Nanak Emporium - MACh Arquitetos
Nanak Emporium - MACh Arquitetos
Paolo Venturella Architecture - Solar powered mosque
Jeremy Harris - the architecture of abandoned american asylums
Kunstschule Waiblingen by Hartwig Schneider Architekten
Chethams School of Music - Roger Stephenson Architects
Ryue Nishizawa by Manabu Chiba
The Lushi Hill Club by Atelier Fronti
Penleigh and Essendon Grammar School by McBride Charles Ryan
Tower Restoration in Huercal-Overa by Castillo Miras Arquitectos
NEUT by Apollo Architects Associates
Astrup Fearnley Museet at Night - Renzo Piano
Vertical Horizons photos by Romain Jacquet-Lagreze
It’s easy to get a measure of a building from afar, but you cant really appreciate a towering city structure until you’ve craned your neck up the length of its spine, admiring the way its reflective edges seem to scrape the sky. Romain’s series captures the behomeths of Hong Kong, from the human perspective of always at their feet. Book available for purchase at hk.asia-city
Photog: Deviantart / Website / Facebook
(via cumpletelyhappy)
Infographic - Life Inside The Kowloon Walled City
Large Image:
https://www.scmp.com/sites/default/files/2013/03/16/scm_news_1.1.nws_backart1_1_0.jpg
Submerged Churches.
These churches from all over the world are not victims of natural disaster, they all sit in the valley of a reservoir. Many reservoirs were created in valleys with small towns or villages nestled in them, the benefit of having reservoirs always outweighed the cost in relocating a small population. In many of these settlements the religious buildings were the tallest and once the valleys were flooded they could still be seen poking out of the water in a surreal post apocalyptic manner. Lots of them still survive, making more of an appearance every time the water level drops.
Among these examples are Ladybower, Graun, Panta de Sau, Tehri and Potosi
Bambu identity by Bond