Upside-Down House (Syzmbark, Poland)
This upside down design seems totally plausible, but it is exactly the message the Polish philanthropist and designer, Daniel Czapiewski, trying to send. Unstable and retarded development was built as a social commentary on the era of ex-Communist Poland. Monuments well worth the trip for a history lesson or a balance.
Wozoco Apartemen (Amsterdam-Osdorp, Belanda)
A blueprint to thwart the law and the zoning was the inspiration for an apartment complex. Dutch housing regulations require apartment construction to provide a number of daylight to their tenants-but MVRDV architects forgot to plan for it. Their solution? To hang thirteen of the 100 units of the northern facade of the block. Intelligent design saves floor space and allows enough sunlight to enter the east or west facade.
Floating Castle (Ukraine)
Powered by a single cantilever - and quite discussed at Panoramio, this mysterious floating house agriculture is included in a sci-fi movie. It is claimed to be an old bunker for the overload of mineral fertilizers but we're sure there's a better story again ... Foreign architects may have a hand in it.
Habitat 67 (Montreal, Canada)
Apartments connect and stack like Lego blocks in Montreal Habitat 67. Without a traditional vertical construction, the apartments have open space that most urban areas the lack of shelter, including a separate patio for each apartment.
Free Spirit Spheres (British Columbia, Canada)
Free Spirit Spheres can be hung from a tree as shown, making a tree house. They also can be hung from other solid objects or placed in a cradle on the ground. There are four attachment points at the top of each sphere and another four anchor points on the bottom. Each connection point is strong enough to bear the whole scope and content.
The scope is made of two laminations of wood strips over laminated wood frames. Outer surface and then finished and covered with clear fiberglass. The result is beautiful skin and very tough. Leather waterproof and strong enough to take the impact that comes with living in a dynamic environment such as forests.
Cube House (Rotterdam, Netherlands)
Living in a home tilt is much easier than that looks-just ask the people who live in Cube House. Architect Piet Blom tipped a conventional house forty-five degrees and rested it on the hexagon-shaped pole so that three sides face down and the other three face the sky. Each cube houses accommodates three floors: the living space, including study, kitchen and bathroom, bedroom floor and upper houses is the pyramid room that can act like the loft or deck view. The houses are quite expensive, but you can satisfy your curiosity by visiting the museum show house.
Gangster's House (Archangelsk, Russia)
Houses one-time Russian gangster Nikolai Sutyagin is certainly unusual. The former convict's eccentric 15-year project apparently began accidentally in 1992 stands 13 floors, 144 feet high. He claimed he only intends to build a two-storey house - larger than its neighbors to reflect the position as the richest city.
Mushroom House (Cincinnati, Ohio)
So different in material and form of this hodgepodge house looks like its been welded and glued. But this is no hobo-construction, was designed by professor of architecture and interior design at the University of Cincinnati, Terry Brown, and recently in the market for around $ 400K.
Pod House (Rochester, New York)
We assume this home was UFO-inspired eccentric, but it was Queen Anne's lace grass is where it gets it roots. Its thin stems support pods with interconnecting walkways.
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Heliotrope Rotating House (Freiburg, Germany)
Green to the extreme, Architect Rolf Disch built a solar powered home that rotates towards the warm sun in the winter and rotates back to back with a well-insulated in the summer. A house that spins in circles does not sound too stable to us, but for the environment is worth the risk.
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