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Interesting to know - Wonders of the Architecture World - 2
From the tall tower in Dubai to a contemporary art museum on New York's
Lower East Side, noteworthy architecture is springing up around the globe.
Conde Nast Traveler's April issue picks seven designs as the "new seven
wonders of the architecture world." They are:
Cumulus, Nordborg, Denmark
an exhibit hall at Danfoss Universe, a science and technology
museum in Nordborg, Denmark. The building has an irregular roof, all
curves and angles, like a bite taken out of a cloud.
Burj Dubai, Dubai
the world's tallest building, which is under construction in
the Middle East and is already more than 1,700 feet tall. The final height
is a secret but its developer, Emaar Properties, has previously said it
will stop somewhere above 2,275 feet and will exceed 160 floors.
London's new Wembley Stadium, London, England
which seats 90,000 with no obstructed sight
lines. A massive 436-foot-tall, 1,000-foot-long single arch braces the
retractable roof. The stadium will be a centerpiece of the 2012 Olympics.
New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York, USA
designed to resemble an off-kilter stack
of silvery rectangles, located on the Bowery on Manhattan's once-seedy,
now-trendy Lower East Side.
Kogod Courtyard, Washington, DC, USA
at Smithsonian Institution, Washington D.C., a curved roof
made from a patterned grid of glass and steel above shallow pools in the
courtyard of the Old Patent Office Building, also known as the Reynolds
Center and home to the American Art Museum and the National Portrait
Gallery.
Red Ribbon, Qinhuangdao, China
Tanghe River Park, in Qinhuangdao, China, about 180 miles
east of Beijing, a steel bench that runs a third of a mile through a
riverbank garden and ecological oasis.
The Crystal, Toronto, Canada
a controversial new entryway and exhibit space at Toronto's
Royal Ontario Museum, whose sharp, even jagged angles have not been
universally loved by the locals. It was designed by Daniel Libeskind.
[From Yahoo News,
Monday, March 24 - Printed in Conde Nast Traveler, April issue]
World's Biggest....
The World's Largest Man-Made Islands
Perhaps no structure on this list more embodies the original impulse
behind the tall building — pure human hubris — than Dubai’s Palm Islands.
Composed of three separate islands, Palm Jumeirah, Palm Jebel Ali and Palm
Deira, the entire construction will add nearly 330 miles of beach front to
the city of Dubai. Parts of Palm Jumeirah are currently open for
development, with the remaining islands to be completed in the next 10-15
years. When finished, the three islands will contain over 100 luxury
hotels while Palm Deira itself will be almost as large as Paris.
The World's Tallest Dam
Construction began on the Nurek Dam (984 feet) in 1961 while the central
Asian nation of Tajikistan was still a republic within the Soviet Union,
and was completed an efficient 19 years later. The dam provides 98 percent
of Tajikistan’s electrical needs and was one of the first to be
constructed with an asphalt central core of cement forming an impermeable
barrier along the Vakhsh River.
The World's Tallest Hotel Not in Dubai
Though eclipsed both by Dubai’s Rose Tower and Jumeirah Emirates Tower,
the Baiyoke Tower II in Bangkok, Thailand, nevertheless boasts 88 floors
and 673 guest rooms. The 997-foot Tower is located in Bangkok’s
Ratchathewi district known for its shopping and its 1.5 mile long
artificial lake.
The World's Tallest Monument
Commonly known as the “Gateway to the West” the St. Louis Arch, designed
by renowned architect Eero Saarinen, marks the starting point of the Lewis
and Clark Expedition. The arch is surrounded by a 91-acre national park
along the Mississippi River and stands 630-feet-tall. Visitors can take a
four-minute tram ride up one of the “legs” of the arch to the observation
deck at its center for spectacular views of St. Louis.
The World's Tallest Hotel Never Actually Completed
Destined for greatness, the Ryugyong Hotel in Pyongyang, North Korea,
stands at 1,083 feet, was supposed to boast 105 floors and 3.9
million-square-feet of floor space, and was meant to have seven revolving
restaurants. Not surprisingly this towering pyramid’s construction was put
on hold in 1992 when North Korea confronted more pressing matters. What
remains is the pyramid itself, but it lacks windows and fixtures and has
been deemed unsafe for human occupancy.
The World's Tallest Casino (sort of)
Unsurprisingly located in Las Vegas, the Stratosphere Hotel & Casino
boasts a 1,149-foot-tall observation tower and restaurant, making it the
tallest free-standing tower in the United States. While you can be shot
straight up 160 feet in the air, or ride a mechanical arm over the Tower’s
edge, there are no actual games in the tower itself.
The World's Tallest Bar
On the 87th floor of Shanghai’s Jin Mao Tower–literally “Golden Prosperity
Building”–is the appropriately titled Cloud Nine. In February 2001,
cocktail-sipping patrons observed Han Qizhi, a 31-year-old shoe salesman,
climb the 1,214 foot tower barehanded.
The World's Largest House
Indisputably, the Sultan of Brunei’s Istana Nurul Iman is the world’s
largest residence. Really more of a palace, this structure boasts an
impressive 2,152,782-square-feet of space, comprised of 1,788 rooms
(including 257 bathrooms), and is home to the Sultan's car collection,
including 165 Rolls Royces. (It easily dwarfs Buckingham Palace's 828,818
square feet). Unfortunately for non-royals, the Sultan’s palace is only
open three days a year for the Islamic festival of Hari Raya Aidilfitri,
marking the end of Ramadan. However, in 2009, Indian multi-billionaire
Mukesh Ambani is scheduled to complete construction on the world's largest
house.
The World's Largest Ancient City
Built in the mid-15th century, Machu Picchu is located 7,875 feet above
sea level in the Urubamba Valley in Peru. A gorgeous collection of 150
structures, including temples and residences, the city was abandoned
approximately 100 years after its founding and not re-discovered until the
early 1900s. Machu Picchu was named one of the New Seven Wonders of the
World in 2007.
The World's Tallest Memorial
Erected in 1940 by the Spanish dictator Francisco Franco, the Benedictine
Abbey of the Valley of the Fallen boasts the largest Memorial Cross in the
world. Located 28 miles northwest of Madrid, the 492-foot structure towers
above a basilica and crypt carved out of a granite ridge, and boasts
spectacular views of both the surrounding valley and the outskirts of
Madrid.
[From Yahoo News,
January 19, 2009]
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