Kyoto-based architecture firm Eastern Design Office have created this sharp ‘the On the Corner house’. The building is concrete, glass, and stone. Yes, the overall structure is triangular, yet the façade is comprised of square components.
Photos by Michael Light, taken from a two-seater plane which he flew himself at the same time. It shows the abrubt effect of the economic crash with acres of flattened hilltops carved through with roads and foundations, without houses.
The Khopoli house by SPASM Design Architects in Maharashtra, India. Concretes where used for the drastic climatic changes that the region experiences, which include high temperatures in the summer and heavy rainfall during the monsoon season.
Conarte’s interior by Anagrama, created as children’s library and cultural center, inside a warehouse-like building. A multi-purpose, asymmetrical reading platform meant to simulate Monterrey’s mountainous topography.
Swiss architect Gus Wüstemann used raw concrete, oak and travertine to create the smooth walls and floors of this home and poolhouse overlooking Lake Zurich.
The ‘Respect the architect’ series by Franck Bohbot from New York. In this work Bohbot wanted to capture the huge essence of architecture with and from his point of view, and with respect.
American firm Choi + Shine Architects designed these electricity pylons called Land of Giants like human figures to march across the Icelandic landscape.
Artist and architect Tomás Saraceno created a massive layered installation that’s suspended more than 25 meters in the air of the Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen museum in Düsseldorf, Germany.