An Architect Draws Buildings Inspired By Everyday Objects (30 Pics)
Interview With ArtistSome artists look for inspiration in otherworldly places, while others use whatever is around them and make the most out of it! Brazilian architect, urban planner, building technician, and art lover Felipe de Castro turns everyday objects, places, and foods into unusual architectural designs. In his wild imagination, a face mask transforms into a hospital, a microphone is a hotel, a sandwich becomes an oddly-shaped building, and a stamp turns into an Apple office.
The 33-year-old artist based in Rio de Janeiro has liked to draw since he was a little kid and now he teaches students and professionals the techniques of perspective drawing. He has had a very vivid imagination since childhood and used to imagine household items in different scenarios, but started bringing his wild ideas to life only a few years ago.
"I always did these re-readings in my mind, I didn't draw on paper. When I was very little, I looked at objects imagining what these objects would look like on a much larger scale, how people would be walking under objects," Felipe de Castro told Bored Panda.
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Not sure a design such as this would be structurally sound. However, Samuel Beckett bridge in Dublin is also based on a harp
Felipe de Castro graduated in architecture in 2018, although he has been working in the field since 2020. But he liked arts for as long as he can remember and used to create models of houses using ice cream sticks.
"Recently, I observed a pencil holder at my desk. I could imagine the construction of that pencil holder and I decided to draw it. I moved it to paper and created a construction from the proportion of this object on a larger scale. It's a kind of creativity exercise," Felipe de Castro told us how the project started.
Is it just me, or is the water fall supposed to symbolize Data Spillage?
Felipe de Castro chose drawing to express himself because it's the easiest to understand.
"We have several ways of expressing ourselves: with speech, writing, body language, but drawing is a form that does not have many interpretations. Of course, except for surrealist drawing, and these drawings are more focused on art, but as our case is more technical and artistic, but more focused on architecture, people look and already have an understanding and an interpretation. The drawing is what the person is seeing."
Check out this winery in Australia https://www.darenberg.com.au/darenberg-cube/
Load More Replies...Wow! That's awesome! BTW, Petrobras' headquarters looks like an explode view of it.
My thoughts as I read this; One: thank you! Two: siT DOWN
Load More Replies...when this is over i dont ever want to see one of these again...let alone a permanent structure dedicated to it.
Felipe de Castro says the biggest challenge in his drawing is imagining the object on a much larger scale and thinking of the real structure for the drawing. And yet, most of his drawings could actually be built in real life.
"Although it is a practice of drawing and an exercise in creativity, I try to create the drawings in a way that is possible to be built, some are just in concept, but most could be built."
This one actually looks rather like Frank Lloyd Wright’s Fallingwater.
Felipe de Castro has gathered 62.2k followers on Instagram over the years. His innovative artwork serves not only as entertainment but for educational purposes as well.
"When I posted on social media, people liked it a lot. Everyone started to share it, it drew the attention of many people, including teachers from all over the world who have contacted me to say that they are doing these exercises with their students. This is very rewarding for me to know that I am helping students from all over the world."
As a hotel, the rooms could be named after the various chocolate bars put out by the Mars Corporation. I would expect the M&Ms room to be Dr. Seussy.
This is like when you're a kid and everything could be something else, amazing, what a shame if one lets go of one's fantasy with age.
So welcome to the surreal world of creative buildings inspired by the most unexpected objects! We encourage you to put your brain to work today and train your creativity and imagination as well by imagining and drawing objects around you as buildings!
Felipe de Castro told us that he hopes to one day build one of the buildings he invented, so maybe next time we will be putting everyday items side by side with real-life buildings.
"One of my drawings that I would like to build would be the Pendrive house as it would be a modern building, I like to bring interaction with the outside together with the movement, in this case, the waterfall."
Sports arena surrounded by an ice-skating rink, which ends up becoming a survival event.
Ya that's not going to work well in heavy snow states (MN) or rainy areas.
The top level could be a café where people meet up before going to the movie together.
https://www.google.lt/maps/@54.6977561,25.2745685,199m/data=!3m1!1e3?hl=en&authuser=0
These buildings already exist. A female dormitory at my alma mater. download-6...79efda.jpg
My eyes see more Frank Lloyd Wright...and I mean this in the most positive of ways.
This one already exists - it's the sail building in Haifa. tumblr_pm6...pg.cf_.jpg
by my calculations this would be a very expensive build and upside down would spell BOOBIES
There’s a cathedral in San Francisco that’s not too different from this.
In Atlanta there is a skyscraper called the Pencil Building because the top looks like a sharpened pencil.
These are so cool! Inspiration for architecture coming from stuff like this... it's really creative, I really want to like, build these in Minecraft LOL they're beautiful!
First: THAT WAS AWSOME KEEP UP THE GREAT WORK!! Second: i need a skate park one so i can say "tHaT waS lEgiTnEss"
I like the addition of greenspace on some of these - not just the surrounding land but on the structures themselves.
Some of those designs would work. The hospital could be built just like that in real life, for instance. Some of them, obviously, wouldn't work, but that watch inspired office building for Timex headquarters would really be ool.
Most of these are very good ideas! I would love to work at a radio station in a building built like a microphone! Totally awesome work!
I have wondered many-a-times why our contemporary residential buildings (houses, flats etc.) cannot be more "future-inspired" and why builders keep creating housing developments that have varied little over the past 120 years? We're a far cry from where Sci-fi of the 1920s-1960s imagined we'd be in the twenty-first century!
...can find an inspiration everywhere. I hope that those buildings and landscapes are as practical as are those objects which inspired their creation.
These are so cool! Inspiration for architecture coming from stuff like this... it's really creative, I really want to like, build these in Minecraft LOL they're beautiful!
First: THAT WAS AWSOME KEEP UP THE GREAT WORK!! Second: i need a skate park one so i can say "tHaT waS lEgiTnEss"
I like the addition of greenspace on some of these - not just the surrounding land but on the structures themselves.
Some of those designs would work. The hospital could be built just like that in real life, for instance. Some of them, obviously, wouldn't work, but that watch inspired office building for Timex headquarters would really be ool.
Most of these are very good ideas! I would love to work at a radio station in a building built like a microphone! Totally awesome work!
I have wondered many-a-times why our contemporary residential buildings (houses, flats etc.) cannot be more "future-inspired" and why builders keep creating housing developments that have varied little over the past 120 years? We're a far cry from where Sci-fi of the 1920s-1960s imagined we'd be in the twenty-first century!
...can find an inspiration everywhere. I hope that those buildings and landscapes are as practical as are those objects which inspired their creation.
