50 Times Architecture Lovers Were So Impressed With A Building They Saw, They Just Had To Share
Some might think that an architect’s main tasks are to create something that a) serves a purpose, b) is not a sore to the eyes, and c) is wind resistant, at least (ideally, durable enough to resist larger disturbances, too). And while that’s not far from the truth, there is so much more that goes into these three goals.
The things hidden within said tasks are often what takes certain buildings from good to great, whether they add to their timeless charm, their functionality, or how well they blend within the environment. Today we want to shed light on some examples of all three, which have caught the attention of architecture enthusiasts on the ‘Architecture’ community on Reddit. Ranging from houses of worship to old McDonald’s locations, they have the je ne sais quoi that people seem to like; scroll down to try to figure out what it is yourself.
Below you will also find Bored Panda’s interview with the designer and founder of Kurani, an architecture firm that designs life-changing spaces for education, Danish Kurani, who was kind enough to share his thoughts on what makes architecture great.
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Preserved Edo Period Neighborhood In Japan
Under A Bridge In Egypt
The Neo-Gothic Architecture Of New College, University Of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, Scotland
It’s clear that some buildings are simply better than others, be it visually only or because of other reasons as well, such as functionality or energy efficiency, just to name a couple. That’s why architects have to think long and hard about numerous aspects of the dwelling, in addition to its appearance.
“Good architecture is designed to serve the needs of the people who will use the space. It starts with a clear understanding of who the project will serve, support, and influence,” Danish Kurani told Bored Panda, discussing the features of excellent architecture.
“It involves looking within and understanding the challenges, needs, and aspirations of the people who will use the space. It goes beyond considering personal style preferences and focuses on the underlying needs and experiences of the users.”
Ukraine - Lviv, Staircase In The House Of Scientists
Mont Saint-Michel In Normandy, France, Started In The 12th Cent. (1080x1233)
Other things architects should focus on, according to Kurani, are solving real problems and prioritizing functionality. “Good architecture focuses on solving real problems rather than superficial issues. It prioritizes solutions that improve the lives of the users and meet their objectives.”
“While aesthetics are important, they should not come at the expense of practicality and usability. The design should be functional, sustainable, and meet the needs of the users,” he added.
Weinhardt Mansion (Chicago, 1888)
This looks like the residence of a quirky, spunky, wise old woman who’s loving life and lives with 15 cats. ☺️
This Building In Brussels, Belgium
Giving directions to your friends, “My front door is the letter P.”
Pretty Cool How They Managed To Preserve The City
Oxford was already 800 years old when painting on top was painted. I wonder what it looked like in the 11th century when it was founded.
The architecture expert continued by emphasizing that it’s important to consider the broader context: it’s necessary to take into consideration the impact of the design on the environment, ecosystems, and the community. “Good architecture aims to create buildings and spaces that are sustainable and beneficial for both humans and the environment.”
Expanding on the matter of sustainability, Kurani pointed out that architects should aim to create buildings and spaces that are energy-efficient, reduce waste, and rely on renewable resources; they should take into account the environmental impact of the design and seek to minimize negative consequences.
17th Century Grafarkirkja Turf Church In North Iceland, The Oldest Turf Church In Iceland. (1347x1681)
The Ceiling Of The Shah Mosque In Isfahan, Iran
Meteora Monasteries, Greece 🇬🇷
Some of the last but not least things architects should focus on are having an informed design approach and a problem-solving mindset. According to the designer, the first one involves engaging with the users, observing their behaviors and needs, and involving them in the design process (which helps to create designs that truly meet the needs and aspirations of the users), while the second focuses on being able to identify the right problems to solve and prioritizing solutions over visual style.
"Azure Blue Pool" At Hearst Castel, San Simeon, California
Barcelona , Spain
Shades Of Blue Highlight This San Francisco Victorian Home
The features suggested by Danish Kurani are what makes certain architecture great; it’s something those working in the field—roughly 222,000 people in the US alone, according to 2023 data—should strive for.
But some people out of the 222,000 in the US and many more elsewhere in the world have gone way past being good and presented the world with awe-inspiring examples of architectural wonders. (If you want to browse such examples, continue to the list of masterpieces that won the 2020 Architecture MasterPrize or marvel at the cool and unique architecture, as shared on this online community, and see for yourself.)
Poland
This is lovely! Doesn't look real. Wish all places were this lovely!
One Of My Favorite Simple And Beautiful Buildings
It's in Tunisia and it's on AirBnB for roughly 200 dollars a night.
Winter Garden, Biltmore Estate
Discussing what takes a building from good to great, Kurani first and foremost suggested that applause-worthy creations solve real problems. According to the expert, their design should prioritize solutions over style and address the specific needs and goals of the people using the space.
They should also be designed for change. “The design should recognize the power of the built environment to change people and nudge them towards desired behaviors and mindsets,” he said.
Palace In Russia With A Giant Iron Tree Built Into The Façade (Kazan Ministry Of Architecture)
Yemeni Architecture
King Alfred's Tower In England, Built In 1772 (1242x1388)
“The design should follow nature,” Kurani continued. “It should respect the influence of natural factors such as light, air, and materials on people and incorporate them in a way that aligns with our evolutionary and biological needs.”
Respecting nature often goes hand in hand with the next feature - building locally, as using certain locally-sourced materials can be more eco-friendly than sending them from a land far, far away. “The design should source materials and approaches to construction from the local area, minimizing the use of materials that harm the environment,” the designer told Bored Panda.
The Oceanographic Museum Of Monaco
Abandoned Church Purchased By Skaters And Renovated Into A Skatepark. What Are Your Thoughts?
In England You Sometimes See These "Wavy" Brick Fences. And Curious As It May Seem, This Shape Uses Fewer Bricks Than A Straight Wall. A Straight Wall Needs At Least Two Layers Of Bricks To Make Is Sturdy, But The Wavy Wall Is Fine Thanks To The Arch Support Provided By The Waves
Two of the last features that take architecture to the next level are being contextual and able to evoke emotion. Talking about the first one, Danish Kurani suggested that, “The design should consider the total impact of a choice, not just one effect in isolation, and ensure that it aligns with the overall goals and principles.”
As for the second, “It should consider the emotional ergonomics of a space and create the optimal feeling by using elements such as color, light, materials, and sound with intentionality.”
Stuyvesant St., New York - USA
Baps Akshardham Temple, Delhi, India
Les Espaces D'abraxas, Noisy-Le-Grand, France
If you’re looking for some more examples of awe-inspiring architecture, browse these instances of architects putting in the effort to make something extra special and succeeding next. Happy scrolling!
Got The Keys To Where I’m Opening My Cafe. I Thought You Guys Might Like The Building
Walls Of The Ark Of Bukhara, A 5th Century Ad Fortress In Bukhara, Uzbekistan. (3456x2304)
Tyler House, Designed In 1950. Los Angeles, USA
Somewhere, China
Townhouse With A Double Staircase Entrance On Howe Street, Lincoln Park, Chicago
Lincoln Park Chicago has the nation’s last free zoo! Edit: One of the last free zoos.
Art Deco Buildings, US
As much as I am not a fan of Art Deco style (way too modern for me 😝), I wish we still built like this. I like buildings with unique style, even if it's not my style.
The Royal Palace Of Naples
Ha! I toured this. The tour guide was a very bitter young woman. I learned from her that people from Naples pretty much hate Northern Italy.
Gothic Architecture
This is Norman (Romanesque) architecture, not Gothic. Rounded arches are Roman, pointed arches are Gothic.
The Georgian Hotel Gives Me Wes Anderson Vibes
The Hill Of The Buddha By Tadao Ando
Beautiful, especially from the outside! The inside is almost surreal, too, but very grey.
Meenakshi Temple, Tamil Nadu, India
Why Do Medieval Cities Look Way Better Than Modern Cities? And How Much Would The Apartments On The Left Cost In America?
Knoll House, Italy, A Private Home Built Atop The Ruins Of A Medieval Barn. Designed By Werner Tscholl In 1997
Harbin Opera House Designed By Mad Architects
A Cafe In Bhutan, Neyphug House
Apparently it's the Neyphug Heritage cafe. https://www.dailybhutan.com/article/neyphug-heritage-sets-up-cafe-in-paro-to-give-back-to-monastery
Oslo Opera House
My First Design Built ✌️😁 Afred Nobel Bridge In Sweden
Björkborn Bridge - wooden arch bridge for pedestrians and bikers crossing Timsälven in Karlskoga, Sweden. Designed in collaboration with three architecture students; Kristoffer Hamrin, Nour Fansa and Mateusz Szpotowicz. Info from Wikipedia.
Karlatornet, Gothenburg Sweden
I Just Drove By This House In Pensacola
Classic San Franciscan Victorian With A Very Modern Color Aesthetic
Surf House In California
A Modern Cabin In Norway
So many issues....... carrying groceries, firewood, garbage out. Not good for children or anyone with mobility problems. etc.
Dunno why you got downvoted, you're right. Reagrdless of how cool it looks, I can see my arthritic knees, ankles, and feet being not happy. And, yeah, it takes two seconds of not paying attention and a kiddo could so easily go flying down those stairs.
Load More Replies...Great question! If you are going to go this far in building, why not make an enclosed bridge in the process. Maybe ventilation purposes? No thats stupid, home is way above ground, sure you can open a couple of windows in the house.
Load More Replies...Is it high off the ground to keep the trolls from breaking in?
So these are individual hotel rooms from what I read on Google. Built for tourists looking for that "unique" experience. I would think, if you wanted to make it an actual home, you would need an elevator shaft, (could disguise it using a simulated tree bark) up into the middle of the house. I really liked this one! :)
I have no idea how much snowfall Norway gets, but if it is 12-15 feet, this place is well enough above that, maybe 20-25 feet above ground? Question is the stairway, But then again maybe a sliding glass door where you can just walk out onto the fallen snow...and sink down 6 feet. :P
Like, what? 😅 15 feet of snow? That's like _5_meters_ in the unit system that the rest of the world uses. Maybe in some mountain passes due to wind conditions. Norway is, for the most part, influenced by the Gulf Stream and gets mild temperatures in the winter. In the North, it's different, but by the average, in Tromsø, the usual snow depth at its height is a little over 120 cm (under 4 ft. in Imperials), and in Kautokeino, it stays under 100 cm (one meter). To think that the building has legs that high because of the snow... no. If there's something usually built on legs in the North, it's the traditional tall-footed food storage barns that are rather small and meant to keep the scavenger animals away, and the leg(s) usually do(es)n't reach higher than maybe 150 cm.
Load More Replies...All the modern Norwegian homesteaders are building their cabins this way.
And they use wind gliders to transport them to visits.
Load More Replies...But... Why? The stair placement seems aesthetically and and logistically unnecessary. If they're going to have a big ole tube of stairs, why not just do an elevator?
Likely because servicing it in the middle of nowhere, exposed to these weather conditions, would be hell. And the amount of electricity it would require? Not likely worth the trouble.
Load More Replies...I know it’s obviously designed by an architect to be structurally sound, but this base makes me feel very uneasy
I would say it was the engineer who made it structurally sound?
Load More Replies...I hate it. Its obviously designed for a place that gets a lot of snow. Where are you keeping your shovel to dig out the front door? Where are you keeping your firewood when the power goes out? How are you digging out the bottom of your stairwell when there's 4 feet of snow blocking it and the spiral nature of it means you can't use the shovel?
I would have to hayan elevator. No way I'm going up and down those stairs to bring the dogs out
Why Can't Architects Build Like This Anymore?
I love old houses and styles, but this looks slightly concerning to me.
"Seating Pod" At The Westin Bonaventure Hotel, Los Angeles, Designed By John Portman In 1974
Can't say why, but I wouldn't feel comfortable neither on that balcony nor in this building.
Grand Staircase With Intricate Woodwork And Wall Panelling In A Restored 1893 Queen Anne Victorian Mansion, Plainfield, Union County, New Jersey
The Drake In Philadelphia
Mvrdv's Brand New Housing Complex In Amsterdam, Netherlands
Three cheers to the intrepid architects who rebuilt this gem after Godzilla smashed through.
Art Nouveau Building By Delune - Brussels, Belgium
Giving directions to your acquaintances, “My front door is literally an upside down lower case d.”
Thoughts On The Koohsar Residential Building? Designed By Ashariarchitects. Located In Shiraz, Iran
The Banff Springs Hotel, A 19th Century Châteauesque Hotel In The Canadian Rockies, Banff National Park, Banff, Alberta, Canada
Renaissance Center Marriott | Detroit, Mi | John Portman | 1977
Condo Building, Copenhagen
What My Local Mcdonalds Looks Like
My first thought was that it looks like Aussie pub. I did an image search and yes it was. Its in Melbourne.
Church In France, Near Omaha Beach
Not even close to Omaha Beach, it's Saint Joseph Church in Le Havre, France. It's about 100 km from the said Beach, on the other side of the Seine bay. Lived 100 m from that church for 5 years, it's trully magnificient at nught
Boston Architecture Styles In One Photo
I remember my brother taking a photo from this same spot back in the 1980's.
The Waldorf-Astoria Hotel In C. 1900. The Hotel Was Demolished In 1929 And Replaced By The Empire State Building. New York City, USA
That wasn't much of a lifespan for such a magnificent building.
The Reflection Of The Church
Glass-Bricks And Windows In Amsterdam
80 Metre Climbing Wall Built On The Side Of A Power Plant In Copenhagen, Denmark
Building By My Hotel In Tokyo
This Was Taken At A Subway Station In Washington Dc. Sorry For The Slight Misalignment
The American Restaurant, Kansas City | Warren Platner | 1974
You know it’s 1974 when the mustache and the sideburn are almost touching.
Brutalist Monuments, Former Yugoslavia
Hyatt Regency , Architect John Portman 1973
This is in San Francisco, for those wondering. It holds the Guinness World Record for the largest hotel lobby in the world. The interior was seen in several films, including The Towering Inferno, Time after Time, High Anxiety, and Telefon. The structure at the top is a former rotating restaurant, now a private club.
Faculty Of Arts And Law, Paris, France
Entrance Hall Of Kyoto Station, Japan, Designed By Hiroshi Hara In 1997
Design Submitted By The Architect vs. How The Contractor Ends Up Building It
This might not be the contractors fault. It might be the owners cheaping out when they saw how much the original design would be to build.
Why Can't Architects Build Things Like This Anymore?
I love the repurposed ones dotted around NZ, they are so obvious. And, yes, I miss their restaurants.
Jun Aoki’s New Louis Vuitton Store In Ginza, Tokyo
The Frank Lloyd Wright Ennis House In Los Angeles, Ca
Roberto Garza Sada Center, Monterrey, Mexico, Designed By Tadao Ando In 2007
Thoughts On This? I Have So Many
Perhaps One Of The Most Disliked Buildings In London Is The No 1 Poultry Building. Polled As The Fifth Worst Building In London, It Was Built In The Place Of A Charming, Neo-Gothic Structure. Much Like Many Other Buildings In Post-War London, It Was Demolished For A Modernist Replacement. [building]
I love Bored Panda. It is a great place to go when depressed! I always find something that makes me laugh. And think. And be amazed. Some of the comments made give me hope for mankind with the humor, empathy.
Thanks, BP. Love this. But it makes me so sad I'll never have any hope of even seeing one of these or anything like it :-(
I get what you're saying, from my own experiwnce ar least, I too will probably never see these places. But just a bit of perspective. According to neurological and behavioral studies, our brains are made to idealise places, experiences and people prior to actually experience them. We use our creative minds, imagination, hope and future projection ability, to create these idealised versions. So actually, what you get to see online and think about is the best version you'll likely ever going to get about that specific place, since going there would involve other tourists, climate differences, travelling fatigue etc. Just 30 years ago, when there was no internet, we would've had no way to even stumble upon such information easily, having to scour books on architecture. And just a century ago almost impossible alltogether. So overall, ain't it awesome we get to know about them anyway?
Load More Replies...I think architects would be happy to draw buildings like these but nobody wants the cost of a full-carved-stone house or an Art Deco facade.
I don't know how to answer the poll at the end. Each region has amazing architecture and beauty. I liked almost all of these!
Unfortunately where I’m from “the old” is not important. They destroyed everything. And I heard too many times: “ew everything is so old in Europe”😞
I love Bored Panda. It is a great place to go when depressed! I always find something that makes me laugh. And think. And be amazed. Some of the comments made give me hope for mankind with the humor, empathy.
Thanks, BP. Love this. But it makes me so sad I'll never have any hope of even seeing one of these or anything like it :-(
I get what you're saying, from my own experiwnce ar least, I too will probably never see these places. But just a bit of perspective. According to neurological and behavioral studies, our brains are made to idealise places, experiences and people prior to actually experience them. We use our creative minds, imagination, hope and future projection ability, to create these idealised versions. So actually, what you get to see online and think about is the best version you'll likely ever going to get about that specific place, since going there would involve other tourists, climate differences, travelling fatigue etc. Just 30 years ago, when there was no internet, we would've had no way to even stumble upon such information easily, having to scour books on architecture. And just a century ago almost impossible alltogether. So overall, ain't it awesome we get to know about them anyway?
Load More Replies...I think architects would be happy to draw buildings like these but nobody wants the cost of a full-carved-stone house or an Art Deco facade.
I don't know how to answer the poll at the end. Each region has amazing architecture and beauty. I liked almost all of these!
Unfortunately where I’m from “the old” is not important. They destroyed everything. And I heard too many times: “ew everything is so old in Europe”😞
