Take a tour of the world’s most beautiful buildings, from Kansas City to India
A hundred years ago, naming the world’s most beautiful buildings was easy: the Parthenon. Sure. The Taj Mahal. Absolutely. Hagia Sophia. No argument. But now, in part because the whole notion was chewed up and spit out by those troublemaking Modernists, we’re just learning to think about architecture in terms of beauty again. It’s open season.
Certain themes are evident in our choices of the world’s most beautiful buildings. We love buildings surrounded by water; the interaction between water and daylight is always magical. (Why do you think the Lincoln Memorial has a reflecting pool at its doorstep?) And we are head over heels for flamboyant uses of pattern and color. The Netherlands Institute for Sound and Vision, for example, is positively psychedelic.
So are we consistent? Nope. But however capricious our choices may seem, we don’t take beauty lightly. After all, the ongoing search for beauty is what travel is all about. It’s certainly the best reason we know to leave the house.
ICMC at Brandenburg Technical University (Cottbus, Germany)
Relativity Theory: The free-form building looks especially impressive because it’s surrounded by long, dull, rectilinear buildings of the sort the East Germans were known for.
ICMC at Brandenburg Technical University,
Cottbus, Germany
Cottbus, Germany
Photo: Alex Korting
Sagrada Família (Barcelona)
Authenticity Alert: The east-facing Nativity façade was the only one completed by Gaudí himself.
Sagrada Família, Barcelona
Photo: Kelly Kollar
Burj Al Arab (Dubai, UAE)
Insider Tip: Non-guests can gain access to the Burj Al Arab’s private island by booking a meal at one of its restaurants; try afternoon tea at the Skyview Bar or a buffet lunch at Junsui.
Burj Al Arab, Dubai, UAE
Photo: Courtesy of Burj Al Arab
Institute for Sound and Vision (Hilversum, The Netherlands)
Experiential Beauty: Tour the history of Dutch broadcasting, or simply gaze up at the stained glass from a table at the atrium’s Grand Café.
Institute for Sound and Vision, Hilversum, The Netherlands
Design by Neutelings Riedijk Architecten/Photo
by Scagliola Brakkee
The Golden Temple (Amritsar, India)
Night Owls Welcome: The temple is open 20 hours a day, from 6 a.m. to 2 a.m. daily, and is illuminated (and especially lovely) at night.
The Golden Temple, Amritsar, India
Photo: Geetesh Bajaj
National Congress Hall (Brasilia, Brazil)
Not Just Skin Deep: Go inside and check out the Green Hall (named for the color of the carpet and the Brazilian flag), with its collection of paintings, sculptures, and decorative screens by renowned Brazilian artists.
National Congress Hall, Brasilia, Brazil
Photo: Courtesy of EMBRATUR
The Guggenheim (Bilbao, Spain)
Small Is Beautiful: Alternatively, we could make a case for Frank Gehry’s first major building, the diminutive white Vitra Museum in Weil am Rhein, Germany.
The Guggenheim, Bilbao, Spain
Photo: Aitor Las Hayas
The Chrysler Building (New York City)
Designed by architect William van Alen, the Chrysler’s shiny, filigreed Art Deco spire is the most indispensable piece of the New York City skyline, perfectly balancing the primal thrust of the classic American skyscraper with the desire for a little bling. (It was the world’s tallest for less than a year in 1931 before that zeppelin-masted tower eight blocks south took the spotlight.) Day or night, its stainless-steel crown still dazzles like nothing else.Icon Alert: This is possibly the only building in the world that is decorated with automotive hood ornaments: the big eagles on the 61st floor were copied from a 1929 Chrysler.
The Chrysler Building, New York City
Photo: Ralph Grunewald
Mont St. Michel (Normandy, France)
Dining Tip: Try the agneau de pré-salé, a local specialty made from meat from the lambs that graze on the nearby salt meadows.
Mont St. Michel, Normandy, France
Photo: Julius Fekete / Alamy
Nelson-Atkins Museum’s Bloch Building (Kansas City, MO)
Special Attraction: Check out the Noguchi Sculpture Court, a minimalist space created by the famed Japanese-American artist that cleverly blurs the line between indoors and out.
Nelson-Atkins Museum’s Bloch Building, Kansas City, MO
Photo: Andy Ryan
From : Yahoo.com
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