10 Most Weirdest Places to Live

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Living in a Billboard:

It is a wonderful recycling process. Expired billboards in a perfectly good  conditions  can be reuse as a living space. Many of us don’t know about those void billboards, that would make a good one bedroom apartment. Now a days, we see that this extraordinary idea comes into a  practical use.

Living in a Billboard

Living in a Walking House:

Walking House is a movable housing system that enables residents to live a peaceful nomadic life near the natural life in ecosystem. It is basically an energy conservation system, which can use and recollect solar, wind and hydroelectric energy.

Living in a Walking House

Living under the Grass:

 An unusual sober building  was built by  a project company  which has all characteristics and covering of grass. Nolaster group of architects has manufactured that building in Loredo, in the north coast of Spain.

Living under the Grass

Living in a Water Tower:

A 85 Feet Tall ”The Tower,” which is a an excellent copy of a Historical Water Tower,  is  reconstructed with the features of Interior housing layout. The Water Tower Features a 360 Degree, Unsurpassed View of the Pacific Ocean, Huntington Harbour and the San Gabriel River.

Living in a Water Tower

Living over a Bridge:

A Bridge House with the characteristics of  living inside a “bridge” surrounded by the lush green scenery was built by Max Pritchard Architect. It was consisted of two steel beams with concrete floors and steel decoration. The  roof was made of plantation pipes. Transparent walls made of glass were added to  that unique house.

Living over a Bridge

Living inside an Airplane:

 A fully Furnished, two bedroom, Boeing 727 fuselage suite is  a part of the Hotel Costa Verde, a hotel located near Quepos, Costa Rica. The creators have Made brighter and prettier, a vintage 1965 Boeing 727 airframe, which in its prior life shuttled globetrotters on South Africa Air and Avianca Airlines.

Living inside an Airplane

Living in a Church:

Gradually decreasing membership of church in Mission District of  San Francisco had sold the church,  due to short of money, to a  businessman Siamak Akhavan who purchased the church for $2.25 million.  Siamak Akhavan who purchased the church  invested another $3 million in it, turning it into a three-bedroom, 2-½ bath, twelve-room home. Its features include an enormous living area, which includes the original sanctuary (with soaring, hand-painted ceilings, arched windows, and most of the original stained glass windows), custom mahogany wood finishes, four fireplaces, and a new chef’s kitchen. The Master Suite includes a marble Roman tub room, dressing room, and incredible 360 degree views from the tower meditation room.

Living in a Church

Living on a 2,575m Peak:

The 2,575m high hut, the Rifugio Nuvolau providing comfort and Give moral or emotional strength to those exhausted trekkers trudging in Italy’s dramatic Dolomite Mountains. Even during World War 1, the 2,575m high hut served as a point for surveying situations on the summit. Besides a flashback in history, the location will provide a bed, eatables, and the jolly company of other outdoorsy souls like you.

Living on a 2,575m Peak

Living on a Boat – on shore.:

  A scrapped shipping boat, The Benson Ford after completing its service of 50 years on the great lakes of world is now using as a private home by Ohio couple. He used the captain’s quarters of the Benson Ford  as a shipping residence. The Ship Residence sits on South Bass Island in Lake Erie now a days.
The front section of the Benson Ford is where the walnut paneled state rooms, dining room, galley, and passenger lounge were located. These elegant quarters were removed from the rest of the ship and brought to land to make up the magnificent Ship Residence.

Living on a Boat – on shore.

Living Upside Down:

Klaudiusz Golos and Sebastion Mikuciuk created this upside down house for an exhibit in Trassenheide, Germany. It’s clearly unlivable but still a lot of  fun.

Living Upside Down

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