Construction and building have risen to a new height generally with huge minds working energetically towards structure a world with wonderful structures that were a distant cry from even imagining forgets considering them for real. They are great examples of the authority of the human intelligence and aptitude. Let’s take a look at some of the most bizarre structures of the world.
Aqua, USA
With beguiling plan and ground-breaking idea Aqua surely manages to be the biggest show moocher ever. The fluid curve of Aqua’s external creates characteristic floor plans with most residences having their own sole circle plan. Aqua’s balconies not only create the dramatic external shape of the building, they bring independence to each home. With no two balconies alike, for the first time ever, each sole owner has a unique condo. You got to grasp your gasp as floor to maximum buildings will take your gasp away with that beautiful view right exterior.
It makes me speculate what the world will look like 50 years from now if the scene today is so higher and original. With such overwhelming structures being erected it wouldn’t be wrong to quote that ‘nothing is impossible’.
CCTV Headquarters, China
Verbal communication of sole, the CCTV H.Q. in China, personifies that word in every way. It is so astonishingly wrought in the ‘Z-zig zag’ manner and looks super dramatic. It may not be the tallest structure or the largest but it is very impressive in terms of design and treatment. The Main Building, with a total floor space of about 380,000 square meters, is estranged into five sections: the management section, the complete business section, the news manufacture and distribution section, the distribution section and the program production section.
Kansas City Public Library (Missouri, United States)
This scheme, situated in the heart of Kansas City, represents one of the found projects after the renewal of downtown.
The people of Kansas City were asked to assist pick highly powerful books that stand for Kansas City. Those titles were built-in as ‘bookbinding’s’ in the ground-breaking design of the parking garage external, to inspire people to use the downtown middle Library.
The Crooked House (Sopot, Poland)
Construction of the building ongoing in January 2003 and in December 2003 it was ended. House building is based on Jan Marcin Szancer (famous Polish artist and child books illustrator) and Per Dahlberg (Swedish painter living in Sopot) pictures and paintings.
The Basket Building (Ohio, United States)
The Longaberger Basket Company structure in Newark, Ohio strength just is a strangest office structure in the world. The 180,000-square-foot structure, a replica of the company’s famous market basket, cost $30 million and took two years to complete. Many experts tried to influence Dave Longaberger to change his plans, but he required an exact copy of the real thing.

Habitat 67 (Montreal, Canada)
Expo 67, one of the world’s largest worldwide expositions was held in Montreal. Housing was one of the main themes of Expo 67.
The dice is the bottom, the mean and the conclusiveness of Habitat 67. In its fabric sense, the cube is a sign of constancy. As for its mystic sense, the cube is sign of understanding, truth, moral perfection, at the origin itself of our civilization.
354 cubes of a superb grey-beige build up one on the other to form 146 residences nestled flanked by sky and earth, flanked by city and river, flanked by foliage and glow.

Hang Nga Guesthouse a.k.a Crazy House (Vietnam)
The house is owned by the offspring of the ex-president of Vietnam, who deliberate building in Moscow.
It does not obey with any meeting about house structure, has unforeseen twists and turns, roofs and rooms. It looks like a pixie tale fortress, it has huge “animals” like a giraffe and a spider, no window is rectangular or round and it can be visited like a museum.
Cubic Houses (Rotterdam, Netherlands)
The unique thought of these cubic houses came about in the 1970s. Piet blossom has urbanized a couple of these cubic houses that were built in Delmonico.
The city of Rotterdam asked him to design accommodation on top of a walker viaduct and he determined to use the cubic houses idea. The idea at the back these houses are that he tries to create woods by each dice representing an abstract tree; therefore the whole village becomes a forest.
Dancing Building (Prague, Czech Republic)
The ‘Dancing Building’ is a nickname known to Rationale-Nederlanden structure that is situated in Prague’s business district. Designed by Croatian-Czech designer Valdo Melanie in teamwork with Canadian Frank Gerry the structure was finished in 1996. The building was built in its place of the one that was shattered during Bombing of Prague in 1945.
















