Le Corbusier’s custom copy of Don Quixote was bound in the fur of his beloved dog Pinceau.
From the book Le Corbusier: Architect of Books
The Broken Column House is so named because it takes the form of a ruined classical column: truncated, jagged and riven with fissures. It was built by the aristocrat François Nicolas Henri Racine de Monville who used it as his main residence during the years immediately before the French Revolution.
(via co-zine)
SEALAND
The Principality of Sealand was founded in 1967 by Roy Bates and his wife on an abandoned defense platform off the coast of England. The bates family declared the island an independent nation. Over the years it has endured storms, blazes and wars, with numerous nations trying to lay claim to it. In 1968 the British courts ruled that they had no jurisdiction over Sealand as it lay outside the British territory boundary. Germany on the other hand, ruled in 1978 that any man-made structure could not be deemed as state territory and therefore, Sealand cannot be seen as a German nation. In 2005 it was put up for sale, one of the bidders was Pirate Bay, it was then withdrawn and still remains in the hands of the Bates family.
120506 - Drawings for Red Bull Music Academy by Langarita Navarro Arquitectos
Casa de Retiro Espiritual - Emilio Ambasz
1975 in Cordoba, Spain.
Mental.
Reyner Banham must be spinning in his grave because of this mess.
Martin Kippenberger, ‘The Happy End of Franz Kafka’s Amerika’, 1994/1999
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Buckminster Fuller, United States Patent 133,411, Design for a Prefabricated House, 1941-1942
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Anton Mourek, United States Patent 93,175, Design for a Building, 1934
“The design may be applied to a building for various uses, such as for...
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Chester A. Sanborn, United States Patent 85,006, Design for a Building, 1930-1931
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Arthur C. Stalcup, United States Patent 101,473, Design for a Building, 1936
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Sadie O’ Neil, United States Patent 86,683, Design for a Building, 1931-1932
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Daniel G. Terrie, United States Patent 121,107, Design for a Building, 1940
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Jerome Watt, United States Patent 86,001, Design for a Building, 1931-1932


