Some see Habitat 67 like and Ant hill or rabbit warren and others see a resemblance to a Taos indian pueblo village. While the visiting public was impressed, they didn’t embrace the concept. At a distance the complex looked like an exciting piece of Cubist sculpture, at close up it’s flat concrete-gray exterior looked dull and as if nobody lived there. An experiment in apartment living, Habitat 67, became the permanent symbol of Expo 67 after it closed. It was Canadian architect Mo
Related with "Icon: Habitat 67"
Habitat Hotel | Solar and Flashy
Habitat Hotel | Solar and Flashy November 6, 2007 in Architecture, Featured Architects by Dayla Corcoran | No comments The longer I stare at Habitat Hotel, the more I realize what an inspiring, albeit superfluous, idea it was. Created by Enric Ruis-Geli of Spain,[...]
Habitat for Humanity
Habitat for Humanity Habitat for Humanity How do I sign up for this? I’d like to do it in the summer, maybe in Mexico, but anywhere is fine. I think it is a great way to help out people in need. I couldn’t do it[...]
Enterprise Architect 7.0 - Project Browser Icon Overlays
The Project Browser window displays the status of each package in the model by overlaying status icons on the package icon. The following table describes what each overlaid icon means. Icon Indicates that… [...]
A favorable habitat to jumping-off place protect bathroom remodeling is to assume how your current
A favorable habitat to jumping-off place protect bathroom remodeling is to assume how your current … . Tags: home renovation, kitchen, architect, flooring, house A favorable habitat to jumping-off place protect bathroom remodeling is to assume how your current[...]
Icon: Poul Henningsen
Poul Henningsen (1894-1967) was born in Ordrup, Denmark, he trained as an architect at the Danish College of Technology in Copenhagen. Finding the style of traditional lighting designs to be insufficient for his interiors he[...]
