News,entertainment, technology, sports..... and if it is cool,we bring it to you!!!
PHONES
Sunday, 20 April 2014
Top 10 Wackiest Construction Projects
At the
beginning of a construction project, no one really knows how it's going
to turn out. Even with all the careful planning in the world, it's
impossible to anticipate the twists and turns that are inevitable in any
architectural enterprise and that often lead to disappointing results.
On the other hand, there are a few souls who never question their
choices at all, even when their projects seem utterly bizarre. Next up,
we'll take a look at 10 wacky construction projects whose eccentric
masterminds knew exactly what the outcome would be -- and proceeded
without caution.
10: The Sutyagin House
Innocent home improvement projects
have a tendency to get out of hand. Refinishing a cupboard might kick
off a whole kitchen renovation. Digging a single flower bed can turn
into tearing up the entire lawn. And sometimes, you accidentally build a
13-story wooden monstrosity on top of your house.
At least, that's what Nikolai
Sutyagin, owner of the one-time world's largest single-family wooden
house, did. Not content with two stories, Sutyagin, a resident of
Arkhangelsk, Russia, spent 15 years adding layer after layer to the top
of his house. The result was a colossally impressive 144-foot
(43.9-meter) homemade skyscraper that towered over the neighborhood.
Since the local building code
stipulates that no wooden structure can be higher than two floors,
Sutyagin built a roof over the second floor in order to claim that
everything above was just decorative. It didn't work -- in 2008, the
city of Arkhangelsk declared the house a fire hazard and demolished it.
9: Ryugyong Hotel
The world's wackiest hotel has 105
stories and 3,000 rooms, but absolutely no one is allowed to stay in it.
Construction on the concrete hulk began in 1987 but stalled in the
early '90s when funding dried up, leaving behind a massive, empty shell.
The Ryugyong Hotel, which looms over the skyline in Pyongyang, North
Korea, is impossible to miss. Depending on how you look at it, the hotel
resembles a rocket about to take off into a magical Communist utopia of
the future, or somewhere a James Bond villain might like to hang out.
Recently, reports have been filtering
in that work is beginning again on the unfinished top floors. Plans
include completing the exterior of the building's pinnacle and
constructing one of the five revolving restaurants that were originally
planned for the hotel.
8: Mirny Diamond Mine
Although it's not quite the largest
pit ever dug by humans -- an honor that belongs to the United States'
Bingham Mine -- the Mirny Diamond Mine in Russia's Siberian region
deserves a place on our list for the sheer grit it took to dig.
Moreover, while the Bingham Mine is out in the desert, the Mirny Mine is
practically in the center of the eastern Siberian town of Mirny. A
giant pit surrounded by a town is visually staggering.
Digging the mine was intensely
dangerous. In winter, workers blasted and clawed through permafrost,
while in summer, the entire landscape turned to slushy mud, rendering
most vehicles inoperable. The outcome is a hole so big -- 1,722.4 feet
(525 meters) deep and 4,101 feet (1,250 meters) wide -- that the sky
above it has been designated a no-fly zone out of concern that aircraft
will be sucked in.
7: The Cerne Abbas Rude Man
What makes the Cerne Abbas giant
rude? Is it the threatening club he's wielding -- or the prominent
erection he's sporting in public view? This wacky construction project
is actually an earthwork carving. Etched into a hillside in Dorset,
England, the Rude Man stands 180 feet (54.9 meters) tall. His likeness
was rendered by trenches dug deep into the white chalk beneath the
landform's turf.
The first mention of the Rude Man in
recorded history was in 1694, when a local churchwarden noted that three
shillings had been paid for "repairing ye Giant." Theories as to why he
was created abound. Some scholars think he's an ancient depiction of
Hercules, while others propound that he's a Celtic fertility god. Some
suspect the Rude Man isn't quite that old -- he may have been created as
a caricature of Oliver Cromwell, who was mockingly called "England's
Hercules." Today, the National Trust owns and maintains the Rude Man,
and the organization relies on local shepherds to keep the grass on the
hillside well-shorn [source: Cockcroft].
6: Jukkasja rvi Ice Hotel
The Jukkasjä rvi Ice Hotel in Sweden
is composed almost completely of ice. Every winter, using frozen
building materials from the Torne River, artists blast enormous steel
skeletal frames with snow cannons. Then, the frames are removed to leave
free-standing snow and ice structures. Construction on the hotel is
continuous throughout the season, with new rooms and projects being
completed as winter progresses.
No matter how cold the weather gets
outside -- and just 124 miles (200 kilometers) north of the Arctic
Circle, it certainly gets cold -- the temperature inside the ice hotel
remains a steady 23 degrees Fahrenheit (-5 degrees Celsius) [source:
ICEHOTEL]. For warmth, guests must rely on reindeer skins, toasty
sleeping bags and the spirits served at the hotel bar, as well as
whatever thermal undies they've packed.
5: Fordlandia
Henry Ford had a lot of good ideas,
but he also had a very bad one. In 1929, Ford constructed the town of
Fordlâ ndia in an attempt to transplant American culture and industry
into the Brazilian jungle. His goal was to get closer to the raw
materials he needed -- and in the process, break the rubber barons who
controlled these supplies.
Fordlândia was designed to be a
beacon of Prohibition-era American culture, kind of like Disneyland with
factories. But Ford didn't anticipate the malaria-carrying mosquitoes,
hot weather and misunderstandings between American and Brazilian
workers. Cranky employees plus widely available machetes was a dangerous
combination. Mistake No. 2 was failing to hire any botanists. The
topsoil, exposed by aggressive land clearance, disappeared, leaving
overcrowded rubber saplings to starve and die in impossibly poor soil or
succumb to a fungal blight. Disaster soon followed.
Today, Fordlândia is a spooky, American-style mirror world decaying in the jungle.
An "Ideal Palace"
Back in 1864 in Hauterives, France, a
mailman named Ferdinand Cheval had a dream. In the dream, he built a
palace made of stone, filled with grottoes and decorated with elaborate
cornices and fine ornamentation -- an "ideal palace." Fifteen years, he
stumbled on a stone. What resulted is one of the most bizarre pieces of
folk architecture in the world.
Examining the stone that tripped him,
Cheval was enthralled by its unusual shape. If the earth had provided
him with such a beautiful, natural material, he reasoned, God must want
him to become a mason. Cheval began collecting stones on his postal
route and used them to build an ever-growing concrete and limestone
structure. This continued for more than 30 years. By 1912, when he had
finished, the palace was several stories high and boasted columns,
turrets and intricate carvings.
3: The Moai
Each standing about 13 feet (3.9
meters) high and weighing 14 tons (12.7 metric tons), the moai, those
iconic carved stone heads that populate Easter Island, are one of the
most famous construction projects in history. Eight hundred eighty-seven
moai dot the treeless landscape of the 63-square mile (163.2- square
kilometer) island, 397 of which stand in the quarries where they were
carved, mysteriously abandoned [source: NOVA].
The moai are a puzzle. How did the
carving of these strange, enormous statues come about on such a small,
treeless island? One hypothesis, though by no means an uncontested one,
is that the Rapanui, the island's original inhabitants, deforested the
island themselves in the process of building the moai, using logs and
rope made from tree fiber to move the statues across the island.
2: The Winchester Mystery House
After Sarah Winchester's husband and
daughter died, a medium explained to her that her family was being
haunted by evil spirits -- specifically, the ghosts of every person
who'd ever been killed by a Winchester rifle. The medium went on to tell
her that in order to keep safe, she must build a house to confuse the
spirits that haunted her. To stay alive, she must build continuously; if
she stopped, she would die.
So she built. For the rest of her
life, Winchester held a seance every night to find out what the next
day's building plans would be, devoting her fortune to a 160-room
mansion with a labyrinth of halls, doors that opened into walls and
stairs that led nowhere. (Ghosts probably don't make the best
architects.)
1: The World Archipelago
One of the world's largest artificial
land masses (and a testament to pre-credit crunch hubris), the World
Archipelago sits about 2.5 miles (4 kilometers) off the coast of Dubai,
United Arab Emirates. Originally planned as 300 tiny private islands,
the archipelago was going to be a luxury paradise for the super rich,
who could buy their country or land mass of choice, each with a price
tag between $15 million and $45 million.
That was the dream, anyway. Though
developers claim that 70 percent of the islands have sold, early rumors
about celebrity tenants like Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie occupying the
Ethiopia island have turned out to be false. Many observers, examining
recent satellite footage, suspect that the sandy artificial islands are
beginning to sink back into the sea [source: Mclean].
No comments:
Post a Comment