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Reflections at Keppel Bay in Singapore is a 99 year leasehold luxury waterfront residential complex on approx 84,0000 m² of land with 750m of shoreline and was completed by 2011. The complex has 1129 units
You seem to be able to find everywhere some good 'ol russian constructivism. Even in a remote and seemingly irrelevant place as Crete
Vladimir Tatlin’s Monument to the Third International never built in his days, reconstructed and installed in the Royal Academy’s Annenberg Courtyard
Moscow. Club of Moscow Institute of Railway Engineers (MIIT), architect S.Gerolsky (1929-1930). Novosuschevsky lane 6/1
SPB German-building Reformed Church rebuilt in the House of culture and technology of communications, L.Grinberg, 1929
The former coking plant of the Zollverein colliery outside Essen, Ruhr. The plant is part of the overall 1920's architectural concept by Fritz Schupp and Martin Kremmer, although built later in the 1950's. The 192 chamber oven-line is a full 800 meters long.
This appears as the real-world manifestation of the visions of Iakov Chernikov...
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Sesión de fotos con Jorge Luengo.
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uraloblsovnarkhoz dormitory, yekaterinburg, 1930-1933, architect: moisei ginzburg
„The former dormitory only has two hallways running through the whole building on its third and sixth floors. These two hallways provided access to every single generic two-storey F-type cell within the dorm. Motivated by creative search as much as by communal housing ideas and a striving for cost-efficiency (strangely enough, even multi-storey solutions may prove rational), constructivists also aimed to improve sanitary conditions. Despite certain drawbacks, the multi-storey design with large windows and high ceilings in living rooms and lower ceilings and smaller windows in bedrooms enabled increased floor area and more spacious cells. Today these F-cells, promptly dubbed “effas” by the common folk, accommodate offices and workshops owned by painters union members. Most of the interiors were lost, but several of the F cells remained almost untouched.”