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Jumat, Mei 24, 2013
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The Heliodome, a bioclimatic
solar house is seen in Cosswiller in the Alsacian countryside near
Strasbourg, Eastern France, August 4, 2011. The house is designed as a
giant three-dimensional sundial, set on a fixed angle in relationship to
the sun's movements to provide shade during the summer months, keeping
the inside temperature cool, and during Fall, Winter and Spring sunlight
enters the large windows as the sun's position is lower in the sky,
thus warming the living space. REUTERS/Vincent Kessler (FRANCE -
Tags: ENERGY ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY) - RTR2PLUX
A Bulgarian woman looks inside
her wine vat home in Socuellamos, central Spain, October 2, 2007. About
40 people living in this makeshift camp. At night they sleep in 20 or so
overturned wine vats -- car-sized concrete barrels dumped on the
outskirts of Socuellamos, a farming community in the hot and dusty
region of Castilla-La Mancha. Picture taken October 2, 2007.
A house partially built in the shape of an airplane in Abuja, Nigeria. REUTERS/Goran Tomasevic
A man walks past Huaiyuan Lou,
one of the best protected Fujian Tulou built in the year 1909, in
Nanjing county, Fujian province, November 19, 2012. The earthen Tulou
buildings, which set up enclosed walls to defend against outside
dangers, have served the Hakka people since 11th century, when their
ancestors settled down at the south west of Fujian province to escape
from rule of Jin ethnic. In 2008, 46 Fujian Tulou were written into the
list of World Heritage by United Nations educational, Scientific and
Cultural Organization (UNESCO) for not only its outstanding historical
and cultural value but also its excellence in size and building
techniques. Picture taken November 19, 2012. REUTERS/Stringer (CHINA -
Tags: SOCIETY) - RTR3AN60
Girls play on a trampoline near a
home blasted from a rock wall at the Rockland Ranch community outside
Moab, Utah, November 2, 2012. The "Rock" as it is referred to by the
approximately 100 people living there in about 15 families, was founded
about 35 years ago on a sandstone formation near Canyonlands National
Park. Polygamy was a part of the teachings of The Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints and was brought to Utah by faithful Mormons in the
late 1840s. The mainstream Mormon church abandoned the practice in
1890, but an estimated 37,000 Mormon fundamentalists continue the
practice today and believe plural marriage brings exaltation in heaven.
Picture taken November 2, 2012. REUTERS/Jim Urquhart (UNITED STATES -
Tags: RELIGION SOCIETY ENVIRONMENT TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY) - RTR3AEYA
People wait in line to visit an
upside-down house built at the Centre of Education and Promotion of the
Region in the village of Szymbark, northern Poland July 31, 2007. The
upside-down house created by Daniel Czapiewski is supposed to describe
the times of the former communist era and the present times in which we
live. REUTERS/Peter Andrews
Benito Hernandez stands outside
his home near San Jose de Las Piedras in Mexico's northern state of
Coahuila January 16, 2013. For over 30 years, Hernandez, his wife Santa
Martha de la Cruz Villarreal and their family have lived in an odd
sun-dried brick home with a huge 40 metre (131 feet) diameter rock used
as a roof. The dwelling is found close to the town of San Jose de
Piedras, a remote community located in the arid desert of Coahuila, some
80 km (49 miles) from the border with Texas. Picture taken January 16,
2013. REUTERS/Daniel Becerril (MEXICO - Tags: SOCIETY TPX IMAGES OF
THE DAY) - RTR3CRUP
Brazilian artists Tiago Primo
(top) and his brother Gabriel hang out at a wall in Rio de Janeiro July
8, 2009. The bizarre vertical "house" built on a climbing wall by
Brazilian artists has been drawing the attention of thousands who walk
by the installation in Rio de Janeiro's downtown neighbourhood.
REUTERS/Bruno Domingos (BRAZIL SPORT SOCIETY) FOR BEST QUALITY IMAGE
ALSO SEE: GM1E59F1QI101 - RTR25GTH
A woman stands inside the
bathroom of a house, which was built upside down by Polish architects
Irek Glowacki and Marek Rozhanski, in the western Austrian village of
Terfens May 5, 2012. The project is meant to serve as a new tourist
attraction in the area, and is now open for public viewing. Picture
taken May 5, 2012. REUTERS/Dominic Ebenbichler (AUSTRIA - Tags: SOCIETY
TRAVEL) - RTR31O4K
Hong Kong architect Gary Chang
rests in a hammock inside his 32-square-metre apartment in Hong Kong
January 28, 2010. After three decades in the same boxy dwelling Chang
grew up in, he has come up with an innovative answer to the increasingly
cramped lives of many urban dwellers -- the science fiction-like
"domestic transformer". Picture taken January 28, 2010. REUTERS/Bobby
Yip (CHINA - Tags: BUSINESS CONSTRUCTION SOCIETY IMAGES OF THE DAY) -
RTR29YLD
Bohumil Lhota, a 73-year-old
builder, stands in front of the house which he built in Velke Hamry,
near the town of Jablonec nad Nisou, 100km (62 miles) north-east from
Prague, August 7, 2012. Lhota conceptualized the idea to create the
unique house and started to build it in 1981, building it close to
nature to benefit from the cooler ground temperature. Lhota's house,
which is built in 2002, is able to move up and down and rotate on its
sides, which allows him to adjust to his preferred window view.
REUTERS/Petr Josek (CZECH REPUBLIC - Tags: BUSINESS CONSTRUCTION SOCIETY
SCIENCE TECHNOLOGY) - RTR36EA2
Bohumil Lhota, a 73-year-old
builder, turns the house he built in Velke Hamry, near the town of
Jablonec nad Nisou, 100km (62 miles) north-east from Prague, August 7,
2012. Lhota conceptualized the idea to create the unique house and
started to build it in 1981, building it close to nature to benefit from
the cooler ground temperature. Lhota's house, which is built in 2002,
is able to move up and down and rotate on its sides, which allows him to
adjust to his preferred window view. REUTERS/Petr Josek (CZECH REPUBLIC
- Tags: BUSINESS CONSTRUCTION SOCIETY SCIENCE TECHNOLOGY) - RTR36EBU
A man takes a picture of the one
of the world's narrowest buildings, built as an artistic installation
wedged between two existing buildings, in Warsaw October 23, 2012. A
building just 92 cm (36 inches) wide as its narrowest point was opened
in Warsaw on October 20 as an artistic installation that will be a home
from home for Israeli writer Edgar Keret. Keret, who told news channel
TVN24 he would live there when he visits Warsaw twice a year, said he
conceived the project as a kind of memorial to his parents' family who
died in the World War Two Holocaust. Picture taken October 23, 2012. To
match story POLAND-NARROW/ REUTERS/Kacper Pempel (POLAND - Tags:
SOCIETY) - RTR39M9N
Tourists pose with an
upside-down house in Tamparuli in Malaysia's state of Sabah on Borneo
island September 17, 2012. Built for tourist attraction, the traditional
Sabah village house was built with everyday households items like
computer, refrigerator, sofa sets, dining table and beds - but all items
are upside down. REUTERS/Bazuki Muhammad (MALAYSIA - Tags: SOCIETY
TRAVEL) - RTR3832O
Residents climb into their
houses atop gravestones inside a cemetery in Manila October 21, 2008.
Many poor urban dwellers make their homes in public cemeteries,
converting abandoned tombs and mausoleums into houses. The local
government plan to move out the hundreds of people who live in the
cemeteries around the city before the upcoming All Souls' Day, a day of
remembrance for the dead when Catholics visit the graves of their
relatives. REUTERS/Cheryl Ravelo (PHILIPPINES) - RTX9REV
Miguel Restrepo (L), 62, and
wife Maria Garcia are seen from their sewer home in Medellin December 4,
2012. The former drug addict has been living in an abandoned sewer with
his wife and dog Blackie for 22 years. Their home, which is fitted with
a kitchen, a fan, tv, a chair and a bed, is a 6 square meter wide and
1.4 meters high tunnel that leaks when it rains, and requires a manhole
cover. REUTERS/Albeiro Lopera (COLOMBIA - Tags: SOCIETY POVERTY) -
RTR3B7PH
Thierry Atta sweeps the
courtyard of his house built in the shape of a crocodile in Ivory
Coast's capital Abidjan, September 11, 2008. Atta was an apprentice of
the artist Moussa Kalo who designed and built the house but died two
months ago. REUTERS/Thierry Gouegnon (IVORY COAST) - RTX8O6X
General view of a tree-house in
Le Pian Medoc, southwestern France, April 24, 2009. France's Natura
Cabana company rents various cabins perched in the trees for ecological
holidays. REUTERS/Regis Duvignau (FRANCE ENVIRONMENT TRAVEL) - RTXEBXP
An octagonal, three-bedroom,
family home built on a rotating platform near Wingham, about 250km
(155miles) north east of Sydney, is shown in this undated handout
picture. The house, which cost about A$700,000 ($641,000) to build, can
complete a full rotation in about 30 minutes according to it's owners.
To match Reuters Life! Story AUSTRALIA-HOUSE/ REUTERS/Handout
(AUSTRALIA SOCIETY) FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY. NOT FOR SALE FOR MARKETING
OR ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS - RTXRQ0E
A house built on a rock on the
river Drina is seen near the western Serbian town of Bajina Basta, about
160km (99 miles) from the capital Belgrade May 22, 2013. The house was
built in 1968 by a group of young men who decided that the rock on the
river was an ideal place for a tiny shelter, according to the house's
co-owner, who was among those involved in its construction.
REUTERS/Marko Djurica (SERBIA - Tags: ENVIRONMENT SOCIETY TRAVEL TPX
IMAGES OF THE DAY) - RTXZWGT
Sumber : http://id.berita.yahoo.com/foto/berbagai-rumah-rumah-unik-di-dunia-slideshow/a-house-built-on-a-rock-on-the-river-drina-is-seen-near-the-western-serbian-town-of-bajina-basta-photo--770002993.html
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3 komentar:
keren keren gan foto nya ,, andai saja di negara kita ada yg seperti itu
rumahnya unik2 banget....jadi pengen punya rumah yg unik
Terima kasih telah berbagi info tentang rumah
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