Yes, there has been more awareness about these old statues - in England as well.
Unfortunately, removing a statue does what? It reduces the visually interesting stuff in civic spaces. Completely unrealistic, but I would like to see the controversy about statues fixed like this: for every slave-owner mounted on a horse, the authorities should commission and build an opposing statue on the theme of "the triumph of the common man". That would give a moral balance to civic spaces, plus a history lesson, which could serve as a brief respite from what city centres are usually devoted to: cars and commerce. ___________________________________________ Thanks for posting the context of your remark, Tristan. As you might imagine, I would never have got the reference myself! Unluckily for you, you have inspired me to post a child's guide to the wonders of gothic:- |
https://gulfbusiness.com/wp-content/...1233733212.jpg
The above is the new Museum of the future, opening at the end of the month in Dubai as the latest "architectural wonder" which has people jizzing their pants but I find it rather garish. :/ |
Wow! That is certainly eye-catching isn't it? I don't like it either: it's too big and too dramatic. It also breaks a cardinal rule of architecture, and of nature: form follows function. That's a good rule, imo, because it means that what you see indicates what it does: a leaf is typically thin and broad to catch sunlight, a trunk is a solid cylinder to act as a support.
Who can guess what is going on inside this building? ...but I suspect there are a lot of awkward, under-used spaces, especially in the bit on the left-hand side that is catching the sunlight in your photo. |
I'd love to see the floor plans for that.
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No secret that I personally prefer more traditional architecture, so I'm posting a link to some photos of beautiful European castles:- https://edition.cnn.com/style/articl...les/index.html My favourite: photo #3 in the short slide-show |
Walp... ask and ye shall receive:
https://lusive.com/lusivelife/post/d....AZgWlxOO.dpbs From just a quick perusal, it appears the design was visualized using Trimbles Tekla structural analysis software. https://www.tekla.com/us/resources/r...-engineering-2 Thats some engineering flex right there. |
Thanks Plankton! I think those two links together have made me change my mind about this building. Hats off to any team that can create something so complex.
http://lusive.com/images/uploads/content/Killa0.png From this viewpoint it looks a lot better, I think. Did you notice that among the skyscrapers on the right, there's one that turns into Big Ben at the top? Oi, Dubai! 'ands off me cultural icon!! |
Looks like thats Al Yaqoub Tower, inspired by the original:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al_Yaqoub_Tower |
That angle is much better Lisna because you can see one of my favorite towers in the UAE just behind it, the Emirates towers, which are the exact opposite of that musem in terms of style and elegance...
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