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3 Best Designed Buildings in the World From Top Architects - the best architecture in the world


3 Best Designed Buildings in the World From Top Architects





1.Gardens by the Bay

Singapore
Wilkinson Eyre Architects, Grant Associates       designed buildings

Singapore

Side-by-side parabolic conservatories of glass and steel anchor this cutting-edge botanical garden in Singapore’s booming Marina Bay district. Named the 2012 building of the year by the World Architecture Festival, the Wilkinson Eyre–designed structures replicate distinct climates—one dry, the other humid—allowing for diverse attractions like a flower meadow and a misty mountain forest.


2.The Shard

London
Renzo Piano Building Workshop
2012
London   Renzo Piano Building Workshop 2012    Familiar to watchers of last summers Olympic Games this 72story...


 Familiar to watchers of last summer’s Olympic Games, this 72-story skyscraper—the tallest in Western Europe—has transformed the British capital’s skyline, rising arrestingly on the southern banks of the Thames. Inspired by church steeples, the structure comprises eight angled glass façades that variously reflect the surrounding city and sky and offer crystal-clear glimpses inside. Intended by Piano to act as a vertical village, the multifunctional building includes offices, apartments, restaurants, and a hotel—all crowned by a recently opened observation platform, which affords stunning views up to 40 miles in every direction.


 3.Perot Museum of Nature and Science

Dallas
Morphosis Architects
2012
Dallas   Morphosis Architects 2012    Architect Thom Mayne the Pritzker Prizewinning founder of Morphosis is famous for...
Architect Thom Mayne, the Pritzker Prize–winning founder of Morphosis, is famous for breaking the mold, and his latest building is no exception. Sheathed in panels of textured concrete, it consists of a five-story cube, fractured at one corner and set atop a sweeping plinth planted with Texas grasses. Slashed across the cube’s exterior is a dramatic glass-enclosed escalator, which whisks visitors to the top-floor entrance to the exhibits.







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