That moment when you decide to open the #Lego #Architecture Studio box…
More you might like
Fragments of Light Hélène Binet
“Hélène Binet has emerged as one of the leading architectural photographers in the world. Every time Hélène Binet takes a photograph, she exposes architecture’s achievements, strength, pathos and fragility.” ~ Daniel Libeskind
Architexture Cedric Lefebvre
"This series tends to demonstrate that well thought out architecture can be self-sufficient.It can have a meaningful existence without its creator or users being in the frame; the building has enough of personality to make people completely redundant."
Patrimonio Artístico Español Fernando Higueras
Fernando de Higueras Díaz (1930 – January 30, 2008) was a Spanish architect. He was one of the most famous architects in the world during the 1970s. His work is recognized worldwide as an original and interesting union of constructivist, rationalist and organic architecture. He died in Madrid, aged 77 years.
a-fellow-wallflower asked:
archatlas answered:
Museums, so many, in all shapes and styles!
Some of my recent favorites:

Milwaukee Art Museum by Santiago Calatrava

Perot Museum of Nature and Science by Morphosis

Dong Yugan uses brick to form sculptural surfaces and playful structures at Red Brick Art Museum
This museum in Beijing takes its name from the red brick used by architect Dong Yugan to create spaces that are dramatically illuminated by skylights, perforations and narrow windows incorporated into its homogenous masonry surfaces. Red Brick Art Museum is a folk-based, non-profit art museum showcasing Chinese and world art, which was founded by collectors Yan Shijie and Cao Mei, and opened in 2014. The museum is located in the Chinese capital’s Chaoyang district, northeast of the city centre. It covers a total area of 20,000 square metres, with almost 10,000 square metres of exhibition space.
Manica Lunga Restoration Michele De Lucchi
Brought to its final configuration by Giovanni Buora at the end of the fifteenth century, the Long Wing is an extraordinary space. In the course of time it has housed monks’ cells, army accommodation, public dormitories, and classrooms. Adapted to contain part of the Cini Foundation’s History of Art library, this hanging gallery is 128 metres long and occupies the north west portion of the ex-Benedictine monastery. Both sides of its wide corridor were formerly occupied by fifty-six individual cells. The restoration project, resulting from a competition held in 2005, clads the walls of the main hall with a double row of open metal shelving capable of containing about 100,000 catalogued volumes in 1400 straight metres of shelves.
