In 1758, French architect
Charles-François Ribart proposed a three-level structure for the site where the Arc de Triomphe now stands: it’d take the form of a stone elephant, complete with rudimentary air conditioning, furniture that folds into the walls, and drainage that circulates out the trunk of L’elephant triomphal. Ribart’s zoomorphic architecture has a more contemporary cousin: in Margate, New Jersey, a 124-year-old elephant structure named Lucy is the last remaining sculpture of its kind and dubbed
“the world’s largest elephant.”
3 comments:
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Te citesc de multa vreme si voiam sa te felicit pentru toate lucrurile interesante si bizare pe care ni le descoperi :-). Ai un blog in mod categoric unic si fermecator !
Mersi lulu, imi face mare placere complimentul tau. Mai ales ca vine din partea ta. Am blogul tau la bookmarks.
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