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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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Amazing structures originally built for world's fairs
8/24/2013 2:18:33 AM

14 amazing structures originally built for world's fairs

Some of the world’s most enduring landmarks (perhaps you’ve heard of the Eiffel Tower?) were originally constructed for a World's Fair. We look back at 14 of our favorites. | By Condé Nast Traveler

[Note: this is only a selection. You may view the complete gallery HERE.]

The Crystal Palace
1851 Great Exhibition; London, England

Though it's the only building on this list that's no longer around, Hyde Park's Crystal Palace — constructed for the 1851 Great Exhibition out of nearly a million square feet of glass — is important because of the impression it made and the impact it had on the architecture of subsequent world's fairs... (more here) (Photo: courtesy Crystal Palace Foundation)


Eiffel Tower
1889 Exposition Universelle; Paris, France


One of the most famous landmarks in the world was, at the time of its construction for the 1889 Exposition Universelle, also the tallest building on earth, at 1,063 feet high. Before its opening, plans for the structure were met with scorn. Notable artists including Guy de Maupassant and Paris Opera architect Charles Garnier even signed a letter in Le Temps that called it a "dizzyingly ridiculous tower dominating Paris." Still, Gustave Eiffel, an engineer by trade, persevered, and on the day of its opening he climbed the 1,710 stairs to unfurl the French flag at the summit himself... (Photo: courtesy tour-eiffel.fr)


The Palace of Fine Arts
1893 World’s Columbian Exposition; Chicago


Many cities repurposed their World's Fair buildings into museums, including San Francisco (the Palace of Fine Arts Theatre), Saint Louis (the Saint Louis Art Museum) and Philadelphia (the Please Touch Museum). Chicago's Greek-inspired Palace of Fine Arts, one of the few remaining buildings from the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition, has housed two museums: The Field Museum of Natural History and the Museum of Science and Industry, which has been there since it opened in 1933. (Photo: courtesy Chicago History Museum)

The Buckminster Fuller Dome
1967 World's Fair; Montreal, Canada


This 200-foot-high geodesic dome was designed by Buckminster Fuller (the inventor of the shape) to house the U.S. Pavilion. This was his most complicated yet: Three-dimensional shapes called icosahedrons, which are 20-sided figures composed of sturdy equilateral triangles, were required to support such a large structure. The U.S. donated the dome to Canada in 1967, and now it houses the Environment Canada biosphere in Montreal. (Photo: CCWE / Expo67 Foundation / Coll. Georges de Passillé)


Canada Place
Expo '86; Vancouver, Canada


Looking like a cross between a sailboat and the Sydney Opera House, Canada Place serves many purposes. Not only was it the home of the Canada Pavilion during the Expo '86, it’s also now a convention center, a hotel, an office building, a cruise-ship terminal, a retail center and a promenade (and its "sails" light up at night). Last year, the site hosted a festival for Canada Day that featured 30 bands on three stages. (Photo: Canada Place)

The Millennium Dome
2000 Millennium Festival; London, England

Located right on the prime meridian and in the home of Greenwich Mean Time, London's Millennium Dome fittingly resembles a clock, with 12 yellow masts sticking up out of a gleaming white "face". (Project director Mike Davies was into astronomy, so the number 12 also references the months of the year and constellations in the zodiac.) (more here)(Photo: Sergio Pitamitz/CORBIS)

The China Art Palace
2010 Expo; Shanghai, China

Like other World's Fair structures, the iconic China pavilion of the 2010 Expo has taken on a second life as an art museum — a really, really big one. The China Art Palace has more than 160,000 square meters of exhibition space covering five floors. One of the Expo highlights, "Along the River During Qingming Festival," a digitally animated rendering of an ancient scroll, is still on exhibit within. (Photo: courtesy Knippers Helbig).


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Roger Macdivitt .

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RE: Amazing structures originally built for world's fairs
8/25/2013 10:07:52 AM

What a great theme for a forum.

This is both interesting and inspiring.

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: Amazing structures originally built for world's fairs
8/26/2013 2:55:04 AM
Quote:

What a great theme for a forum.

This is both interesting and inspiring.


Thanks for the kind visit and your feedback, Roger.

Miguel

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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