Five interesting Facts related to Architecture
Being an architect is not just about drawing and building. It’s more than that. It involves a lot of other things, like science, technology, social skills, etc. This makes architecture really an interesting field and today, here are five interesting facts related to architecture.
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) handed out medals, 151 to be exact, across five creative arts categories including architecture, painting, sculpture, literature, and music from 1912 to 1948. The founder of the International Olympic Committee, Baron Pierre de Coubertin, considered art an essential part of the competition. All entries in all categories of the art competitions were required to draw links between art and sport. Both built work and speculative designs are allowed to enter the competition, as well as designs for town planning.
The first ever Olympic gold medal in architecture was won by Eugène-Edouard Monod and Alphonse Laverriére of Switzerland for their town planning project Building Plan of a Modern Stadium.
The Sims is extremely a popular video game in 2000. But before it became a life simulator, the original concept had the game working more like SimCity wherein players would design a house and autonomous characters would test the design’s success. But during the development, it was decided that the Sims were more interesting than the original concept and their once limited role was developed further.
The owners of the Empire State Building like to promote it as the most famous building in the world. But the real moneymaker of this 102-story skyscraper is not the 2.7 million square feet, 85 floors of commercial space. It is the view!
The Observation Deck attracts 4 million visitors a year.
In 2014, the building’s two observation decks generated $111 million, 40% of the total revenue while the office space leases netted just $104 million, 37% of total revenue.
When Godtfred Kirk Christiansen, the son of LEGO founder, tried to make a Lego model of the house he was building, it didn’t come out to scale because the Lego bricks have a 5:6 width to height ratio. This led to the creation of Modulex, Lego bricks for architects. Modulex is a much smaller brick that was based on perfect cubes. Their use was for planning boards, wall charts to organize projects.
The Half Way to Hell Club was an exclusive club organized by the men who fell from the Golden Gate Bridge construction in 1936 and 1937 and were saved by the safety nets. A total of 19 men were saved by these nets, which are suspended under the floor of the Bridge from end to end.
Architecture was once an Olympic Event
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) handed out medals, 151 to be exact, across five creative arts categories including architecture, painting, sculpture, literature, and music from 1912 to 1948. The founder of the International Olympic Committee, Baron Pierre de Coubertin, considered art an essential part of the competition. All entries in all categories of the art competitions were required to draw links between art and sport. Both built work and speculative designs are allowed to enter the competition, as well as designs for town planning.
The first ever Olympic gold medal in architecture was won by Eugène-Edouard Monod and Alphonse Laverriére of Switzerland for their town planning project Building Plan of a Modern Stadium.
https://99percentinvisible.org/ |
The Sims was originally designed as an architecture simulation alone.
The Sims is extremely a popular video game in 2000. But before it became a life simulator, the original concept had the game working more like SimCity wherein players would design a house and autonomous characters would test the design’s success. But during the development, it was decided that the Sims were more interesting than the original concept and their once limited role was developed further.
The Observation Decks of The Empire State Building generates more revenue than its entire Office Space.
The owners of the Empire State Building like to promote it as the most famous building in the world. But the real moneymaker of this 102-story skyscraper is not the 2.7 million square feet, 85 floors of commercial space. It is the view!
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In 2014, the building’s two observation decks generated $111 million, 40% of the total revenue while the office space leases netted just $104 million, 37% of total revenue.
LEGO Used to Make Special Bricks for Architects
When Godtfred Kirk Christiansen, the son of LEGO founder, tried to make a Lego model of the house he was building, it didn’t come out to scale because the Lego bricks have a 5:6 width to height ratio. This led to the creation of Modulex, Lego bricks for architects. Modulex is a much smaller brick that was based on perfect cubes. Their use was for planning boards, wall charts to organize projects.
http://minibricksmadness.com/ |
5 The Half-way-to-hell club
The Half Way to Hell Club was an exclusive club organized by the men who fell from the Golden Gate Bridge construction in 1936 and 1937 and were saved by the safety nets. A total of 19 men were saved by these nets, which are suspended under the floor of the Bridge from end to end.
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