
This ingenious preschool is so adorable that it makes any work seem like play. Artist Tomi Ungerer and architect Ayla Suzan Yöndel designed it so that children enter through the cat’s mouth, where the classrooms and cafeteria are located, and exit into the backyard via a slippery dip for a tail.
There are lots of interesting and cool buildings around the world but today I’m going to share photos of some animal shaped buildings.
This is called zoomorphic architecture.
I like the cat shaped kindergarten building (above photo) the most, it is so cute and during an emergency we could slide down the tail of the cat to exit the building.
Below are buildings in shapes of Giant Koala, Lucy The Elephant, Turtle in a Storm trooper outfit and lot’s more.
Please click the photos for larger images:
- Observation Tower, St. Georges de Windsor, Quebec About two hours east of Montreal, on the drive toward the Maine border, is a roadside attraction worth a detour. Local artist Josée Perreault designed an observation tower from boulders painted to look like a cow reclining in a field. Upon climbing the squat tower, travelers are rewarded with a view of real-life cows reclining similarly in green pastures.
- Gagudju Crocodile Holiday Inn, Kakadu National Park, Australia Upon arrival, you don’t immediately appreciate how true this hotel is to its name: the low-lying, curved corridors could simply be a way to give each room a unique view of the landscape, rich with kangaroos and other wildlife. A bird’s-eye view, however, reveals that the entire hotel is shaped like one of the region’s most feared residents, the crocodile, and that every guest has been swallowed whole.
- Lucy the Elephant, Margate, NJ Lucy was the first example of zoomorphic architecture in America, with the patent to prove it. Built in 1882 to sell New Jersey real estate, Lucy then found use as an office, a bar, and a summer home. The patented 65-foot-tall tin and wood construction was meant to be one of a pack, but giant elephants didn’t take off the way the architect intended. To this day, Lucy stands proudly alone.
- The Giant Koala, Dadswells Bridge, Australia A koala looks cute as a button, unless you’re looking at the Giant Koala at Dadswells Bridge near the Grampians National Park. This monstrous 49-foot marsupial appears ready to devour whole any passing motorists. The Aussie landmark was built in 1988 by sculptor Ben Van Zetten and recently sold for around half a million dollars.
- Ladprao Tuk Chang, Bangkok You’d have to have a thick hide to work in the 335-foot-tall Elephant Tower, easily a contender for one of the world’s ugliest buildings. Architect Ong-ard Satrabhandhu’s creation is certainly one of the most famous in Bangkok, thanks to three towers—the pachyderm’s thick legs and trunk.
- Wildlife Wonderland Park, Gippsland, Australia Many zoomorphic buildings are based on majestic animals. Not so the Wildlife Wonderland Park, which pays tribute to the largest worms on the planet. Some have measured nine feet in length and are often mistaken for snakes. The museum is now closed but the building still stands in Gippsland (about two hours from Melbourne). If you put your ear to the ground, you might hear those worms moving—they’re that big.
- Burj Qatar, Doha French architect Jean Nouvel may have simply intended to create yet another sleek tower for the Doha skyline. But thanks to a conical shape, a pointed aerial spike, and a textured white skin exterior—a metal brise-soleil of Islamic design—his Burj Qatar (pictured on the right) strongly resembles the snout of the rare whale species known as the giant narwhal.
- Vila Olímpica, Barcelona In the late 1980s, many architects were obsessed with Grecian columns. Frank Gehry felt that postmodernists weren’t looking back far enough. He surmised that we are all descended from fish and, for the 1992 Olympics, set about creating a structure near the Hotel Arts that would reflect our 300-million-year-old ancestor. The metal canopy, measuring roughly 114 by 177 feet, is supported by a wood and steel space frame and was the first of several fish-inspired buildings Gehry created.
- Native American Cultural Center, Niagara Falls, NY It’s no accident that Niagara’s Native American Cultural Center looks like a turtle wearing a storm trooper outfit. Turtles are an important part of Iroquois legends, and the now-vacant center also happened to be built in 1981, at the height of the Star Wars frenzy.
- Big Sheep Wool Gallery and Big Dog Information Center, Tirau, New Zealand New Zealand is infamous for having more sheep than human residents, so it comes as no surprise that in Tirau (population less than 800) the most notable building resembles a sheep. Local craftsman Steven Clothier used corrugated iron to construct the museum—and the adjoining tourist information center, which is shaped like a dog, naturally—in 1998 as a way to boost tourism.
- Universum Science Center, Bremen, Germany A giant silver clamshell and a giant chrome sperm whale rising from the reflecting pool are two popular interpretations of Thomas Klumpp’s design. Inside the Universum Science Center, opened in 2000, are interactive exhibits also meant to provoke and engage the visitor: you can, for example, feel sound waves vibrate throughout your entire body.
- Zayed National Museum, Abu Dhabi The London-based architecture firm Foster + Partners chose the form and flight of a falcon as the inspiration for the Zayed National Museum, slated to open in 2016. (Sheikh Zayed, after whom the museum is named, is a keen falconer.) The building’s steel feathers, which act as natural cooling towers, will soar as high as 410 feet from a reflecting pool.