Little boxes on the hillside aren’t for everyone. While some people  might be content with a cookie-cutter home in a bland suburban  neighborhood, others create truly one-of-a-kind homes with incredibly  imaginative shapes and materials. In addition to the 
70 amazing houses around the world  that we’ve featured before, here are 15 jaw-dropping examples of  architecture from a decaying wooden skyscraper in Russia to a  mushroom-shaped home in Cincinnati that looks like it was custom-made  for Dr. Seuss.
Bart Prince House – Albuquerque, New Mexico
 
 
Architect 
Bart Prince is  renowned for his incredibly creative approach to designing structures.  The homes he has created look nothing like the boxy houses you and I  live in; they’re quirky, they’re organic, and they’re most definitely  one-of-a-kind. Prince says his designs start from the inside out, and  that every home he builds has an idea behind it. Pictured are Prince’s  own home in Albuquerque (top) and the Seymour residence in Los Altos,  California.
Dar al Hajar – Yemen
 
 
This striking rock palace is not a hotel or a museum. It’s not even a primary residence. 
Dar al Hajar  was built as a ‘summer home’ by Imam Yahya in the 1930s, and it’s a  stunning example of rock-cut architecture. Standing at the base of this  imposing structure, you have to crane your neck to see the top. The  palace has since been restored so that visitors can buy a ticket and get  a breathtaking 360-degree view of the surrounding landscape.
Bubble House – Tourettes-sur-Loup, France
 
 
The ‘
bubble house’  of Tourrettes-sur-Loup, France, is only 35 years old and has yet to be  finished, but that hasn’t stopped the French ministry of culture from  listing it as a historic monument. Designed in the 70s by Hungarian  architect Antti Lovag for fashion designer Pierre Cardin, the bubble  house is futuristic yet organic, with lots of built-in furniture and  oval, convex windows. The design is meant to take optimal advantage of  the volcanic Côte d’Azur landscape, and its windows certainly provide a  beautiful view of the Mediterranean.
Wooden Skyscraper – Arkhangelsk, Russia
 
 
Nikolai Sutyagin, a former gangster, began building this ‘
wooden skyscraper’  in Arkhangelsk, Russia with the intention of it being only a two-story  building. But, a trip to see wooden houses in Japan and Norway convinced  him that he hadn’t used roof space efficiently enough, so he kept  building. “First I added three floors but then the house looked  ungainly, like a mushroom,” he said. “So I added another and it still  didn’t look right so I kept going. What you see today is a happy  accident.” The multimillionaire became a pauper after his possessions  were destroyed during a stint in prison, and the house is now decaying  around him, but he still lives in the bottom floor with his wife.
The Upside-Down House – Szymbark, Poland
 
Polish businessman and philanthropist Daniel Czapiewski built 
The Upside Down House  as a statement about the Communist era and the end of the world. It  took 114 days to build because the workers were so disoriented by the  angles of the walls. It certainly attracts its fair share of tourists to  the tiny village of Szymbark, who often become dizzy and ‘seasick’  after just a few moments inside.
Hang Nga Villa – Dalat, Vietnam
 
Looking like something out of a child’s fairytale gone wrong, the  bizarre-looking structure in Dalat, Vietnam was built by the daughter of  Ho Chi Minh’s right-hand man. Madame Hang Nga created the 
Hang Nga Villa  – now known simply as ‘Crazy House’ – to reflect her interest in art  and architecture. Made of concrete, the house now serves as a restaurant  and reception area for an adjacent French colonial-style hotel in a  jolting contrast in architectural styles. The inside is said to be even  stranger, with all the kitschy decor you can handle, including a giant  eagle with red Christmas light eyes, “for the Americans”.
Toilet-Shaped House – Suweon, South Korea
 
 
The world’s one and only 
toilet-shaped house  was built to mark the launch of the World Toilet Association, a  campaign for more sanitary restrooms worldwide. Sim Jae-Duck, nicknamed  “Mayor Toilet”, had the 4,508-square-foot concrete and glass structure  built in his native city of Suweon, South Korea. At the center of the  home is a glass-walled “showcase loo” that produces mist to make users  feel more secure. Sim, who was born into a toilet and has made clean  restrooms his life’s work, now lives in the home.
Eliphante & Hippodome – Cornville, Arizona
 
 
Called the ‘
Eliphante house’  for the look of its entrance, this sculptural home was created by  artist Michael Kahn and his wife Leda Livant with found materials over a  period of 28 years. Eliphante and several outbuildings occupy 3 acres  of land and incorporate rocks and scraps from construction sites. There  was never any kind of floor plan for Eliphante – it just sort of  evolved. Ms. Livant’s residence on the property is the ‘Hippodome’, a  mosaic-covered creation that looks like a hippo emerging from a lake.
Inversion House – Houston, Texas
 
When two old studio buildings owned by 
The Art League  in Houston were set to be demolished, they decided to take the  opportunity to turn them into a temporary art installation. Artists Dan  Havel and Dean Ruck sculpturally altered the two buildings, peeling off  the exterior siding of the front building to simulate the appearance of a  funnel-like vortex. The opening was actually a tiny hallway (only kids  could fit through it) that passed through the two structures and emptied  out into an adjacent courtyard.
Shoe House -  South Africa
 
The ‘
shoe house’  of South Africa is the work of artist and hotelier Ron Van Zyl, who  built it for his wife Yvonne in 1990. The shoe houses a little museum of  sorts, showcasing Van Zyl’s wood carvings. The shoe is part of a  complex that includes an eight-chalet guest house, camp site,  restaurant, pool and bar.
Mushroom House – Cincinnati, Ohio
 
Architect Terry Brown created this much-maligned ‘
mushroom house’,  an unusual piece of architecture situated in a rather upscale area of  Cincinnati. Brown’s architectural style developed when he began  experimenting with materials like wood, colored glass, shell, ceramics  and various metals to create irregular shapes that mimic those found in  nature.  A professor of architecture and interior design at the  University of Cincinnati, Brown frequently had to defend the unique  design of the house against complaints by neighbors before passing away  in 2008.
Floating House – Ukraine
 
An optical illusion? Trick of Photoshop? Nobody really seems to know much about this supposed ‘
floating barn’ which was reportedly located in Ukraine and may or may not still be standing. Cantilevered barns do exist – mostly in the 
Appalachian region of the United States – but usually aren’t quite this dramatic looking. Real or fake, it’s certainly pretty striking.
Space House – Signal Mountain, Tennessee
 
The ‘
Space House’  in Signal Mountain, Tennessee was built by Curtis King and his sons in  the 1970s and is quite a draw for curiosity seekers in the area, who  have been filing by and taking photos for decades. Six concrete support  pillars look like landing gear beneath the main part of the building.  The Space House sold on the auction block in March 2008 but the buyer  defaulted, so it’s being offered for “whatever the public is willing to  pay” on December 14th.
Crooked House – Sopot, Poland
 
From Poland comes another interesting building, the ‘
Crooked House’.  The design was inspired by the drawings of Polish artists Jan Marcin  Szancer and Per Dahlberg, which have a whimsical and Dali-esque feel.  It’s not actually a house – it’s part of a shopping complex. But, it’s  very cool all the same, with its surreal angles and blue-green glass.
Hundertwasser Haus – Vienna, Austria
 
 
Austrian artist Friedensreich Regentag Dunkelbunt Hundertwasser may  not be well known across most of the world, but anyone who has visited  Vienna knows of his iconic creation, the 
Hundertwasser Haus.   It’s an apartment complex characterized by patchwork paint, undulating  floors, the incorporation of vegetation and a façade with seemingly no  rhyme or reason to its structure. Hundertwasser reportedly took no  payment for designing it, considering it a public service to prevent  something ugly going up in its place.
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