1. Leaf House – Angra dos Reis, Brazil
The roof of this architectural masterpiece looks like a giant
 flower with six petals, each of which covers a different section of the
 home. A curved swimming pool works its way through the house before 
culminating as a small pond stocked with fish and vegetation in the backyard.
 Architect firm Mareines + Patalano designed the interior of this house 
to be free of hallways, providing ample space for the beach winds to 
blow through. “The idea of hallways stems from production homebuilding, 
which has so dominated our environment and marketplace that people see 
them as a standard,” says Peter Koliopoulos, an architect with 26 years 
of experience and founder of Arizona-based Circle West Architects. “That
 is really unfortunate because great spaces are developed in a way that 
this home has been developed.”
This post features 18 strangest homes around the world whom can also be considered as most unique houses by their unique architecture designs.
This octagonal house can rotate a full 360 degrees with the touch of a 
few buttons. A rotating drive consisting of 32 outrigger wheels and 
powered by two 500-watt electric motors is used to spin the house on 
demand, a process that can take anywhere from 30 minutes to two hours. Geothermal heating
 keeps the house at a steady 71.6 degrees, and the electrical wiring and
 plumbing are centralized so that they don’t interfere with the house’s 
ability to move. The entire cost of the project was on par with the cost
 of a nonrotating house of comparable size.
3. The Nautilus – Mexico City
This seashell-shaped home was completed in 2006. The stone steps running
 along the shrubs lead to the front door, which blends into the mosaic 
façade. Architect Javier Sensonian practices what he calls “bio-architecture,” a style that has led him to design buildings
 shaped like snakes, whales and several other creatures. The Nautilus 
was created to imitate the cephalopod’s shell, and its cavernous 
interior is filled with vegetation and small trees. “It’s not common 
that you would see a home of this design ascetic,” architect Peter 
Koliopoulos says. “However, it’s very enlightening and something that we
 can all learn from.”
4. Montesilo – Woodland, Utah
Gigaplex Architects created this unusual and award-winning weekend home 
in 2006. This house was created by joining two corrugated grain silos, 
the largest of which has a diameter of 27 feet. “This is an approach 
that is akin to sustainability,”
 architect Peter Koliopoulos says. “This silo home is a lot of fun and 
is a neat way to look at an existing product in a creative way.” With a 
modest size of 1,800 square feet, the designers saved space by placing 
the beds in cubbyholes that are cut into walls, each equipped with its 
own mini entertainment systems.
5. Steel House – Lubbock, Texas
Artist and architect Robert Bruno has been at work on his steel home since 1974. Bruno has said that he wants the shape
 of the structure to be somewhere between animal and machine. Most homes
 have an initial skeleton that is built upon throughout the construction
 process, but Bruno has approached this home like a sculpture, building 
it on the fly and making constant modifications. Architect Peter 
Koliopoulos points out that the four legs and cantilevered design 
minimize the structure’s impact by not disrupting the earth as much as a
 typical home design would have. Estimated weight of the structure is 
110 tons.
6. Subterra Castle – Central Kansas
Ed Pedin purchased this defunct missile silo in 1983, but it took about a
 decade of renovations to make it a livable home. Pumping out more than 8
 feet of rainwater that accumulated while the site was inactive was one 
of many makeover challenges. Not many homeowners can say their house 
once stored a four-megaton nuclear warhead. What was once the launch 
control station, Pedin says, is now a cozy living space. Transforming a 
nuclear launch pad into a residential castle has lots of benefits, such 
as an 11,000-square-foot garage and a 1,700-foot-long airstrip, which 
came in particularly useful when Pedin was experimenting with 
do-it-yourself ultralight aircraft. Since the completion of Subterra 
Castle, Pedin has become a mogul of sorts, creating 20th Century Castles
 LLC, a real-estate firm specializing in converting missile silos.
7. Sliding House – Suffolk, England
This traditional farmhouse was created by London-based dRRM Architects 
with one major mechanical surprise. The 20-ton outer shell of this home 
can be retracted in six minutes, revealing a second, mostly glass, inner
 shell. Power comes from four 12-volt batteries that run a motor that 
pulls small wheels, built into the timber shell, along an old set of 
railroad tracks. This feature gives the owners control over how the 
house interacts with the surrounding environment, allowing them to make 
adjustments as seasonal temperatures and light cycles change.
8. The Mushroom House – Cincinnati
This was the home and studio of Terry Brown, an architect who died in 
2008. Brown, who was a professor at the University of Cincinnati’s 
College of Design, Architecture, Art and Planning, built the home 
between 1992 and 2006, bringing in students, on occasion, to contribute 
to the project. Undulating woodwork,
 bizarre shapes and an array of materials come together to form a 
cohesive, albeit zany, structure. “This isn’t something you draw up and 
say, ‘Go build it,’” architect Peter Koliopoulos says. “When you’re 
doing something this custom, you’re fabricating and designing 
simultaneously in the field.” The fantastical design doesn’t stop at the
 front door. The interior is adorned with angular cabinets and 
multicolored rock walls. “This is highly personal and artistic … it’s 
just a different way of living and thinking,” he says.
9. Bubble Castle – Theoule, France
Designer Antti Lovag long rebelled against traditional structures, and 
the Bubble Castle is a perfect example of his radical approach to 
rethinking the built environment. The bulbous compound sits on the 
southwestern coast of France. There are no sharp angles or straight 
lines in this unusual design. Lovag unified the home with its natural 
surrounding by bringing outdoor elements inside, including palm trees 
and a waterfall. “This home is incorporating these outdoor rock 
croppings in a way that links them to the overall bubble concept,” 
architect Peter Koliopoulos says. The house has already been deemed a 
historic monument by France’s Ministry of Culture, despite the fact that
 it’s not even 50 years old.
10. Klein Bottle House – Mornington Peninsula, Australia
This beach house, which was designed by the firm McBride Charles Ryan, was named the world’s best home at the 2009 World Architecture
 Festival awards. A Klein Bottle is a complex mathematical concept that 
involves folding a cylinder into itself in order to create an unusual, 
spiraling form. This notion was the driving force behind the Klein 
Bottle House, which appears to bring the interior out to the exterior 
and vice versa. A steel frame was layered with cement and sheet metal, 
while the architects created a courtyard at the center of the house to 
allow wind to pass through easily.
11. The Crooked House of Windsor – Windsor, England
Construction of this house dates back to 1592, but it didn’t acquire its
 trademark slant until 1718, when the structure was rebuilt using 
unseasoned green oak. Sure it’s slanted, but what really makes the house
 stand out is that its basement had a secret passage to Windsor Castle, 
one of the official residences of the U.K.’s royal family. The passage 
was allegedly used for trysts between King Charles and a mistress, as 
well as for running supplies to the castle’s kitchen. The passageway has since been sealed off. Through the centuries, the crooked house has been home to various businesses, including a brewery and jewelry shop. It is now a restaurant.
12. Amory Lovins’ House – Old Snowmass, Colo.
Amory Lovins, co-founder of the Rocky Mountain Institute and a Popular 
Mechanics Breakthrough Award winner, is no stranger to eco-friendly 
initiatives, and this combined home and work space is a testament to his
 ingenuity. The residential section of the building costs a measly $5 
per month to power, thanks to the structure’s passive solar design, 
16-inch-thick walls and krypton-filled windows. Lovins doesn’t rely on a
 boiler or furnace to heat the space; instead, two wood-burning stoves 
take care of the job. But most impressive, perhaps, is the greenhouse, 
which has churned out nearly 30 crops of bananas, as well as guavas, 
pineapples and other tropical fruit rarely associated with the Rocky 
Mountains.
13. Marathon Coach Custom Motorhome
Marathon Coach is to motor homes what Bentley is to automobiles: pure 
luxury. A brand-new, fully loaded model can go for as much as $2.2 
million, though used models can be picked up for less than $200,000. A 
custom order takes about 180 days to build. For starters, each Marathon 
Coach has a minimum of five high-definition TVs, ranging from 7 to 50 
inches in size. A 515-horsepower engine powers this house on wheels, and
 the stainless-steel chassis is covered under a 1.5 million-mile 
warranty. Other wild options include pullout barbecues, electric 
fireplaces, a second bathroom and a wine chiller. The major drawback is 
that the vehicle gets only about seven miles to eight mpg.
14. Lake Palace – Udaipur, India
This relic of architectural days past dates back to 1746, when Maharana 
Jagat Singh II commissioned it. Nowadays, it is a high-end hotel, 
outfitted with modern amenities and luxury suites. The ornate palace 
sits on a 4-acre slab of land in the middle of Lake Pichola. Its 
exterior is made from white marble, which architect Peter Koliopoulos 
says isn’t exactly compatible with the natural surroundings. “You always
 want to develop design concepts that leverage, reinforce and highlight 
the natural features of the area. The scale and form of this building, 
though, are pretty obtuse,” he says. “Incorporating the marble just 
extends the oddity of the design approach.”
15. Chameleon House – Northport, Mich.
Anderson Architecture completed this home in 2006 atop a hill 
overlooking a cherry orchard and Lake Michigan. The striking structure 
took less than eight weeks to build thanks to the use of prefabricated 
materials. The steel frame of this house is wrapped in corrugated, 
translucent acrylic slats, allowing it to take on and reflect the 
changing colors of the landscape, like a chameleon blending into its 
habitat. Because it sits on a steep hill, the entrance of the home leads
 to the third floor, letting residents descend to the bedrooms or walk 
up to the living area.
16. Free Spirit Sphere – Qualicum Beach, British Columbia
This hanging room is the brainchild of Tom and Rosy Chudleigh, a 
Canadian couple who build these spherical living spaces for customers 
around the world. The Chudleighs have two spheres hanging on their 
property: the Eve model, which has a diameter of 9 feet, and the Eryn 
model, which has a diameter of 10.5 feet. The spheres can be ordered 
fully loaded, equipped with plumbing, electricity and insulation. An 
average sphere weighs around 1,100 pounds, and it takes a crew of three 
about a day to install. The Chudleighs say that the structures gently 
rock in the wind, a nice thought — depending on just how windy it is.
17. 222 House – Pembrokeshire, Wales
This house, located within a national park on the southwestern coast of 
Wales, is sunk into the ground so the landscape remains nearly 
uninterrupted by its presence. It was completed in 1994 by design firm 
Future Systems. With turf-covered roofing and siding, the 222 House fits
 seamlessly into the surrounding field. “This is exemplary sustainable 
design, where you are integrating the home into the site and minimizing 
the visual impact,” architect Peter Koliopoulos says. The bathroom and 
kitchen are prefabricated pods that were lifted into the site during 
construction. An added benefit of the design concept is the geothermal 
insulation, which shields the home from wind and cuts energy 
consumption.
18. The Winchester Mystery House – San Jose, Calif.
Work on this home began in 1884 and lasted through 1922, when owner and 
designer Sarah Winchester, heiress of the Winchester rifle company, 
died. At one point, the property sprawled over 161 acres, but has since 
been reduced to just 4 acres. Winchester was never a huge fan of 
blueprints. Instead, she preferred an on-the-fly design strategy, 
sketching rooms and architectural oddities whenever inspiration struck. 
Notable features include 40 bedrooms, three elevators, 47 fireplaces, 17
 chimneys and 467 doorways. The house originally had seven levels, but 
an earthquake in 1906 collapsed three of them. Tourists now flock to the
 house to see its many quirks, including a staircase that leads straight
 to the ceiling.
 
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