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rotating house1

With the improvement in technology and architecture, many interesting and pioneering house designs have come into limelight in the past. But, what I bring to you this time is something extraordinary… something that will take innovation to a different level altogether. Here is a house that rotates to follow the sun so that more than usual light enters the rooms. Placed on a turntable, the structure is a home to Luke and Debbie Everingham of Wingham, New South Wales.
rotating house2

The ingeniously designed house is octagonal in shape offering more space than usual while the central core of plumbings and electrical fittings allows it to rotate. This unique rotating mechanism takes help of two small electric engines for the power requirement and a touch-screen panel in the living area is used to control it. The couple has spent a whooping £400,000 to design and construct their beautiful rotating house built on 24-meter diameter with 360-degree verandah. I would love to own a house like this one. How about you?

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  • The Recycled Newspaper House

    Newspaper House at Blackie Arts Centre - front view
    Image: MC =)

    The Newspaper House is participatory art, community project and a statement on the environment all rolled up into one – literally! With the most recent incarnation boasting walls, floors and shingles of thousands upon thousands of rolled up old newspapers, Sumer Erek’s installation is a thought-provoking take on the place we call home.

    The theme of ‘house’ is a common thread for Erek, who is a refugee of Cyprus and moved to Britain in 1970. From Erek’s website:

    “A house is a building, it is a roof over one’s head, and it is also a repository for nationhood, identity and belonging. By creating a house, I don’t only dwell upon my existence in it, but also build a ‘home’ for art.”

    Newspaper House at Gillett Square
    Image: sarflondondunc

    Commissioned by Creative City, the first Newspaper House appeared in Gillett Square, London, last March. The public was invited to stop by, rolled up London dailies in hand, to help the artist build the house. By the end of the live demonstration period, over 85,000 papers had been put to a good second use.

    But why did Erek use newspaper as his material of choice for this house? He explains:

    “The material is a key, fundamental part of the project. It works in three ways. ‘News’ defines our era, ‘information technology’ is the dominating part of our existence. ‘Paper’ makes a direct relationship with our environment, and ‘house’ ties all the things together.”

    Newspaper House close-up
    Image: MC =)

    When the installation showed up at the Blackie Arts Centre for Liverpool’s 5th Biennial in September, participants placed even more papers into the house. By the time the exhibition ended, the house had been stuffed with over 100,000 recycled papers.

    Newspaper House at Blackie Arts Centre - side-view
    Image: MC =)

    You might think that with that many papers, construction is complete, but Erek hopes the opposite is true; he wants this house to be a continual ‘work-in-progress’, just like life:

    “I would leave it unfinished if I could for people to be able to participate forever and ever.”

    Filled with millions of messages and built on the sweat of the community, the Newspaper House makes a strong statement about the information age in which we live, the possibilities that exist when we work together and just how much meaning a house can hold.

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