Notre DameNotre Dame HDR (Image Credit:
Delox - :: SK :: EU :: [Flickr])
Notre Dame at night (Image Credit:
Atoma [
wiki])
Interior HDR of Notre Dame (Image Credit:
mircea tudorache[Flickr]). [Update 5/9/07: Oops, not Notre Dame de Paris. It's Notre
Dame in Montreal. Still, I left it up because it is quite a beautiful
photo.]
Another interior picture of Notre Dame (Image Credit:
eugene [Flickr])
South Rose Window of Notre Dame (Image Credit:
robert_562 [Flickr])
Notre Dame de Paris[wiki] or simply Notre Dame is the quintessential example of Gothic
Architecture. Construction of the church started in 1163, when Bishop
Maurice de Sully decided to build a cathedral befitting his status as
the bishop of Paris. Notre Dame was completed some 200 years later -
one of the first European cathedrals to be built on a truly monumental
scale.
A particularly striking feature of Notre Dame are its Rose Windows -
massive (at the time they were the largest windows in the world)
circular stained glass windows that depict scenes from the bible.
Legend has it that when Notre Dame’s bell "Emmanuel" was recast in
the 1600s, women threw their gold jewelry into the molten metal to give
the bell its unique ring.
At the end of the 18th century, during the French Revolution, the
church was ransacked, its treasures plundered and many of the statues
of saints were beheaded. Notre Dame was dedicated to the Cult of Reason
and then the Cult of the Supreme Being - for a while, it was even used
as a barn!
In 1831, Notre Dame was made famous by Victor Hugo, who wrote "The
Hunchback of Notre Dame," about Quasimodo, a hunchback bell ringer who
fell in love with the Gypsy Esmeralda. The popularity of the book
spurred a gothic revival in France and helped the restoration of the
cathedral back to its original splendor.
HallgrímskirkjaHallgrímskirkja (Image Credit:
Andreas Tille [
wiki])
Hallgrímskirkja [wiki] (Icelandic for the Church of Hallgrímur), the tallest building in
[color:b079=#32527A ! important][color:b079=#32527A ! important]Iceland, is named after Hallgrímur Pétursson, a 17th century poet and clergyman.
The church’s unusual design (some had likened it to a rude hand
gesture) is supposed to represent volcanic columns rising between the
steeple tower - a reference to Iceland’s many volcanoes.
The iconic building looks like it belongs in J.R.R. Tolkien’s Lord
of the Rings. Indeed, many aspects of Tolkien’s work was inspired by
Norse mythologies and many of the fictional names in the book are Norse
in origin, although there is no reference that Hallgrímskirkja served
as a model any of the towers in the book.
Jubilee ChurchRichard Meier’s Jubilee Church (Image Credit:
alaninabox [Flickr])
Back view of the church (Image Credit:
alaninabox[Flickr])
You can’t miss the distinctive curved walls of
The Jubilee Church[wiki] in Tor Tre Teste, Rome. It was designed in 1996 by architect
Richard Meier, who said that the modern-styled church is the "the crown
jewel of the Vicariato di Roma’s (Archdiocese of Rome) Millennium
project." And right he was!
The curved walls not only serve the engineering purpose of
minimizing thermal peak loads in the interior space, they are also a
religious methapor:
Three circles of equal radius generate the profiles
of the three shells that, together with the spine-wall, make up the
body of the nave. While the three shells discretely imply the Holy
Trinity, the reflecting pool symbolizes water in the ritual of Baptism.
Notre Dame du HautNotre Dame du Haut or Ronchamp (Image Credit:
jimgrant [Flickr])
If there was a church modeled after Elvis’ hair, Le Corbusier’s
Notre Dame du Haut is it. The pilgrimate chapel is located in Ronchamp,
France. Indeed, it is more famous than the little town that most people
simply call the structure itself Ronchamp.
The cleverness of unusual design of the billowing concrete roof is
apparent when it rains: water pours off the slanted roof onto a
fountain, creating a dramatic waterfall.
Although quite different from his usual design, Notre Dame du Haut is considered one of Le Corbusier’s finest work.
The Crystal CathedralCrystal Cathedral (Image Credit:
richmanwisco [Flickr])
Interior of the Crystal Cathedral, notice the giant organ (Image Credit:
Wikipedia)
Another view of the interior (Image Credit:
Savannah Grandfather [Flickr])
The Crystal Cathedral [
official site |
wiki] is neither made of crystal nor is it a cathedral. Nevertheless, the Christian megachurch in the city of Orange
[color:b079=#32527A ! important][color:b079=#32527A ! important]Garden [color:b079=#32527A ! important]Grove, California, is one amazing church.
Built by "
The Hour of Power" televangelist Rev. Dr. Robert
H. Schuller (who started out with a "drive-in" church located in an
actual, old drive-in movie theater!) and his wife Arvella, and designed
by architect Philip Johnson, the church is made almost entirely out
glass with a web-like framework of steel.
From the outside, the Crystal Cathedral is shaped like a giant
four-pointed crystal star, with the main "cathedral" rising 12 stories
above the ground, featuring a mirror-like exterior composed of some
12,000 panes of glass. The view is even more amazing from the interior,
where the transparent glass lets in the surrounding view, sunlight and
the sky.
The Crystal Cathedral also has one of the largest pipe organs in the
world, called the Hazel Wright Pipe Organ, with 5 consoles controlling
270 ranks, 31 digital ranks, and more than 16,000 pipes!