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6. And one of my absolute favourites: The Fujian Tulou, Chinese fortified earth buildings (12th–20th cent.), mostly circular or rectangular in configuration, five stories high & capable of housing up to 800 people
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10. Goju-no-to, an anti-seismic, five-storied pagoda erected in 1407 in Nara, mixing Japanese and Chinese architecture. In case of earthquakes, the five floors oscillate in opposite phases, preventing the structure from breaking apart...
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12. One of the oldest types of houses still widely used all over the planet—and a frequent setting in my intimate spatial reveries—is the adaptive stilt architecture. Here's the abandoned village of Ukivok on King Island in the Bering Sea, west of Alaska (photos 1892 and 1978)
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14. The fortified granary, Ksar Ouled Soltane, located in the district of Tataouine, southern Tunisia. Ksar means 'granary' and the name Tataouine, well... you know what I mean
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19. Indian stepwells, also known regionally as 'vav', 'baori', 'baoli', and 'bawadi', are structures that, in the first place, helped harvest water but were also used as subterranean temples and pleasure retreats [Photographs by Edward Burtynsky and Victoria Lautman]
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21. The ancient wooden synagogues in Poland Here is the Zabłudów synagogue as captured in 1895 by art collector and patron Mathias Bersohn for his ethnographic work on wooden synagogues in Poland ('Some Remarks on Ancient Wooden Synagogues in Poland', 1900)
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