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13 Buildings You Should Visit When You're in Tokyo, Japan

Discover the 13 significant buildings you should visit the next time you’re in Tokyo.

New-york , United-states , Japan , Nagoya , Aichi , Tokyo , Paris , France-general- , France , United-kingdom , Meiji-mura , Akita

26 Historic Buildings to Visit the Next Time You're in Paris


© Corbis
Paris is known today as the City of Lights. Thousands of years ago it was called Midwater-Dwelling—which is how its Latin name, Lutetia, can be translated. This list covers just a few of the most notable structures built in Paris over all of these years.
Earlier versions of the descriptions of these buildings first appeared in 1001 Buildings You Must See Before You Die
, edited by Mark Irving (2016). Writers’ names appear in parentheses.
Notre-Dame de Paris
Notre-Dame de Paris has been the cathedral of the city of Paris since the Middle Ages. It is a Gothic exemplar of a radical change in the Romanesque tradition of construction, both in terms of naturalistic decoration and revolutionary engineering techniques. In particular, via a framework of flying buttresses, external arched struts receive the lateral thrust of high vaults and provide sufficient strength and rigidity to allow the use of relatively slender supports in the main arcade. The cathedral stands on the Île de la Cité, an island in the middle of the River Seine, on a site previously occupied by Paris’s first Christian church, the Basilica of Saint-Étienne, as well as an earlier Gallo-Roman temple to Jupiter, and the original Notre-Dame, built by Childebert I, the king of the Franks, in 528. Maurice de Sully, the bishop of Paris, began construction in 1163 during the reign of King Louis VII, and building continued until 1330. The spire was erected in the 1800s during a renovation by Eugène-Emmanuel Viollet-le-Duc, though it was destroyed by fire in 2019.

United-states , Les-halles , Rhôalpes , France , Paris , France-general , New-delhi , Delhi , India , Canada , London , City-of

19 Places That Exemplify Cool Swiss Style


© fotoember-iStock Editorial/Getty Images
From the Yellow House to the Kirchner Museum, these buildings offer a vision of what Swiss architectural style means.
Earlier versions of the descriptions of these buildings first appeared in 1001 Buildings You Must See Before You Die
, edited by Mark Irving (2016). Writers’ names appear in parentheses.
Yellow House
Valerio Olgiati’s redesign of a 19th-century building in Flims constitutes a radical transformation of its character. Placed directly by the curving roadside, the Yellow House enjoys maximum impact on the cultural landscape of a town otherwise hidden from immediate view. This potential is fulfilled by the striking presence of the restored building: a timeless, deeply textured surface bearing the marks of construction, painted overall in white to emerge as a gloriously abstract volume. Its name—the Yellow House—is the last vestige of its past embodiment as a bourgeois town house with Neoclassical stylistic pretensions. Olgiati’s father, himself an architect, donated the old building to Flims on condition that it was renovated to become an exhibition space, painted white, and its covering replaced with a vernacular stone slab roof. Olgiati’s design radicalizes these stipulations. Externally the building was stripped of ornaments, the entrance rotated sideways, and all unnecessary openings filled in to create a seemingly neutral grid of windows. Internally the building (completed in 1999) was gutted and rebuilt in whitewashed timber, with the eccentric internal structure organizing the open plan into four unequal areas according to the ceiling beams’ orientation. On the top floor, the dramatic encounter between this structure and the central roof geometry results in a “broken” pillar, symbolizing the power of challenging academic assumptions. (Irina Davidovici)

Norway , Stabio , Switzerland-general , Switzerland , Munich , Bayern , Germany , Corippo , Aarau , Aargau , Riva-san-vitale , Zurich

Portugal Is Home to These 17 Inspiring Buildings


© Pedro Salaverría/Shutterstock.com
Legend holds that Lisbon, Portugal’s capital, was founded by the ancient Greek hero Odysseus. Although these 17 buildings might not be quite as fantastical as that claim, they will delight you just the same.
Earlier versions of the descriptions of these buildings first appeared in 1001 Buildings You Must See Before You Die
, edited by Mark Irving (2016). Writers’ names appear in parentheses.
Monastery of Santa Maria da Vitória
, Commissioned by King John I, the monastery at Batalha (Portuguese for “battle”) was built to commemorate the victory of the Portuguese over the Spanish in 1385. Of the master builders involved it was the English architect Master Huguet who made the biggest impact, being instrumental in turning the monastery into the most impressive example of Gothic architecture in the entire Iberian region. He raised the nave and altered the proportions of the church in a style reminiscent of the English Early Perpendicular. The Founders’ Chapel in particular is a monument to his genius. The star vault of the cupola, which spans 62 feet (19 m), was a daring achievement and a highly innovative structure for its time. It was completed in 1434.

Matosinhos , Vila-real , Portugal , Lisbon , Lisboa , Eschwege , Hessen , Germany , Ilhavo , Aveiro , Porto , Sintra