Amazing Gravity-Defying Buildings

There was a time when skyscrapers seemed unbelievable -as though building something that tall was just asking for a major collapse. These days, skyscrapers may be old news, but there still are plenty of architects out there trying to defy gravity and human perception.

Over on Homes and Hues, we collected some of the craziest, most vertigo-inducing buildings we could find to challenge your senses. From tilted structures to cantilevered creations that appear to hover off the ground, it's amazing what modern materials can allow us to acomplish.

Be sure to check out all 7 crazy structures at Homes and Hues: 7 Amazing Gravity-Defying Buildings


Comments (0)

I think this is a fake. If it was really the pattern causing the illusion I should be able to just look at one corner quadrant and see the same effect. But the warping appears only in the center of the picture.
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Spurious, the pattern is caused by the vertical or horizontal placement of the black and white checker tiles between the larger purple ones. If you look closely you'll see that while most places on the board alternate how the checker tiles are aligned, there's a row and column down the middle that has two aligned sets, which is what creates the illusion of misalignment radiating from the center.
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To defend SpuriousGeorge, it is a bit of a cheat not to alternate those two lines. But that's what the illusion is about. Kinda spiffy.
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It's a clever illusion, no doubt. Although the lines are technically straight, and perpendicular to each other, this portion of the illusion is not perfectly perpendicular to the monitor (maybe it got scanned crooked), as it is has been rotated counter-clockwise by 1/2 of a degree (no, seriously). That rotation, however, shouldn't adversely impact the illusion - that the straight lines seem to be bent/curved.

The real truth about this specific illusion... the illusion is slightly crooked, but the lines are straight. Very cool.

I was bored, so created this animated gif of the illusion, with and without the pivotal pieces.
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Thanks Pedro, that is much clearer. And I see now why the warping only appears from the center, and not the rest of the picture is because of the repeated diamonds in the middle.
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