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6 Unique Long Weekend Travel Ideas for Architects

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The "architectural pilgrimage" is much more than just everyday tourism. Studying and admiring a building through text and images often creates a hunger in architects, thanks to the space between the limitations of 2D representation and the true experience of the building. Seeing a building in person that one has long loved from a distance can become something of a spiritual experience, and architects often plan vacations around favorite or important spaces. But too often, architects become transfixed by a need to visit the same dozen European cities that have come to make up the traveling architect's bucket list.

The list here shares some sites that may not have made your list just yet. Although somewhat less well known than the canonical cities, the architecture of these six cities is sure to hold its ground against the world's best. The locations here make ideal long weekend trips (depending of course on where you are traveling from), although it never hurts to have more than a few days to really become immersed in a city. We have selected a few must-see buildings from each location, but each has even more to offer than what you see here—so don't be afraid to explore!

AD Classics: Parish of the Holy Sacrifice / Leandro V. Locsin

Once dubbed a “flying saucer,” the Parish (Church) of the Holy Sacrifice is a Modernist expression which embodies the complex colonial history of the Philippines. Located on a university campus in Quezon City (formerly the capital of the nation, now a part of the Metro Manila National Capital Region), the domed concrete church was the product of Filipino architect Leandro Locsin, and of three other national artists who contributed to the building’s interior.[1] Locsin’s design, which combines elements of traditional Filipino architecture with postwar International aesthetics, is a potent symbol of a newly-independent nation following centuries of imperial control.

AD Classics: Parish of the Holy Sacrifice / Leandro V. Locsin - Religious Buildings, BenchAD Classics: Parish of the Holy Sacrifice / Leandro V. Locsin - Religious Buildings, Garden, ArchAD Classics: Parish of the Holy Sacrifice / Leandro V. Locsin - Religious BuildingsAD Classics: Parish of the Holy Sacrifice / Leandro V. Locsin - Religious BuildingsAD Classics: Parish of the Holy Sacrifice / Leandro V. Locsin - More Images+ 2

AD Classics: Kings Road House / Rudolf Schindler

Secluded behind a screen of tall bamboo shoots in West Hollywood, Los Angeles, the Kings Road House may be considered the first home ever built in the Modernist style.[1] Designed by Rudolf Schindler in 1921, the architect’s use of tilt-slab concrete construction (highly innovative at the time) and an informal studio layout, set it apart from its contemporaries; indeed, the design would set the tone for other Modernist residential design for decades.

AD Classics: Kings Road House / Rudolf Schindler - Houses, Garden, FacadeAD Classics: Kings Road House / Rudolf Schindler - Houses, Beam, TableAD Classics: Kings Road House / Rudolf Schindler - Houses, Garden, FacadeAD Classics: Kings Road House / Rudolf Schindler - Houses, Door, Beam, Table, BenchAD Classics: Kings Road House / Rudolf Schindler - More Images+ 5

Film Screening: The Oyler House: Richard Neutra’s Desert Retreat

Join us for another portrayal of one of America’s greatest architects: Richard Neutra. The Oyler House: Richard Neutra’s Desert Retreat explores how Neutra, considered the “father of California Modern architecture,” came to befriend this modest small-town family and how he was inspired by the site’s stunning desert setting, which Neutra compared with the grandness of the mystical Gobi Desert.

Artist Lucy William's Remarkable Illustrations of 20th Century Modernism

Neither photographs nor renders, all of the images in this post are actually the intricately handcrafted creations of British artist Lucy Williams, a skilled paper-cutter with an incredible amount of patience. Luckily for us architecture fiends, the stars of Williams’ mixed-media works are her 20th century modernist designs. Check out more of her amazing work after the break.

Artist Lucy William's Remarkable Illustrations of 20th Century Modernism - Image 1 of 4Artist Lucy William's Remarkable Illustrations of 20th Century Modernism - Image 2 of 4Artist Lucy William's Remarkable Illustrations of 20th Century Modernism - Image 3 of 4Artist Lucy William's Remarkable Illustrations of 20th Century Modernism - Image 4 of 4Artist Lucy William's Remarkable Illustrations of 20th Century Modernism - More Images