A famous destination around the world, a city filled with glamorous tango halls, cafes at every corner, exceptional wine and the best steak in the world.
With more than 100 springs erupting at an altitude of more than 4,000 metres in the Andes Mountains, these are the highest geysers in the world.
A spiraled apartment building hosting as many trees as human occupants. It is a loud testament to Hundertwasser's fear of straight lines.
If you don't want to relax in your own home, and want to be thrown off balance all the time, you should definitely try living in one of this apartments.
A block of apartments designed to imitate the rhythmic structure of a honeycomb is something worth to consider visiting.
Casa Mila or La Pedrera, as it is often called, is Gaudi's second most popular building. It is also his last work before dedicating his life to the construction of the Sagrada Familia.
Some people choose to live in them, others just visit them. This are the strangest, most creative apartment blocks from around the world.
This building in Copenhagen, Denmark is an apartment block made up of V and M shapes. The blocks are formed to allow the same daylight, privacy and views for all apartments.
This strange architectural experiment, wasting living space, should definitely be in your "to see" list when visiting Rotterdam.
This very interesting and unusual building, in the centre of Almere, will attract the looks of anyone passing by.
The Wave is made out of 190 million year old sand dunes that have turned to red rock, on the border of Arizona and Utah.
Carved from the Navajo sandstone over the course of countless millenniums, this is one of the most breathtaking places on earth.
This 274 metres long and 8 metres wide Henderson Waves is the highest pedestrian bridge in Singapore.
This Polynesian island in the southeastern Pacific Ocean is famous for its 887 extant monumental statues, called moai, created by the early Rapanui people.
Azure Window is a natural archway in the island of Gozo, Malta and it is one of the natural wonders of Europe.
The Parâng mountain group is a subgroup of mountains in the Southern Carpathians and it is the second highest in Romania, after Fagaras Mountains.