Your Castle Real Estate
Call Us: 720-289-0260

7 Amazing Mirrored Buildings

mirror-1

1. French architecture studio Bona-Lemercier, artist Xavier Veilhan, and set designer Alexis Bertrand gave the Château de Rentilly a face-lift late last year, covering the 1960s country house in mirrored panels as part of Frac-Île-de-France, a regional program for the contemporary arts. Today the transformed residence, located some 30 minutes outside Paris in Bussy-Saint-Martin, serves as an exhibition space.

 

mirror-2

2. Lucid Stead, an installation by artist Phillip K. Smith III, rises in the desert of California’s Joshua Tree National Park like a mirage. In 2013 Smith mounted colored LED lights on an abandoned cabin and wrapped bands of highly polished metal around the structure. The installation reflects the arid terrain during the day and lights it up at night, evoking the surreal quality of a dream.

 

mirror-3

3. Reflective surfaces on this roadside café along a tourist route in Gifu, Japan, amplify the pinks, whites, and reds of nearby cherry trees when in bloom. Local firm Bandesign created the simple structure of the aptly named Mirrors café, which features two volumes centered on a planted, graveled garden.

 

mirror-4

4. British architect Farshid Moussavi brought her sleek, modernist sensibility to the Museum of Contemporary Art Cleveland (MOCA) with a faceted, gemlike design for the cultural institution’s new home. Standing four stories tall on a hexagonal base that comes to a squared-off top, the 34,000-square-foot structure is clad in black stainless steel that reflects the sky or the city lights, depending on the time of day.

 

mirror-5

5. Set in the scenic South Tyrolean Dolomites, a mountain range in northeastern Italy, the Mirror Houses are a pair of vacation-rental homes, designed by local architect Peter Pichler for a client who lives on-site. Clad in a UV-coated mirrored glass to prevent bird collisions, the units also capture sweeping easterly views of the nearby peaks.

 

mirror-6

6. Flatware isn’t the only thing glinting at the celebrated restaurant Steirereck in Vienna, where a recent expansion overseen by local firm PPAG Architects includes mirrored volumes with dramatic windows that slide open vertically.

 

mirror-7

7. For an Irish organization that supports children with developmental disabilities, architecture studio SATA (led by duo Kristoffer Norrinder and Mark Thompson) built the West Limerick Children’s Centre, which is clad in polished aluminum panels that afford occupants privacy.

(All content courtesy of Architectural Digest)

Archives