
Towers that seem alive, twisting and  dancing with each other. An alien-like blob that looks like a UFO
 after  dark. A building that’s literally a blur. All of these and more are  homes, hotels, museums and cathedrals around the world created without  any sense of restraint or desire to fit in. To say these bizarre  buildings are unconventional would be putting it mildly – they’re almost  too strange to be real.The Tianzi Hotel, China

(image via: damn cool pics)
Could this be the weirdest-looking hotel in  the world? Ten stories tall, the Tianzi Hotel in Hebei Province, China  holds the world record for the world’s “biggest image building”. The  three figures that make up its hulking shape are Fu Lu Shou – good  fortune, prosperity and longevity.
Nautilus House, Mexico

(image via: dvice)
Fanciful and strange, the shell-shaped  Nautilus House in Mexico City hardly looks like a home. But even though  the inside is just as unconventional as the outside – with carpets of  plants, stone walkways and entirely curvilinear surfaces – a couple and  their young children actually live there.
Atomium, Belgium

(images via: o palsson)
The aptly named Atomium building consists  of nine interconnected steel spheres that together form the atomic  crystal structure of iron (magnified 165 million times, natch). Designed  for the 1958 World Fair in Brussels, this 335-foot-tall wonder contains  exhibition spaces, a restaurant and a dormitory for visiting  schoolchildren with escalators connecting the spheres.
Cathedral of Brasilia, Brazil

(image via: wikimedia commons)
From the outside, this bizarre building  hardly looks like a cathedral – but that’s exactly what it is, and once  you step inside the beautiful and colorful stained glass affirms its  identity. The Cathedral of Brasilia is made up of 16 curving concrete  columns with glass in between them, and a glass ceiling.
Errante Guest House, Chile

(image via: beauty addict)
The word ‘unusual’ doesn’t quite cut it  when describing this extremely odd building, which hardly looks  habitable with its sloping surfaces. Details on this structure are  fuzzy, but it’s certainly an eye-catcher.
Kunsthaus, Austria

(image via: annia 316)
Called the “Friendly Alien” by its creators, Peter Cook and Colin Fournier, the Kunsthaus Graz  is an art museum in Graz, Austria built in 2003 for the European  Capital of Culture celebrations. The blob-like structure definitely  deviates from the typical minimalist style of modern art museums and at  night, when it’s lit up, it looks unlike anything else in the world.
Blur Building, Switzerland

(image via: diller & scofidio)
From afar, it looks like little more than a  strangely earthbound cloud. But get a little closer and you realize  that it’s actually a building shrouded in man-made fog. The Blur  Building in Switzerland is a suspended platform that sprays tiny drops  of lake water into the air from 31,400 jets, creating the mist effect.  The building was created for the sixth annual Swiss National Exhibition  and can host up to 400 visitors at a time.
Tenerife Concert Hall, Spain

(image via: extra noise)
Who else but Santiago Calatrava  could have created this sculptural work of art, the Tenerife Concert  Hall in the Canary Islands of Spain? The dramatic curve of its sweeping  roof gives it an entirely unique silhouette, especially when viewed from  the side. Made from concrete, the auditorium connects the city of  Tenerife with the ocean.
Kettle House, Texas

(image via: bizarre records)
Made of steel sometime in the 1950s, the ‘Kettle House’ in Texas  has attracted many a curious tourist. The unusual choice in materials  and shape was probably influenced by the owner’s previous occupation –  building storage tanks for oil companies.
Casa Batllo, Spain

(images via: bert k, laurea)
One of Barcelona’s treasured buildings designed by the famed Antoni Gaudi, Casa Batllo  is known locally as the ‘House of Bones’ for its flowing, skeletal  stonework. With small balconies that resemble the faces of lizards and  an exterior texture reminiscent of scales, perhaps it could more  accurately be called reptilian.
Olympic Stadium, Quebec

(images via: nicholas nova, rene erhardt)
Built for the 1976 Summer Olympics, the  Olympic Stadium in Montreal is now used as a stadium for the city’s  professional baseball and football teams. Its centerpiece is the  Pisa-like leaning tower, the tallest inclined tower in the world at  nearly 575 feet.
Guggenheim Museum, Spain

(image via: dalbera)
Considered one of architect Frank Gehry’s greatest works, the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain  is a mass of random curves made from titanium, which resemble fish  scales. Gehry says “the randomness of the curves are designed to catch  the light”, and that they do, with a brilliant shimmer that reflects the  sparkling water of the Nervion River.
Kansas City Library, Missouri

(image via: marnox1)
What could be more appropriate for a  library design than making it look like books on a shelf? The Kansas  City Library in Missouri features a façade of book spines, including  Tolkein’s Lord of the Rings and Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet, that  fence in the parking areas which sandwich the historic building.
Federation Square, Australia

(image via: rob young)
Taking up an entire city block, Federation  Square is an imposing collection of architecture, but there’s more than  enough whimsy to balance out its sheer size. Reminiscent of Gehry’s  Guggenheim Bilbao – albeit far more geometric – this building’s design  was the winner of an international competition to create a new civic  precinct in the center of Melbourne, Australia.
Dancing Building, Prague

(image via: ahisgett)
Hmm, what super-famous architect could have  been involved in this building? That’s right, Frank Gehry had a hand in  the design of the Nationale-Nederlanden building  in downtown Prague, Czech Republic, which was co-designed by Vlado  Miluni?. The building’s two main structures resemble a pair of dancers,  hence its nickname – but it’s also known as ‘Drunk House’.
Cubic Houses, Netherlands

(image via: darksidex)
After many Rotterdam buildings were  destroyed in WWII, architects had a bit of fun redesigning many areas in  new, modern and sometimes surprising styles. The Cubic Houses  are one example, designed in the 1980s by architect Blom. They’re  basically standard houses turned on a 45 degree angle, each resting on a  hexagonal pylon. The cubes are so fascinating that one owner decided to  buy and manage a “show cube” to keep tourists from disturbing the rest  of the residents.