Water Tower Architecture in Darfur, Sudan by H3AR

Watertower Skyscraper An African Architecture Watertower Skyscraper In Africa
Watertower Skyscraper Interior View Watertower Skyscraper Wireframe Model Watertower Skyscraper Wireframe View Watertower Skyscraper Zap Wide View

Latest Entries

Masuzake Glowing Alcohol Shots Masuzake Glowing Alcohol Shots

Last year's Bronze award Koizumi International Lighting Design Award winner should be a cool thing to have if you're fond …

Silestone Slab Vases by Form Us With Love Silestone Slab Vases by Form Us With Love

Swedish studio Form Us With Love and Cosentino introduce a project exploring the Silestone's quartz surface. Silestone Slab Vases project …

Easy On - Attachable External Hard Drive by Diacre Nicolas Easy On - Attachable External Hard Drive by Diacre Nicolas

The common situations for ordinary external harddrive is the space we should provide to put the storage media when it …

Track Swimming Speed with My Pace Goggle Track Swimming Speed with My Pace Goggle

Last year's Sparks Award entry should be a good solution for swimmers to track how fast they flow through the …

Origo 3D Printer - Personal 3D Printing for Home Use Origo 3D Printer - Personal 3D Printing for Home Use

Just like printing the ordinary paper, put the papers in the feeder and give some click from computer to start …

Furniture for Bikes - Modern Bike Racks by Quarterre Furniture for Bikes - Modern Bike Racks by Quarterre

Straight and boring should be the most proper words to describe the ordinary bike-racks. That's why people tend to put …

advertisements

Enclosed as a contestant in the Evolo Magazine's 2010 Skyscraper Competition, this Polish architect and design firm H3AR creation features a multipurpose building to pump water from an underground lake (31,000 m2) in the Darfur region of Sudan.

Baobab, the African savanna, was the inspiration of the water tower skyscraper which are also comprises a treatment plant, hospital, school and a food storage center to trigger economical development while bridging the cultural differences of the three different religions and languages in the turbulent African nation.

169 People Love This! 23 People Hate This!
blog comments powered by Disqus