Valencia’s rites of spring will leave you deafened, blinded and dumbstruck

city of arts and sciences
[photo courtesy Spanish-Living.com]

Meet L’Hemisfèric, one of the five attractions that make up the dazzling, ultramodern City of Arts and Sciences (known as Ciutat de les Arts i les Ciències in Catalan, or Ciudad de las Artes y las Ciencias in Spanish) in Valencia, Spain. This “city,” completed in 2004 by renowned Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava, includes an opera house, a garden, a science museum and an oceanographic park. The cherry on top of this sensory overload sundae is, of course, L’Hemisfèric: an entertainment complex boasting the trifecta of IMAX theater, laserium and planetarium. And if you’re into creepy nicknames, feel free to call it the “Eye of Knowledge.” (According to Spanish-Living.com, “The eye even blinks with the aid of a steel and glass shutter operated by hydraulic lifts.”)

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[photos courtesy Hipocondriaca, . Bambo]

As it turns out, right now would be an excellent time to make a trip to Valencia, as the whole town is gearing up for Las Fallas. Held on March 15-19, this annual celebration welcomes spring in the very best way: with FIRE and NOISE. During the festivities, celebrants construct enormous firecracker-stuffed puppets (called ninots), usually grotesque or satirical figures, which get paraded around the streets and placed in tableaus (fallas). Every day at 2pm, pyrotechnicians try to out-muscle each other in La Mascletá, a fireworks competition that focuses on sheer bone-rattling percussive power instead of sparkly lights. (They refer to the finale as the terremoto, meaning “earthquake.”) As you might expect, the whole thing culminates in an epic conflagration: Nit del Foc (”The Night of Fire”). According to Valencia City Guide:

All Fallas burn all over the city the following night (including the winner of the competition) in a tremendous spectacle of fire and joy. Valencia is at that moment like Nero’s Rome, a city in flames.

And indeed, so it would seem:

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[photos courtesy vanguardista, Fabio Gava]

For more dazzling Las Fallas snapshots from Flickr, go here. [Thanks to Neatorama for inspiring for this post!]

Posted by shaula on March 13th, 2008

Photo of the Day: Nautilus House

Nautilus House

Looking like something straight out of a Barbarella DVD extra, this swingin’ cephalapad (oof) belongs to some lucky design-minded couple in Mexico City. Conceived by Arquitectura Organica’s Javier Senosiain (the mastermind behind such jaw-dropping works of organic design as the Quetzalcoatl Nest ), the house boasts spiral staircases, indoor gardens and a knockout mountain view. Its shell is made of ferrocement, an earthquake-resistant material consisting of cement, sand and water slathered on a wire frame. If you crave more Nautilus eye candy, check out Senosiain’s site. [via BoingBoing; photo courtesy DVICE.com]

Posted by shaula on February 29th, 2008