© Shutterstock
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Teapot Dome Service Station
- A former gas station built in the shape of a teapot located in Zillah, Washington state, this quirky example of novelty architecture was constructed in 1922. (Photo: Wikimedia/CC BY-SA 4.0)
© Wikimedia/Creative Commons
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High-Heel Wedding Church
- Famous for its use as a wedding venue, this novelty church (which has no religious function) is located in Budai Township, Chiayi County, Taiwan. (Photo: Wikimedia/CC BY-SA 4.0)
© Wikimedia/Creative Commons
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Ice-cream can
- An ice-cream booth modeled as a giant milk churn set off a busy southern Californian highway, photographed in the 1950s.
© Getty Images
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Wigwam Motel
- Wigwam Motels, also known as the "Wigwam Villages," is a motel chain in the United States built during the 1930s and 1940s. Two of the motels are located on Route 66, in Holbrook Arizona, and Rialto, California. (Photo: Flickr/CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)
© Flickr/Creative Commons
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Root beer stand
- This root beer stand in Kansas City, Missouri is built in the likeness of a Native American chief.
© Getty Images
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Basket-shaped building
- The huge, seven-story basket-shaped Newark, New Jersey headquarters of the Longaberger handcrafted baskets company.
© Getty Images
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Big Duck
- Constructed in the 1930s to help its owner's duck farming business, the Big Duck was originally used as a shop to sell ducks and duck eggs. It nests in Flanders on Long Island, in New York.
© Shutterstock
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Coffeepot-shaped drive-in
- A coffeepot-shaped drive-in restaurant near Los Angeles, pictured in 1939.
© Getty Images
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Elephant building
- Bangkok's Elephant Building consists of three towers—the back and front legs of an elephant, and a trunk complete with eyes and tusks. It's one of the strangest examples of modern architecture in Thailand.
© Shutterstock
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Barkies sandwich shop
- Silent film actress Esther Ralston (1902–1994) stops for a snack at Barkies, a sandwich shop built in the form of a huge puppy in Hollywood.
© Getty Images
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BMW Headquarters
- The BMW Tower in Munich, Germany is built to mimic the shape of four cylinders in a car engine, with the museum (foreground) representing a cylinder head. (Photo: Wikimedia/CC BY-SA 3.0)
© Wikimedia/Creative Commons
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Chili bowl eatery
- An early 1940s eatery shaped like a chili bowl serving burgers, spaghetti, and other dishes to hungry passers-by near Los Angeles.
© Getty Images
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Haines Shoe House
- The Haines Shoe House was built in 1948 as an advertising gimmick by "Colonel" Mahlon N. Haines, the self-styled shoe wizard of York, Pennsylvania. It still stands today.
© Getty Images
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Guitar-shaped hotel
- The Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Resort in South Florida is the world's first guitar-shaped accommodation.
© Shutterstock
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Brooks Catsup Bottle water tower
- Built in 1949 and trademarked "The World's Largest Catsup Bottle," the lofty landmark still stands south of Collinsville, in Illinois. (Photo: Flickr/CC BY-SA 2.0)
© Flickr/Creative Commons
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Spittelau incinerator
- The Spittelau incinerator in Vienna, Austria is famous for its contemporary and colorful architecture representing a symbiosis of technology, ecology, and art.
© Shutterstock
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Zep Diner
- Two young women enter the Zep Diner, a diner shaped like a Zeppelin airship, in 1930's Los Angeles..
© Getty Images
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Giant kiwifruit
- The enormous Kiwi360 stands as an attraction at the Te Puke Kiwifruit Center in New Zealand. One side of the Kiwi360 is green, and the other side is yellow. (Photo: Wikimedia/CC BY 3.0)
© Wikimedia/Creative Commons
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Louisville Slugger Museum & Factory
- The world's largest baseball bat is an architectural showpiece of the Louisville Slugger Museum & Factory in Louisville, Kentucky.
© Getty Images
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Shell Service Station
- Located in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, this bright and breezy service station, shaped as a giant scallop shell, has stood since 1930. (Photo: Wikimedia/CC BY-SA 3.0)
© Wikimedia/Creative Commons
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Big Pineapple
- Inaugurated in 1971, the Big Pineapple is an entertainment complex located near Woombye in Queensland, Australia.
© Getty Images
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Trees of Mystery
- Tree Mystery is a park and tourist attraction set near the coastal town of Klamath, California. It's noted for its giant statue of Paul Bunyan and the statue of his companion, Babe the Blue Ox.
© Getty Images
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Big Donut Drive-In
- There's no mistaking what you can purchase here. Pictured is a 1965 exterior view of customers standing at the counter of the Big Donut Drive-In, which features a giant donut on its roof.
© Getty Images
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Sombrero restaurant
- A familiar site on America's iconic Route 66, the high-peaked sombrero with neon embellishments tops the entrance to the retro-looking La Cita Mexican restaurant in Tucumcari, New Mexico.
© Getty Images
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Big Apple
- Located on the south side of Ontario Highway 401, the Big Apple is a bakery, restaurant, and roadside attraction in Colborne, Ontario, Canada.
© Getty Images
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Lucy the Elephant
- Constructed of wood and tin sheeting in 1881, Lucy the Elephant in Margate City, New Jersey has served as a restaurant, observation deck, and lately an Airbnb property. (Photo: Flickr/CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)
© Flickr/Creative Commons
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Corn cob water tower
- The "ear of corn" water tower can be admired in Rochester, Minnesota. (Photo: Wikimedia/CC BY-SA 3.0)
© Wikimedia/Creative Commons
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Pysanka Museum
- Built in the shape of a pysanka (Ukrainian Easter egg), this museum in Kolomyia, Ukraine is the only one of its kind in the world dedicated to the pysanka. (Photo: Wikimedia/CC BY-SA 4.0)
© Wikimedia/Creative Commons
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The Bottle
- The Bottle is named for the bright orange wooden replica of a Nehi soda bottle, which stood north of downtown Auburn, Alabama from 1924 to 1936 before it was destroyed by fire. Although the structure no longer exists, a historic plaque and a photograph mark the location. See also: Ancient rock-cut architecture that will take you back in time.
© Public Domain
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The odd appeal of novelty architecture
Mimetic designs that stand out from the crowd
© Shutterstock
Novelty architecture, also called mimetic architecture, is a unique type of building known for its unusually literal appearance. These buildings often commemorate an event or serve as an advertisement. They can also copy other famous buildings without any intention of being authentic. The style generally became popular in the United States in the 1930s, though some examples date back to the very beginning of the 20th century. Today, novelty buildings can be admired throughout the world, and serve as visitor attractions in their own right.
Click through the following gallery and admire some of the most unusual architecture ever designed.
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