Skip to content
io9

These Beautiful Giant Sculptures Support Power Lines With Style

By

Reading time 1 minute

Comments (0)

Electricity pylons, or transmission towers, usually aren’t the most interesting structures, just basic towers that keep electrical wires aloft. But some architects have designed innovative towers that are more than mere eyesores.

Land of Giants, 98-ft (30 m) tall towers designed by Choi + Shine Architects, 2008

(via Choi + Shine)

55-105-ft (17-32 m) high plyons, designed by Dietmar Koering, 2009

(via Dezeen)

Superstring, by Yong ho Shin, 2010

(via ArchDaily)

A design by Youssef Ghali, 2011

A woman, by Elena Paroucheva

(via GRID Expo)

P193, designed by Amec, with Pick Everard, 2011

Migrant Mast, designed by Rever & Drage Architects, Norway, 2011

(viaGRID Expo and Rever & Drage)

Flower Tower, by Gustafson Porter, 2011

(via Wired)

P205, by New Town Studio, 2011

Clown-shaped towers in Újhartyán, Hungary, 2011

(via Designrulz and Skyscraper City)

P197, by Knight Architects, Roughan & O’ Donovan and ESB International with MEGA, 2011

P113 AL_A Pylon, designed by AL_A & Arup, 2011

Deer and human figures, by the Moscow-based DesignDepot, 2012

(via DesignDepot)

The Land of Giants: Giants of the Wind, by Choi + Shine, 2012

(via Choi + Shine)

The 148 ft (45 m) high robot, designed by DOMA, Argentina, 2012

(via Onliner)

___

The images above are from RIBA, except when noted otherwise.

Explore more on these topics

Share this story

Sign up for our newsletters

Subscribe and interact with our community, get up to date with our customised Newsletters and much more.