These are the world’s most beautiful                         buildings? Are you kidding?
A                         hundred years ago, naming the world’s most  beautiful buildings was easy: the                         Parthenon. Sure. The Taj Mahal. Absolutely.  Hagia Sophia. No argument. But now,                         in part because the whole notion was chewed up  and spit out by those troublemaking                         Modernists, we’re just learning to think about  architecture in terms of beauty                         again. It’s open season.
We                         readily admit our choices for the world’s most  beautiful buildings are                         questionable. They include Gaudí’s controversial  
Sagrada  Família cathedral (arguably a top sight)                         in 
Barcelona—a  building that teeters on the                         boundary between love and hate. We see that edge  as the exact place where                         beauty happens. 
Beautiful is not the  same as 
pretty; it’s a                         strong word, suggesting big emotions.
Sagrada  Família, Barcelona
Burj  Al Arab, Dubai, UAE
Institute  for Sound and Vision, Hilversum, The  Netherlands
The Golden Temple,                         Amritsar, India
National Congress Hall,                         Brasilia, Brazil
The  Guggenheim, Bilbao, Spain
The  Chrysler Building, New  York City
Mont St. Michel,                         Normandy, France
ICMC at Brandenburg  Technical University, Cottbus, Germany
Nelson-Atkins  Museum’s Bloch Building, Kansas City, MO
Gresham Palace, Budapest,                         Hungary
Christian Dior Store, Omotesando, Tokyo
Hearst Tower, New  York City
Therme  Vals, Vals, Switzerland
Tiger’s Nest Monastery, Bhutan
New Norwegian                         Opera and Ballet, Oslo, Norway
Great Mosque, Djenne, Mali
Catherine Palace, Outside St.  Petersburg,                         Russia
The Bauhaus, Dessau, Germany
Akron Boys and Girls Club II, Akron, AL
Wat Rong Khun, Chiang                         Rai, Thailand
Hand-Made School, Rudrapur, Bangladesh