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Sunday, January 20, 2013

Rumah Terbalik Tamparuli Sabah

              

                    Bus Terminal near Wawasan Plaza

                  Bus Terminal near Wawasan Plaza

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The house was opened to the public in early February 2012 and has since been attracting visitors from near and far. The house itself is hard to miss, having been flipped upside down, with its floor facing skyward. Everything inside the house, from furniture to household appliances, hover above your head, as the ceiling is actually the floor. Visitors will notice some distinguishing Sabahan décor and features showcased in this house. In the garage, a car is parked upside down. It might seem disorienting in the first few seconds, but the fascination of it all takes over. This architectural wonder has also been included in the Malaysia Book of Records for being the first of its kind in the nation. Visitors can enjoy a meal or afternoon snack at the Rumah Terbalik Café or pick up a souvenir at the Gift Shop. Guided tours are available.

Getting There
The house is located along Mile 21, Jalan Telibong, Tamparuli. The journey by road takes approximately 40 minutes. Taxis can take you from the city centre but be sure to make return arrangements as taxis on standby may not be readily available at this location.

If from Terminal Wawasan KK : Took Bas to Tuaran (About RM2) ,Alight before reach Pekan Tampauli, the house at left hand side of the road.

Opening hours
Daily (including public holidays): 8:00am to 10:00pm

Admission fees
MyKad holders: RM10.00
Others: RM18.00
Students/Children below 12 years: RM5.00
Children below 3 years: Free of charge
** Kindly note that indoor photography is prohibited.

Contact details:
Tel : +6088 260263
Website : www.upsidedownhouse.com.my
Email : sales@trekkerslodge.com

 

Sabah's longest suspension bridge ( Jambatan Tamparuli ) At Pekan Tamparuli

signage of Jambatan TamparuliIMG_0686IMG_0690

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Unbelievable Upside Down Houses In The World

Upside down houses: they’re more common then you think… but why? Perhaps the artists and designers of these flipped out homes wanted to shake up the way we think of society’s most pressing need, shelter. Maybe they just wanted to stand out from the crowd. In that at least, they’ve succeeded.

           Sakasa Restaurant, Japan

Real estate agencies just love the image of this upside down restaurant in Matsumoto city, Nagano prefecture, Japan – what better way to illustrate the philosophy of “house flipping”?

The designer of the upside-down restaurant went all out, inside and out, to fulfill his/her image of a world turned upside down: many of the ceiling light fixtures are inverted buckets, the outside advertising signboards and emergency exit signs are inverted and the menu displays mirror image text. No telling whether they serve reversal-of-fortune cookies after each meal.

                              Norman Johnson’s Upside-Down House, Florida, USA

Want to see what the houses in Florida’s Sunrise Golf Village look like? Well, just stand – on your head – outside the model home above.Norman Johnson’s Upside-Down House is a faithfully transposed recreation of a typical home in lovely Sunrise, circa 1961. Even the furniture inside was mounted upside down, and that palm tree outside looks VERY confused.

 

What appears to be a mid-1960s Dodge convertible is parked in the carport, or rather, on the carport’s ceiling. A good way to find loose change, to be sure. Sunrise, as it’s now called, was incorporated in 1961 by developer Norman Johnson and is located just west of Fort Lauderdale, Florida. The upside down model home did much to attract attention and homebuyers to embryonic Sunrise; sadly it’s been torn down… or is that “torn up”?

 

                   Device to Root Out Evil, Canada

If church steeples are meant to point to heaven, where does THIS church look to for guidance and inspiration? Who the Hell knows?

First installed in Vancouver, BC, Canada and later relocated to a park in Calgary, Alberta, the 25-ft tall, aluminum framed, red glass shingled“Device to Root Out Evil” was designed by American sculptor Dennis Oppenheim, who says that “Turning the church upside down makes it more aggressive, but not blasphemous.” Though commissioned by the President’s Panel on Art, the president of Stanford University rejected the sculpture because it was “not appropriate” for the campus.

                         Wonderworks, Florida & Tennessee, USA

WonderWorks is “an amusement park for the mind” with 2 locations: Orlando, Florida, and Pigeon Forge, Tennessee. Both look from the outside like an oversized White House flipped onto its roof.

                              

WonderWorks features over 100 interactive exhibits, a 12-seat movie theater equipped with motion seats and a 36-ft tall indoor ropes course. Why was it designed to look like an overturned building? They don’t say… one more thing for you to wonder about, it seems.

                The World Stands on Its Head, Germany

Opened to the public in the autumn of 2008, the “The World Stands on its Head” (“Die Welt Steht Kopf”) House can be found on the island of Usedom in the Baltic Sea. The house was designed by Klaudiusz Golos and Sebastian Mikiciuk, who carried the theme of upside down-ness to the inside as well.

                                   

Tourists visiting the “The World Stands on its Head” would be well advised to take their bathroom breaks BEFORE entering the house. Though it may not appear so, the law of gravity works in the usual manner.

                            House Upside Down, Russia

Putin on the ritz? There’s not much information is available to explain why a homeowner in St. Petersburg, Russia, built his home upside down. Perhaps he wanted to make a statement on the status of the Russian real estate market. Perhaps he was holding the blueprints upside down.

The image above shows the Russian upside-down house after completion. Note the decorative brickwork along the base, er, top of the walls. Note also the doghouse in the yard which was NOT built upside down – you Laika?

                      Upside-Down House, Poland

The Upside Down House in the tiny village of Szymbark, Poland, was built by Polish businessman and philanthropist Daniel Czapiewski. Unlike the anonymous Russian from St. Petersburg, Czapiewski hired a crew of carpenters and contractors who battled disorientation and dizziness to get the home completed in just 114 days.

Czapiewski’s purpose in building the Upside Down House was to ridicule the Communist era and its many foibles and follies. Considering the state of capitalism lately and the subprime mortgage financial fiasco of 2008, maybe Czapiewski should build another upside-down house in the USA.

                        Turkish Upside Down House

(image via: EnglishTurkey)

The Turkish Upside Down House in the city of Antalya was built as part of an effort to attract homebuyers to the area. They don’t call it the Goldcity Tourism Center for nothing! Obviously, some savvy Turkish entrepreneur took a page from Norman Johnson’s playbook. His cuning plan seems to be working as the house is said to be ” one of the most popular attractions for tourists in Antalya region.” Not sure what – if any – the other tourist attractions in the area are like.

                                       

The Antalya house’s roof, windows, front door and balcony are all constructed upside down, as are the rooms (even the bathrooms) on the inside. Even the landscaping is upended – check out that tree in the front yard! Truly a supreme effort to turn one corner of the world upside down, but don’t ask why the Antalya upside-down housegot the works; that’s nobody’s business but the Turks.

                                   House-Attack, Austria

                               

The House-Attack in Vienna, Austria is not for the sensitive of spirit – you know what happened the last time someone from Austria said “attack!” We’ll hope that this artistic installation by Erwin Wurm comes to a better (not bitter) end. The building/sculpture was constructed at Vienna’s Museum Moderner Kunst (MuMoK) in 2006. The artist explains the sculpture as follows: “A symbol for conservative, small-minded longings, the single-family house collides into the museum as an temple to the muses, and the museum itself now also becomes part of the sculpture.”

That’s an actual house embedded in the museum’s roof, by the way – literally a “house attack”. Perhaps it wanted more lebensraum. In any case, watch this video to witness the rise (but not fall) of Wurm’s House-Attack:

                           House of Katmandu, Spain

The House of Katmandu, opened in 2007, is a combination theme park, museum and tourist attraction located on the Spanish island of Majorca.

Designed to resemble a Tibetan-style mansion, the House of Katmandu takes visitors on a room-by-room adventure that follows the adventures of a fictional Indiana Jones-type character on a mysterious quest for a legendary red jewel. On the way he meets an ancient monk and a magnificent mermaid princess. Sorta like Star Wars meets Indiana Jones, in Spanish. In an upside-down house. Hey, you pay your money and you take your chances.

                   

Gimme shelter… and some Gravol. These strange and unusual upside-down houses might be nice places to visit but you wouldn’t want to live there. Imagine waking up in the middle of the night, forgetting where you are… trying to find the bathroom would be the least of your problems.

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