10 Most Unique Churches
 
 
Harajuku: Japanese Futuristic Church 
This futuristic protestant church is located in   Tokyo  and it was first unveiled by the design firm of Ciel Rouge Creation in 2005. 
The ceiling is specially made to reverberate natural sound for 2 seconds to provide a unique listening experience for worshipers and tourists.

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Saint Basil's Cathedral: The   Red Square  's Colorful Church

The St. Basil's Cathedral is located on the Red Square in   Moscow  ,  Russia  . A Russian Orthodox church, the Cathedral sports a series of colorful bulbous domes that taper to a point, aptly named onion domes, that are part of Moscow's Kremlin skyline. 

The cathedral was commissioned by Ivan the Terrible to commemorate the capture of the Khanate of Kazan. In 1588 Tsar Fedor Ivanovich had a chapel added on the eastern side above the grave of Basil Fool for Christ, a Russian Orthodox saint after whom the cathedral was popularly named. 

Hallgrímskirkja:   Iceland's Most Amazing Church
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The Hallgrímskirkja (literally, the  church of  Hallgrímur ) is a Lutheran parish church located in Reykjavík ,  Iceland . At 74.5 metres (244 ft), it is the fourth tallest architectural structure in  Iceland . The church is named after the Icelandic poet and clergyman Hallgrímur Pétursson (1614 to 1674), author of the Passion Hymns. State Architect Guðjón Samúelsson's design of the church was commissioned in 1937; it took 38 years to build it. 


Temppeliaukio Kirkko: The  Rock  Church
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The Temppeliaukio Kirkko (  Rock  Church ) is a thrilling work of modern architecture in  Helsinki . Completed in 1952, it is built entirely underground and has a ceiling made of copper wire. 
It was designed by architect brothers Timo and Tuomo Suomalainen and completed in 1969. They chose a rocky outcrop rising about 40 feet above street level, and blasted out the walls from the inside. It is one of the most popular tourist attractions in  Helsinki and frequently full of visitors. 


Cathedral of Brasília: The Modern Church of architect Oscar Niemeyer
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The Catedral Metropolitana Nossa Senhora Aparecida in the capital of Brazil is an expression of the architect Oscar Niemeyer. This concrete-framed hyperboloid structure, seems with its glass roof to be reaching up, open, to heaven. On 31 May 1970 , the Cathedral's structure was finished, and only the 70 m diameter of the circular area were visible. Niemeyer's project of Cathedral of Brasília is based in the hyperboloid of revolution which sections are asymmetric. The hyperboloid structure itself is a result of 16 identical assembled concrete columns. These columns, having hyperbolic section and weighing 90 t, represent two hands moving upwards to heaven. The Cathedral was dedicated on 31 May 1970 . 


Borgund   Church: Best Preserved   Stave   Church
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The Borgund Stave Church in Lærdal is the best preserved of  Norway 's 28 extant stave churches. This wooden church, probably built in the end of the 12th century, has not changed structure or had a major reconstruction since the date it was built. The church is also featured as a Wonder for the Viking civilization in the video game Age of Empires II: The Age of Kings. 


Las Lajas Cathedral: A  Gothic  Church Worthy of a Fairy Tale
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The Las Lajas Cathedral is located in southern  Colombia and built in 1916 inside the canyon of the Guaitara  River . According to the legend, this was the place where an Indian woman named María Mueses de Quiñones was carrying her deaf-mute daughter Rosa on her back near Las Lajas ("The Rocks"). Weary of the climb, the María sat down on a rock when  Rosa spoke (for the first time) about an apparition in a cave. 

Later on, a mysterious painting of the Virgin Mary carrying a baby was discovered on the wall of the cave. Supposedly, studies of the painting showed no proof of paint or pigments on the rock - instead, when a coresample was taken, it was found that the colors were impregnated in the rock itself to a depth of several feet. Whether true or not, the legend spurred the building of this amazing church. 


St. Joseph  Church: Known for its Thirteen Gold Domed Roof
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The St. Joseph The Betrothed is an  Ukrainian  Greek-Catholic  Church in  Chicago . Built in 1956, it is most known for its ultra-modern thirteen gold domed roof symbolizing the twelve apostles and Jesus Christ as the largest center dome. The interior of the church is completely adorned with Byzantine style icons (frescoes). Unfortunately the iconographer was deported back to his homeland before he was able to write the names of all the saints as prescribed by iconographic traditions. 


Ruzica  Church: Where Chandeliers are made of Bullet Shells
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Located over the Kalemegdan Fortress in  Belgrade  ,  Serbia  , theRuzica Church is a small chapel decorated with.trench art! Its chandeliers are entirely made of spent bullet casing, swords, and cannon parts. 

The space the church now occupies was used by the Turks as gunpowder storage for over 100 years and it had to be largely rebuilt in 1920 after WWI. Though damaged by bombings there was an upshot to the terrible carnage of The Great War. While fighting alongside England and the US , Serbian soldiers on the Thessaloniki front took the time to put together these amazing chandeliers. 
It is one of the world's finest examples of trench art. 


Chapel of St-Gildas: Built into the base of a bare rocky cliff
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The Chapel of St-Gildas sits upon the bank of the Canal du Blavet in Brittany, France. Built like a stone barn into the base of a bare rocky cliff, this was once a holy place of the Druids. Gildas appears to have travelled widely throughout the Celtic world of Corwall, Wales , Ireland andScotland. He arrived in Brittany in about AD 540 and is said to have preached Christianity to the people from a rough pulpit, now contained within the chapel.

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