>big shopping centres are an evolution of italian galleries from the XIX century
EYYY, IM SHOPPING HERE
Big shopping centres are an evolution of italian galleries from the XIX century
other countries don't have these?
>spanish "humour"
i'm sure france has a lot of those
I meant other yuros, don't they have XIX century galleries?
yes, but UK ones tend to be longer and lower. pic related for example
Nice
>don't they have XIX century galleries?
Norway didn't exist as a concept before the XX century. How could we have malls then?
neither did italy till 1850~
Remember to crush the bull balls if you go to that Gallery for maximum luck
our concept of gallery is usually an art gallery, i dont think we have those in spain
We have a cold war era gallery, now housing the central bus terminal, and it's fuck ugly. It's been crowned ugliest building in Oslo several years in a row.
They're gonna tear it down and rebuild the bus terminal on top of the Central train station because we've become oil rich arab tier when it comes to building shit in this last decade, completely asinine and I fucking hate this city.
t. Metternich
Not to that extend...
Meant for
why is it that nordics cant into arquitecture?
There are only shitty fashion shops and overly expensive restaurants in that gallery nowadays
>the concept of Italy was born with the statal unification
shit costs a lot to build because winter actually exists here and since we have no culture, people are content living in shit because they have no experience of better
still better than living in this decaying shithole. We need bilions in order to renovate our older buildings.
Not as big as those in Italy
soulless gommunism combined with dull climate and being a former economic outskirts
That looks dreadful.
And we had a nice looking one in Rotterdam, but of course the Germans had to destroy it...
Like the galleria Vittorio Emanuelle II of Milan? No, there's a reason that one is considered a masterpiece even if it's just a shopping mall, I've been there and what was surprising to me is local shops around it and even newspaper stands looked a lot like Mexico's, tho I supose it is because you inspired those.
Our traditional shopping districts look like pictured, otherwise it's mostly American style malls even if some incorporate an excess of romantic neoclassic style plaster decorations.