Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Beer Can House The front of the beer can house on Malone Street A shed at the Beer Can House showing how the walls are covered with flattened beer cans. The Beer Can House is a folk art house in Rice Military, Houston, Texas, [1] covered with beer cans, bottles, and other beer paraphernalia. Houstonian John Milkovisch worked through the late ...
The Rivergate Tower, also known as the Sykes building or the Beer Can Building, [2] [3] is a 454-foot-tall (138 m) skyscraper in Tampa, Florida. The skyscraper is the seventh tallest building in Tampa with 31 floors. [ 4 ]
A building being built using beer cans as bricks Architect Mike Reynolds next to a tin can wall in the 1970s. A tin can wall is a wall constructed from tin cans, which are not a common building source. The cans can be laid in concrete, stacked vertically on top of each other, and crushed or cut and flattened to be used as shingles. [1]
Li Rongjun -- an architect in China -- took recycling to a whole new level with this amazing house. At the start of the project, Rongjun only had $11,000 and 8,500 discarded beer bottles, but he ...
One of the more unusual promotions was the "Talking Package". It was a robot made of Lucky Beer containers; its body was a beer barrel, the neck, arms and legs were made of beer cans, and the head and feet were large bottles. One hand held a beer bottle, as well. Inside was a microphone and a speaker.
Welcome to My Unique House, a weekly video series that profiles the most unconventional homes around the country and their equally interesting owners.
A fl*shlight beer can thing... the recipient was not happy and caused a huge HR thing. During the same secret santander exchange, someone got 1/8 of weed and management called the police. It was a ...
The house was built using 10,000 bottles of J. Hostetter's Stomach Bitters which consisted of various herbs in a solution of 47% alcohol. The Peck house was demolished in the early 1980s. [citation needed] Rhyolite, Nevada bottle house. Around 1905, Tom Kelly built his house in Rhyolite, Nevada, using 51,000 beer bottles bonded with adobe ...