
Warm greetings Hive!
To start your productive week, take time to appreciate our latest collection of fantastic personal stories encompassing interesting architecture and design projects from around the world. Our leading entries showcase exceptional content from Southeast Asia, Europe, and South America celebrating religious and medieval landmarks for your enjoyment. Cheers!
Welcome to Architecture Anthology™, the official Curated Content Catalog of , your dedicated community on the Hive Blockchain covering digital content from various international locations about Architecture, Interior Design, Furniture Design, Urban Design, and Environmental Design.
To celebrate this week's report, we are truly thrilled to present to you EDITION 41 featuring our Top 3 publications:
1. A sacred monument with a prestigious title from the Philippines
2. A metropolis of historic origins certified by UNESCO from Spain
3. A vital church with an interesting transformation from Venezuela
Don't forget to also check out our "Runner-Up" entries for their remarkable contributions. Our heartfelt congratulations to all selected authors and their curated posts!
Our Champions for the Week:
(August 21 -27, 2023)


Upon entering the church, you can easily feel the sanctity of the place. It's like being immediately engulfed with a sense of tranquility. It is quiet, big, yet cool. The majestic altar, ever so grande, was a sight to behold. The focal point was the silver tabernacle, claimed the only of its kind in the Philippines. The dim lighting cast a soft glow, creating an ambiance of intimacy and devotion.


We enter and walk through narrow streets always in the shade and look at the different balconies, some wrought iron and balconies or windows that will have seen a lot. And also doors of different styles that testify to the coexistence between different cultures at one time: Christians, Muslims and Jews came to live in this city, although it was a Jew who opened the doors for the Muslim bands to conquer the city. But that is another story or history…


I like to think of buildings as if they had a little of our humanity, anyway they are a part of vital importance in our lives, I think a structure works like the human body and, like this, it wears out with the passage of time and this wear is more and more noticeable with the passage of years. Buildings, like us, have a useful life, that is, a considerable amount of time in which it is supposed to be well, unless extraordinary situations occur, such as earthquakes, for example.













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