• Montreal's Habitat 67 showed that high-density urban housing could be built without making people feel like they've been crammed into a concrete shoebox.
  • Habitat67 celebrates it’s 50th anniversary this year, and a new exhibit explores the iconic project and the visionary architect behind it — Moshe Safdie.
  • This is Habitat 67, a housing complex that was designed by Moshe Safdie as part of his graduate thesis while studying architecture at McGill University.
  • Hem İsrail hem de Kanada vatandaşı olan mimar Moshe Safdie'nin 1967 Montreal Expo için hayata geçirdiği Habitat 67 projesi hala içinde yaşanabiliyor.
  • ; Habitat 67; Habitat 67; Habitat 67; Habitato 67; 栖息地67; Habitat 67; complesso edilizio costruito per l'Expo 67 a Montréal; complexe d'habitation de...
  • “We’re now seeing many of the ideas, once held as mere utopian dreams, becoming a reality. Habitat 67’s legacy has so much more potential yet to explore.”
  • Perhaps the most iconic piece of architecture in Montreal is Habitat 67, designed by Israeli/Canadian architect Moshe Safdie for the city’s World Expo.
  • Habitat67 is a private residence and cannot be toured, but it is worth a visit, if only for the exterior view, as it looks more impressive in real life than in any photo.
  • Habitat 67 is an assembly of 354 prestressed concrete cubes forming in its current configuration a total of 146 apartments.
  • Habitat 67; the revolution of city living. How did this building become such a monument? And what made this architectural design idea fade over time?