#17 here's some useless info: It's supposed to look like a large stone slab, with some sort of quartz (?) mineral ribbon going through it (certainly not a prolapsed intestine.) It's considered a cultural landmark, and they feel it's the "most beautiful department store" they have. Reading about, it seems they put a whole lot of thought into the design, what with the multi-textured glass, the wrap-around walkway, the rock being an "anchor," and so on. I feel like it ended up as a "too many cooks in the kitchen" kind of thing.
#17 here's some useless info: It's supposed to look like a large stone slab, with some sort of quartz (?) mineral ribbon going through it (certainly not a prolapsed intestine.) It's considered a cultural landmark, and they feel it's the "most beautiful department store" they have. Reading about, it seems they put a whole lot of thought into the design, what with the multi-textured glass, the wrap-around walkway, the rock being an "anchor," and so on. I feel like it ended up as a "too many cooks in the kitchen" kind of thing.
It's supposed to look like a large stone slab, with some sort of quartz (?) mineral ribbon going through it (certainly not a prolapsed intestine.) It's considered a cultural landmark, and they feel it's the "most beautiful department store" they have.
Reading about, it seems they put a whole lot of thought into the design, what with the multi-textured glass, the wrap-around walkway, the rock being an "anchor," and so on. I feel like it ended up as a "too many cooks in the kitchen" kind of thing.