Rico's friend Kelley forwards this Yahoo article, with the note Japan goes goofy!:
Rico says yup, just as wacky as he remembers... (And SEPTA wouldn't even apply for a grant from the Feds for this...)
As many cities and have started realizing, bus stops are ripe for an architectural revolution. A bus shelter has few practical requirements, other than a roof for protecting waiting riders, so why is it that for so long we've been stuck with gray and boring shelters? Why are we not, for example, turning our bus stops into oversized replicas of beloved foods?
In Konagai, Japan, bus shelters look like giant pieces of fruit, and it's enough to make an easily-delighted person book a trip.
Twenty-six years ago, the locals of Konagai (located in Nagasaki prefecture) had a big idea: build cartoonish, fruit-shaped bus stops for their 1990 Travel Expo, which was meant to attract visitors to the area.
The project was successful. Even three decades later, the fourteen fruity shelters are attracting travelers, who are eager to take photos of the inhabitable oranges, strawberries, melons, and more.
Check out the photos:
Rico says yup, just as wacky as he remembers... (And SEPTA wouldn't even apply for a grant from the Feds for this...)
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