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Author: orange_madu

[Pelbagai] BINAAN/ARKITEKTUR/BANGUNAN YANG MENARIK DAN KENAPA?

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 Author| Post time 16-5-2017 01:19 PM | Show all posts


Hakka Earth Building.

Saya memang suka yang ada elemen nature/alam semulajadi.
Nampak sejuk mata memandang.



Earth houses (土楼) are traditional houses of the Hakka (客家族 ) ethnic group in Fujian, Guangdong, and Guangxi Provinces. These houses, called Tulou, are typically designed for defensive purposes and consist of one entrance and no windows at ground level. These houses are usually round with kitchen and utility rooms on the ground floor, and people living on the higher floors.

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 Author| Post time 16-5-2017 01:23 PM | Show all posts
wati2110 replied at 16-5-2017 01:17 PM
Cantik2 senibina bangunan kat negara india tu.... Teringin sangat nk pi sana tapi bila baca pasal ba ...

Kalau pergi kene berteman, dan kawan2 yg pernah pergi semuanya suggest amik tour-agent yg betul2.Jangan sampai sana baru sebok nak decide.

Sb diorg pun ade jenis2 yg main pukau ni tetiba je dah takde duit, tibe2 je dh kene tinggal tepi jalan.
Kalau duit je xpe, kalau di ragutnya 'barang lain' huhuhuhuhu nanges lahhh.

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Post time 16-5-2017 01:50 PM | Show all posts
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                     Berlin    
See the illuminated Reichstag at night -- home to the German parliament.  This vision of beauty is just one reason to visit artsy Berlin. We also suggest you see other cool architecture structures, including Potsdamer Platz’s Sony Center, Altes Museum and Das Rotes Rathaus.

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Post time 16-5-2017 01:52 PM | Show all posts
    Chicago    
The Cloud Gate (pictured) and Willis Tower (aka Sears Tower) are a few architecture sites heavily populated by tourists. The Windy City was also home to the architect great Frank Lloyd Wright. Take a tour of his home and studio to see his architectural laboratory, where he generated amazing ideas and experimented with numerous design concepts.

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Post time 16-5-2017 01:52 PM | Show all posts


Yg ni gah

    Rome    
Although the Romans adopted aspects of ancient Greek architecture, Rome, Italy, still made our list of top architecture cities. The city has awesome architecture witnessed by the beauty of the Colosseum (pictured). It was built in 72 AD and is considered one of the greatest works of Roman architecture and engineering. Tourists can also see other ancient Roman architecture in Aqueducts, the Pantheon, Temple of Vesta, the Vatican and Baths of Caracalla.

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Post time 16-5-2017 01:53 PM | Show all posts
    Barcelona    
Architect Antoni Gaudi’s work can be spotted throughout Barcelona, Spain. His multi-colored tile-style is ever present at Park Güell (pictured) and Casa Batlló. Gaudi also designed La Sagrada Familia, but died before his work was completed. Sculptors have continued working on the basilica, which is also a popular tourist attraction. Work is scheduled to be completed by 2026.


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Post time 16-5-2017 01:54 PM | Show all posts
    Brasilia    
Travel to Brasilia, the capital of Brazil. The city has not gone untouched by creative minds and artists. Take a look at the inside of the unique interior of the Cathedral of Brasília. Oscar Niemeyer designed the basilica in 1970. Check out the Palacio da Alvarado, the Cultural Complex of the Republic and Three Powers Square for more artistic architecture.


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Post time 16-5-2017 01:56 PM | Show all posts
orange_madu replied at 16-5-2017 09:05 AM
Ni satu lagi.

Hagia Sophia, Istanbul.

    Instanbul    
You probably wouldn’t know it, but Instanbul, Turkey, is also a great architecture city. The Hagia Sophia, Column of Constantine and Sultan Ahmed Mosque (pictured) are wondrous sites to behold.  The mosque is also known as the Blue Mosque because of its blue-tiled walls inside.


masjid biru yang tak biru luarnya pun...

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Post time 16-5-2017 01:56 PM | Show all posts
    Cairo    
Journey to Cairo, Egypt, to explore the Great Pyramid of Giza (on the right), the oldest and largest of the three pyramids. It is the oldest of the Seven Wonders of the World — the only one that remains intact. It’s amazing to think how huge bedrock stones where moved into place to create the Pyramid. But it’s no mystery why this city made our list. The Cairo Tower, City Stars Cairo, International Stadium, Cairo Opera House, Yocubian Building and Sultan Hassan Mosque are all great examples of distinct architecture native to this vibrant city.


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Post time 16-5-2017 02:14 PM | Show all posts
Spire of Dublin


view at night sangat cantik



and also..
Marina Bay Sands,Singapore



Singapore Helix Bridge



this bridge is really fascinating, but when i went there i had a crappy dslr which couldnt capture its beauty (maybe i am bad photographer)..hoping to go there again and take gazillion pictures for memory sake




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Post time 16-5-2017 02:24 PM | Show all posts
iolss pun teringin nak pergi India. memang nak sangat pergi sana. Nak pergi kawasan Kashmir, Shimla, Pondicherry (teringat filem 3 Idiots), Goa dan banyak lagi.

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 Author| Post time 17-5-2017 10:08 AM | Show all posts
Edited by orange_madu at 17-5-2017 10:09 AM

Malaysia pun ade je bangunan cecantek tapi tulah kalau cite pasal negara kita ni byk sgt birokrasi nya.
Tu yg maintenance kuranglah, bajet nk menyelenggara takdelah.

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 Author| Post time 17-5-2017 10:10 AM | Show all posts



Ni haaa cantek kot.
Dah la Masjid lambang negara Islam.
Harap kerajaan negeri dan pusat ambil tindakan untuk jaga & maintain.
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 Author| Post time 17-5-2017 10:11 AM | Show all posts
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Post time 17-5-2017 10:27 AM | Show all posts
      Interview with Zvi Hecker: “Good Architecture Cannot Be Legal; It Is Illegal!”                        Save this article   
         
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Throughout the course of his career, the forms present in Zvi Hecker's work have undergone significant changes – from the rigidly geometric shapes of his early work such as his Ramot Polin housing and Synagogue in the Negev Desert, to his more freeform recent works like the Jewish School he designed in Berlin. Hecker, though, sees all of his works as both consistent with each other and individual, describing himself as “an artist whose profession is architecture.” In this interview from his “City of Ideas” column, Vladimir Belogolovsky speaks with Hecker about his inspirations and the ideas that underpin his career.
Vladimir Belogolovsky: I visited the Heinz-Galinski school here in Berlin where your original idea came from the pattern of sunflower seeds; it was not the first time you used it. Could you talk about your fascination with the sunflower, and why you think it is a good guiding principle for a building?
Zvi Hecker: Well, one can’t qualify it as a blueprint for every building. This one was the first Jewish school built in Berlin after the Holocaust. Coming from Israel, I wondered—what could I bring to the children of Berlin? A flower is a natural present and a sunflower is a common flower in Israel. What began as a sunflower evolved into a series of continuously changing images. Already in the construction stage, it looked to some like a kind of a small city with winding streets and courtyards, not really a building. Later on when the schematic model of the load-bearing walls was made, we were surprised to find out that “pages of an open book” were hidden in our design. We didn’t realize it earlier—in Hebrew, school is Beth-Sefer, which literally means “house of the book.”
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              VB: So if you wanted to be clever, you could say that you conceived the school as the house of the book from the beginning.
ZH: But if I began with the idea of a book, I would certainly end with the sunflower. [Laughs.] Because it is the transformation from one idea to another that happens in the process of design. No matter which way the process begins, it is the result that counts. One can start with “a” to finish with ”k” or hopefully with “z.”
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              VB: Going back to the sunflower, you said that it is a good gift to the children of Berlin. But you’ve used the sunflower metaphor in the past as well. So it is a recurring idea in your work. Could you elaborate why?
ZH: You know, during World War II, we were deported to Siberia from Soviet-occupied Polish territory. Then we were sent to Samarkand, in Uzbekistan. There during the afternoon, after the classes at primary school, I sketched the local Uzbek houses. That’s when I became an architect. It was a time of a food shortage and the sunflower was helpful… So the sunflower has a personal meaning for me. And it is also nature’s greatest phenomenon. The formation of its seeds follows the mathematical sequence of the golden section. It provides great nutrition, its vibrant color radiates to great distances… What else could nature do for us?
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              VB: Speaking about your school project, you said that the “dynamic and organic character of the sunflower resonates with the nature of education.” How so?
ZH: Well, the school was first a sunflower, then a city, then a book… But in a way, it remains a sunflower. And it is not as if Zvi Hecker has built a sunflower, nothing like that, but because the walls, facing the sun, reflect the sunlight deep into the classroom’s interior. The unique nature of the sunflower, not its form, is at work here. The way children assimilate knowledge is reminiscent of the way the sunflower captivates the sun’s rays. Education is the illumination of the mind. And I think that education at this school goes on not only in the classrooms. The architecture of the building is a source of education in itself.
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              VB: Your school is not just a realization of one unique building. It is consistent with what you have done before and since. It is a work in progress. It is your manifesto in the making, is that right?
ZH: For me, the greatest human invention is bread. You take the flour, yeast, water, salt—nothing special—and you bake the most delightful foodstuff. The same is true for architecture—you mix cement, sand, water—nothing special—and you get a beautiful concrete. You know, Frank Lloyd Wright once said: “Ladies and gentlemen, a brick is worth ten cents, if you give it to me, I will turn it into gold.” It is the magic of transformation—what you make out of what you take. And this alchemical process is a life-long labor, not just for one building.
What seems to be consistent in my work is the absence of free-standing buildings for people to go around in admiration. You know, you can’t go around the Jewish school, there is nothing to see. You have to go inside, even though you will still be outside. My buildings very often tend to interchange into a semblance of a city; its walls shape buildings, squares, and courtyards, providing an enclosure and a sense of security.
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              VB: Some of your early residential projects are based on a repetition of the same modular, and other projects are freer, based on such imagery as hands and spirals with all spaces being unique. Are these different ideas or are they part of one idea?
ZH: As a student of Alfred Neumann it was natural for me to use modular geometry as a kind of matrix and grammar for the architectural design. But of course it was only the way to make the idea intelligible, not an aim in itself – rather a kind of scaffolding taken off when the building is completed. Later on, images like the palm of a hand, a maple leaf, or a sunflower imposed their own syntax. An organic metaphor runs through many of my designs.
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              VB: You are perceived as an “artist-architect.” Is that how you see yourself?
ZH: I see myself on both sides of the art spectrum. I regularly exhibit my artwork in art galleries and show my architectural projects in architecture museums. Sometimes I hear people say, “So, you are really an artist.” I suppose it is a compliment, since being an artist seems to be better than just being an architect. [Laughs.] I don’t deny that I am an artist and I answered, ”I am an artist whose profession is architecture.”
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              VB: Do you intend your buildings to be works of art?
ZH: I believe an artist’s path is toward transcendence. I hope that my designs, when built, will be considered works of art within architecture, but who can predict it? We also don’t know what our children will become but we must provide them with the best possible education. This is what the process of design is all about, broadening the intelligence of our designs.
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              VB: Would you say you are a signature architect? Is that the intention—to find your distinctive voice and express it artistically?
ZH: Distinctive voice is a very poetic expression; I like it, though I think I am rather looking for a distinctive voice for each of my designs. If one detects a certain coherence in my “oeuvre” it is a natural result of what I stand for; what I believe in, it is not a conscious attempt toward a distinctive diction of mine, but rather a faithfulness to what is manifested in the design.
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              VB: Isn’t that the intention of every architect?
ZH: Personally, I try to satisfy my common sense and eventually refine the intelligence of my design. But I am not trying to attain a particular expression that would be distinctly mine. It would anyhow be fruitless. I believe that if you cultivate your own garden something will grow out of your seeds. As a young architect, I consciously avoided Le Corbusier’s example, but it was very tempting. Some of my generation fell into this trap. I liked Frank Lloyd Wright’s architecture and his arrogant posture. You know, Bruce Goff once told me about Wright’s reaction to one of his latest designs: “Bruce, who are you trying to scare?” And then he added, “but we do scare them sometimes.” [Laughs.]
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              VB: You like testing your clients and exploring your limits.
ZH: I am an artist after all. You know, real art and real architecture cannot be totally legal; very often both are in direct conflict with legality.
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              VB: These are some radical thoughts! What do you mean?
ZH: Well, look at my Spiral Apartment House in Ramat Gan, Israel. It has its illegal twist. One can question, for example, the legality of the changes I made in plans during the construction phase, plans that were approved by the building authority and bought on paper by the people. They wanted to sue me. The construction was stopped repeatedly because of complaints from the neighbors. In order to keep going, it needed the assertion of my personal will and total dedication, by working by myself on the scaffolding. This illegal provocative element is not foreign to art; it is a kind of disruptive agent that upsets the established order.
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              VB: So do you see yourself as a radical architect?
ZH: Not at all. The so called “radical designs” play egalitarian games and look very commercial. I would gladly consider myself as the architect of the pyramids in Egypt, temples in Greece, or castles in Spain. I am a traditional architect because I try to address the basic traditional needs of the people. If someone sees me as a radical, it is most probably because of the way I interpret those needs in contemporary terms.
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              VB: Well, being radical is also a tradition—building something that never has been done before, whether pyramids, temples, or castles. Part of architectural tradition is breaking traditions, that’s what you mean. You teach architecture; do you have any particular ways of doing that?
ZH: The architectural tradition is the richest and oldest of all the arts, and is also very well documented, for over 4,000 years now. But at some schools of architecture, teaching begins with so-called modern architecture. I think students would learn more if exposed to the way cities like Rome, Paris, Barcelona, and Krakow were masterfully expanded by nineteenth-century architects. They were the real modern architects!
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              VB: You’ve said: “Architecture is above all an act of magic . . . due to the fact that it hides more than it reveals. What we look at, what we see, is only a reflected image of what we cannot see: architecture’s soul.” Do you think architecture’s soul is always hidden?
ZH: Architecture’s soul can’t be seen. Like in the plays of Anton Chekhov—we can only guess what the sisters in the Three Sisters feel like, as they are unable to spell it out. That is why these plays are always contemporary; silence is never outdated. The same is true for architecture. The silence of what can’t be seen creates the architectural form and its invisible soul.
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              VB: Do you ever tell your students what architecture is?
ZH: I don’t know what architecture is; I only know what architecture is not. I have to discover it for myself in each new project. You may find some common threads in my work, though it seems to me that I always start from zero. I believe so. For me, designing a building is like cooking a meal. I try not to reheat the old stuff, but start with ordinary ingredients in hopes of arriving at an extraordinary taste.
I like working with limitations. It is all about overcoming and exploiting difficulties. As a result, some of my buildings look as if they were always there. That’s a very good sign.
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              VLADIMIR BELOGOLOVSKY is the founder of the New York-based non-profit Curatorial Project. Trained as an architect at Cooper Union in New York, he has written five books, including Conversations with Architects in the Age of Celebrity (DOM, 2015), Harry Seidler: LIFEWORK (Rizzoli, 2014), and Soviet Modernism: 1955-1985 (TATLIN, 2010). Among his numerous exhibitions: Anthony Ames: Object-Type Landscapes at Casa Curutchet, La Plata, Argentina (2015); Colombia: Transformed (American Tour, 2013-15); Harry Seidler: Painting Toward Architecture (world tour since 2012); and Chess Game for Russian Pavilion at the 11th Venice Architecture Biennale (2008). Belogolovsky is the American correspondent for Berlin-based architectural journal SPEECH and he has lectured at universities and museums in more than 20 countries.
Belogolovsky’s column, City of Ideas introduces ArchDaily’s readers to his latest and ongoing conversations with the most innovative architects from around the world. These intimate discussions will be a part of the curator’s upcoming exhibition with the same title to premier at the University of Sydney in June 2016. The City of Ideas exhibition will then travel to venues around the world to explore ever-evolving content and design.
A version of this interview was previously published by uncube. It was shared with ArchDaily by the author, with permission from uncube.

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 Author| Post time 17-5-2017 10:51 AM | Show all posts
seribulan replied at 17-5-2017 10:27 AM
Interview with Zvi Hecker: “Good Architecture Cannot Be Legal; It Is Illegal!”        
  • 0 ...

  • Bentuk sunflower mau sesat weolls kalau masuk dlm bangunan tu
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    Post time 17-5-2017 11:01 AM | Show all posts
    Thank you Supermod @seribulan

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    no prob  Post time 17-5-2017 11:51 AM
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    Post time 18-5-2017 08:41 PM From the mobile phone | Show all posts
    Me pun suker tengok senibina bangunan....boleh raba2 bangunan lagik bila lalu....due to work hazard....hehehehehehe
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    Post time 19-5-2017 01:29 PM | Show all posts
    9 Bangunan Terunik di dunia..Malaysia pun ada tau!
    Amazing!!! Hah, itu je yang aku mampu cakap bila tengok struktur bangunan2 unik ni...tetiba je hari ni mood nak jadi "Engineer" aku datang, terus je aku teringat pasal bangunan2 unik ni. Memang superb! Tapi bangunan bangunan ni masih ada yang dalam proses pembinaan, memang sangat2 super duper cantik dan unik..jom tengok!

    1) Aqua (USA)


    Bangunan ini kalau korang tengok betul2 memang agak klasik dan tradisional...kalau dilihat dari pandangan bawah ke atas, kita akan nampak effect jelly/ ripple yang ada pada struktur bangunan ni..nampak macam tak rata,ada lekuk2..perasan tak?

    Memang nampak agak kuno sikit..hehehe.But unique!

    Ni la effect kalau kita tengok dari dekat..memang cantik!
    2) Chicago Spire (USA)

    Yang ini memang betul2 nampak macam rupa roket..dijangka siap pada tahun 2010 (Aku tak pasti dah siap ke belum).Mak ai..bangunan ni memang tinggi gila dan dijangka menjadi bangunan tertinngi di Barat..hehehe.

    Memang superb! Nampak macam mercu tanda roket je aku tengok.Hik hik hik
    memang mencecah awan...Nice view

    3) CCTV Headquarters (China)

    CCTV headquaters pun penduduk China nak design cantik-cantik tau, hah,memang cita rasa tinggi betul..hehehe.Yang aku kagum sangat dengan bangunan ni sebab bentuk Zig Zag. Cun la..lagi satu kalau koang perasan kan, dia macam tak ada dinding penyokong kan? Sebelah je dinding dia..memang bagus benor tukang design bangunan ni...hehehehe..

    Macam ni je bangunan dia..bangunan tau!memang canggih betul..





    4) Regatta Hotel (Jakarta)


    Ho ho ho..dekat Indon pun ada gak bangunan unik,memang pantas sekali pikiran pikiran orang indon ini ya..patut ar pandai wat laser time pelawanan bola sepak, ramai je buruh2 diaorg datang keja dekat negara kita, sebab memang diaorg ni otak2 engineer..hehehehe. Tapi, serius aku cakap, memang cute sangat rupa hotel ni! tak taulah berapa ribu semalam kan nak tido dkt dalam hotel ni..(Mimpi jelah imah oi..)









    Memang cantik..tengah pulau pulak tu..
    5) Residence Antilia (India)

    Dekat India, diaorang bukan saje ada Taj Mahal yang termasuk list dalam 7 keajaiban dunia tu, tapi ada jugak bangunan ni ( Aiya...semua dia nak bolot jugakkan?hehehe...). Bagi aku bangunan ni memang sangat pelik tapi unik..Sebenarnya Residence Antilia ni diilhamkan dari rupa rak Cd..patut ar nampak macam bentuk2 cd kan?

    Sebagai org yg cintakan environment, aku memang suka gila dengan bangunan ni pasal dia nampak mesra alam dengan pokok2 yang ada dekat bangunan tu..I like it!!
    6 ) Russia Tower (Rusia)


    Hah, yang ini pun unik jugak! Menara Rusia.Dijangka complete pada tahun 2012, bangunan ini akan menjadi bangunan paling tinggi dekat Europe, (mujur bukan dekat dunia..sebab kitakan nak buat menara tertinngi di dunia lepas ni,hehehe).












    7) Penang Global City Centre - (Malaysia)

    Wah, negara kita pun masuk list lah..memang terbaiklah Malaysia..Yang ini confirm aku boleh pergi nanti.hehehehe..Tapi bentuk penang global city centre ni sangat2 unik..sebab macam bentuk dua ekor angsa dan anaknya..Eh,betul apa,cuba korang tengok betul2..comel kan? Bangunan ni dalam proses untuk dibina dan mengambil masa 15 tahun untuk siap! Confirm time ni kalau aku hidup lagi dah beranak pinak..hehehe.







    8) Gazprom Headquarters (Russia)

    Hmmm....dah 2 dah bangunan unik Rusia ni.Bagus betul..mesti budget banyak ni sampai boleh bina bangunan unik2 camni..Ho ho ho memang sangat takjub sebab bangunan ni diperbuat dari glass flame. Uniknya bangunan ni sebab dia akan bertukar warna 10 kali sehari bergantung pada kedudukan matahari.Hebatkan?







    9) Burj Dubai (Dubai)

    The last top 9 most unique building in the world ialah Burj Dubai..bangunan paling tinggi di dunia sekarang.hehehe.




    Nukilan MindaFahiMah MahaYudDiNat5:19 PM
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    Post time 19-5-2017 01:30 PM | Show all posts
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