"Very strange, but this is what my husband wanted," she said by phone from a village about 62 miles east of
"He brought his relatives and used saws to cut the house in half," she said, adding that she now owns the other half that is still standing. The house is made from wood with a tile roof and propped up on wooden pillars, a typical style for a Cambodian country home.
She said her estranged husband and his relatives, after ripping apart half of the house, carried all the debris to his parents' house nearby.
She said the divorce was prompted by her husband's jealousy about her alleged relationship with a policeman in the village. She denied having an extramarital affair.
"He wanted a divorce, and I said, `Let's divorce,'" she said.
The husband could not be reached for comment.
Bou Bout, a village chief, said local officials and police were present as witnesses the day the couple split their 20-by-24 1/2 foot house into half.
"Local officials tried three times to get them to mend their differences, but the husband would not budge," Bou Bout said by phone.
What had happened as reported above is what I think we had been unknowingly or probably had carelessly ignored to include it [marriage] in our list to be one of THE FACTORS THAT INFLUENCE OUR ARCHITECTURE.
A good lesson though!, BUT where is our stand as an ARCHITECT, if this building happen to be our so-called master piece of our egoist approach in portraying our philosophical personal architectural product without compromising to unpredictable potential factors that may have direct influence to it?
I THINK YOU HAVE THE ANSWER FOR YOURSELF TO THIS DILEMMA.





2 comments:
hehehe..so funny couple.
the factor that influence our architecture??
I hope this case not become a trend in family. so ridiculous...
oh yee, we hope so. The architecture of the family itself has to be strong.
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