Most of the one of a kind people have made works of architectural wonder and amazement, while others at any rate made something unique. Here for your delight are 5 of the most bisarre and unique structures in the United States of America.

Summum Pyramid

Situated in Salt Lake City, Utah, the almost 9-metre-tall (30 ft) and 12-metre-long (40 ft) Summum Pyramid is the essential centre for the Summum religion. Established by Claude 'Corky' Nowell in 1975, the Summum religion offers numerous similarities with Christianity, aside from two things: They trust their teachings originated from extraterrestrial creatures and that they are one of the main experts of modern-day mummification.

The Longaberger Company building

What number of companies do you realise that have employees who work in the item that they offer? In Newark, Ohio, the employees of the Longaberger Basket Company work in a seven-story form of their item. The giant basket is 59 metres (192 ft) long by 38 metres (126 ft) wide at the base and 63 metres (208 ft) long by 43 metres (142 ft) wide at the top. Its handles weigh around 150 tons. Obviously, the seven-story Longaberger Basket Company base camp holds the record for being the world's biggest basket.

Dick Clark's Flintstones Home

When you visit Malibu, California, you expect to see chateaus and shoreline houses fitting in with the rich and renowned, not a home straight from ancient times. Made by late TV host and media personality Dick Clark, the house is carved completely from stone. Needing to expand on the property however being hindered by the Malibu Park Conservancy Group, Dick Clark uncovered in a meeting that he was permitted to expand on the property if he molded his home to resemble a natural rock formation.

The Mansion on O Street

Designed by US Capitol architect Edward Clark in 1892 for his family and relatives, the three homes were constructed with connecting basements and main floors yet with separate resting quartres. In the 1930s, the homes were separated into individual houses as cabin for FBI chief J. Edgar Hoover and his men. But on February 14, 1980, H.H. Leonards acquired the homes and remodeled them over into a single unit as a bed-and-breakfast and later bought another row of townhouses, bringing the total of the homes to five structures.

The Mushroom House

Far out in Perinton, New York, lies a home straight out of a science fiction novel. Called the Mushroom House or Pod House, the house was made by architect James H. Johnson in 1970. Designing it after the underbelly of the Queen Anne's lace flower, it got to be known as the Mushroom House for its brown shading, which looks like a mushroom. Spreading over 387 square metres (4,168 ft2), the house is made out of four interconnecting pods lifted off the ground by strengthened concrete 'stems.'