The Palace of Parliament (Romania), is the largest building in Europe and the building that holds three records homologated by the Guinness Book of World Records: for the largest civilian administrative building in the world, the heaviest building in the world and the most expensive administrative building in the world. Read more after the break......
The US Congress meets in Washington at the Capitol  building, which features a vast dome and elaborate triangular pediments perched  on top of grand columns inspired by the classical architecture of Greek and  Roman temples. Construction of the building began in 1793, and it was first  occupied in 1800. Since then, numerous additions have been made by a succession  of architects, including the replacement of the original dome with the current  cast-iron structure.
Classical themes also inspired the design of this  portico on the Palais Bourbon, which has been the seat of the French National  Assembly or lower legislative chamber of the French government since 1798. The  portico was added to the palace in 1806 to honour Napoleon, but the emperor was  reportedly unimpressed. "He regretted he was no longer an artillery officer who  could target his canons against this ridiculous screen," future minister for  fine arts Antonin Proust said in 1891.
South Africa's Parliament, which was completed in  1884, displays similar neoclassical design principles alongside bold  terracotta-coloured brickwork. It also takes the principle of separation of  powers unusually literally: based in Cape Town, it is over 900 miles (1,450km)  away from the government departments it scrutinises, which are based in  Pretoria.
The Reichstag, home to Germany's Parliament,  boasts a glass dome designed by British architect Norman Foster and added amid  significant restoration after the country's reunification. The original building  opened in 1894, but was severely damaged by a 1933 fire blamed by Hitler on  communist rabble-rousers, a threat that - real or otherwise - helped him to  strengthen his grip on power.
Canada's parliamentary buildings, like the UK  Houses of Parliament, drew inspiration from the gothic architectural tradition.  The main buildings were constructed between 1859 and 1866, and the tower, which  bears a striking resemblance to the clocktower in Westminster housing Big Ben,  was added in 1927. Inside the building there are other echoes of Westminster:  Canadian MPs also face their political adversaries across a House of Commons  decked out with green leather seats.
But the neogothic and neoclassical motifs espoused  by many western legislatures were eschewed when the Diet National Parliament  Building was constructed between January 1920 and November 1936 in Tokyo.
Russia's lower house, the State Duma, has met in  an imposingly brutalistic building since 1994, after the previous year's  constitutional crisis left the White House, the home of Russia's predecessor  legislature, badly damaged by troops loyal to President Yeltsin.
The designers of Australia's Parliament drew  inspiration from the shape of boomerangs as they planned an extensive renovation  of the dilapidated home of Australian legislators, completed in 1988. Much of  the building's office space is concealed underground to provide some respite  from Canberra's summer sun.
In Brasilia, as in Canberra, architects and town  planners were given the chance to realise radical design ideas. This building  hosts Brazil's bicameral legislature.
India's Parliament House meanwhile emphasises  continuity with its circular structure, overseen by a statue of Mahatma Gandhi,  with features that are designed to evoke ancient Indian monuments. The building  was opened in 1927 after a construction project lasting nearly six years. The  transfer of power from the UK to its former colony took place on the 15 August  1947 in the Central Hall, a circular, domed building within Parliament  House.










