Bagh-e-Ferdowsi park,
Tehran
1. Wide shot of park
2.
Visitors walking past statue
3.
Top shot of spiral stairway
4. Pan of building
5.
Various details of same building
6. Wide shot of four cultural houses
Various locations,
Iran
7. Various exteriors of reconverted buildings
8. Various interiors of bathhouse converted into restaurant
Ait Iktel village,
Abadou,
Morocco
9. Wide shot of village and landscape
10.
Villagers sitting next to water network channel
11. Villagers entering school
12. Students at study seen through window
Datai
Hotel,
Pulau Langkawi,
Malaysia
13. Wide exterior shot of hotel and swimming pool
14. Various exteriors of hotel
15. Pan of hotel interior
Nubian Museum,
Aswan, Egypt
16. Wide top shot of museum
17. Pan of museum gardens
18. Exterior detail
19. Visitors entering museum
20. Wide interior shot of museum with statue
Kahere
Eila Poultry Farming School, Koliagbe,
Guinea
21. Various of courtyard buildings
22. Students entering school house
23. Interior of school house tilts up to straw ceiling
SOS Children's village,
Aqaba, Jordan
24. Wide top shot of village
25.
Women and children walking along wall of building
26. Various exterior details
27.
Children on slide in playground
Tilonia,
India
28. Various of '
Barefoot Architects' at work mixing building materials
29. Various of houses in Tilonia community
Olbia Social
Centre,
Antalya, Turkey
30. Various top shots of complex
31.
Women walking under canopied walkway
33. Top shot of spiral fountain
34. Interior of complex - tilts down from ceiling
35. Exterior shot of complex with building and pond
STORYLINE:
The winners of this year's
Aga Khan Award for Architecture were announced on Tuesday in
Aleppo, Syria.
The prizes, totalling 500-thousand
U-S dollars, are the largest awarded for architectural projects in the
Islamic world.
They are presented every three years.
According to the
Aga Khan Development Network, the award aims to "identify and encourage building concepts that successfully address the needs and aspirations of societies in which Muslims have a significant presence".
Particular attention is paid by the judges to work which uses local resources and appropriate technology.
This year, there were nine recipients of the prize, which encompasses contemporary design, community improvement, restoration, and landscaping schemes.
The Bagh-e-Ferdowsi
Park (designed by Baft-e-Shahr Consulting,
1997), a 30-hectare area of landscaped hillside in
Tehran, Iran, was singled out for its natural setting of stone pavings and sculptures within the topography of a valley.
Elsewhere in Iran, urban developers were praised for the on-going conversion since
1992 of traditional buildings into a variety of public facilities, thus revitilising historical centres.
The judges recognised Ghoujdama tribesman Ali
Amahan, for the projects he conceived (in
1995 and on-going) to help improve the infrastructure and community buildings in his home village of Ait Iktel in Morocco
.
The Datai Hotel (
Kerry Hill Architects,
1993) in Pulau Langkawi, Malaysia, was upheld as a prime example of marrying luxury tourism with ecological sensitivity.
The judges commended
Egypt's Nubian Museum (
Mahmoud El-Hakim, 1997) for its successful integration of past, present and future elements in a single building, and its use of local architectural styles.
On a vastly different scale, the Kahere Eila Poultry Farming School (Heikkinen-Komonen,
2000) in Koliagbe, Guinea, impressed the award panel with its "elegantly humble yet modern" architecture and use of simple composition and construction techniques.
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- published: 21 Jul 2015
- views: 239