Aga Khan Award in Architecture: For the Muslim world, buildings that heal – The Express Tribune

Aga Khan Award for Architecture 2013 Cycle Shortlisted Project Salam Cardiac Surgery Centre -  Khartoum, Sudan.
Aga Khan Award for Architecture 2013 Cycle Shortlisted Project Salam Cardiac Surgery Centre – Khartoum, Sudan. More information.

The Naqsh-e-Jahan square and blue-domed Shah Mosque of Isfahan are cool to the eye. They are examples of spectacular architecture in Muslim civilisation. We’d like to think we have inherited this built environment. But the reality of our world today is a congested, dense inner city scrabble of housing. Think of a slum in Karachi, for example.

This gives rise to a question, according to Farrokh Derakhshani, the director for the Aga Khan Award for Architecture. “Does the architecture of [a] society represent [its] reality? If there is chaos, is it in our built environment and also how we live?”

Derakhshani used this line to open his presentation on ‘Buildings that Heal’, at the Aga Khan University on Thursday. He was accompanied by Italian architect Raul Pantaleo of Studio Tamassociati who spoke about their work on the Salam Centre for Cardiac Surgery in Khartoum, Sudan. It was one of the five winners sharing the one-million-dollar Aga Khan Award for Architecture, 2013.

via Aga Khan Award in Architecture: For the Muslim world, buildings that heal – The Express Tribune.

From the Ismailimail Archives <br> Aga Khan Award for Architecture - trophies ahead of the 2013 Award Ceremony in Lisbon Portugal
From the Ismailimail Archives
Aga Khan Award for Architecture Steering Committee and 2013 Master Jury

About Aga Khan Award for Architecture

The Aga Khan Award for Architecture (AKAA) is given every three years to projects that set new standards of excellence in architecture, planning practices, historic preservation and landscape architecture. Through its efforts, the Award seeks to identify and encourage building concepts that successfully address the needs and aspirations of societies across the world, in which Muslims have a significant presence.

The selection process emphasizes architecture that not only provides for people’s physical, social and economic needs, but that also stimulates and responds to their cultural expectations. Particular attention is given to building schemes that use local resources and appropriate technology in innovative ways, and to projects likely to inspire similar efforts elsewhere.

The Award is governed by a steering committee chaired by His Highness the Aga Khan. A new committee is constituted each cycle to establish the eligibility criteria for project submissions, provide thematic direction in response to emerging priorities and issues, and to develop plans for the future of the Award. The steering committee is responsible for the selection and appointment of the master jury for each Award cycle, and for the Award’s programme of international seminars, lectures, exhibitions and publications.

The twelfth triennial cycle of the Award runs from 2011-2013. The current prize fund totals US$ 1,000,000 and is presented to projects selected by an independent master jury. The Award has completed eleven cycles of activity since 1977, and documentation has been compiled on over 8,000 building projects throughout the world. To date, the master juries have selected 105 projects to receive the Aga Khan Award for Architecture.

AKAA project locations

The first Award Cycle Presentation Ceremony was held in Shalimar Gardens, Lahore, Pakistan in 1980 and since then every three years, the Awards have been presented at historically significant locations around the world such as:

  • Topkapi Palace, Istanbul, Turkey (1983)
  • Badi Palace, Marrakesh, Morocco (1986)
  • Citadel of Saladin, Cairo, Egypt (1989)
  • Registan Square, Samarkand, Uzbekistan (1992)
  • Karaton Surakarta, Solo, Indonesia (1995)
  • The Alhambra, Granada, Spain (1998)
  • Citadel of Aleppo, Syria (2001)
  • The Humayun Tomb Complex, New Delhi, India (2004)
  • The Petronas Towers, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia (2007)
  • Museum of Islamic Art, Doha, Qatar (2010)
  • Castle of São Jorge, Lisbon, Portugal (2013)

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