
Aga
Khan Award for Architecture
The Tenth Award
Cycle, 2005 - 2007
On
4 September 2007, at a ceremony held in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia,
His Highness the Aga Khan announced the nine recipients
of the 2007 Aga Khan Award for Architecture. Founded in
1977, the Award marked its 30th anniversary this year, and
the completion of the 10th cycle of the programme.
Nine
projects Receive 2007 Aga Khan Award for Architecture
- 4 September 2007 (Press Release and Slide
show)
Full
Background Information and On-line Press Kit
Video
of the Recipients of the Aga Khan Award for Architecture
- 4 September 2007
2007
Master Jury for 2007 Profiles(PDF)
The
nine projects selected by the 2007 Award Master Jury were:
- Samir
Kassir Square, Beirut, Lebanon
- Rehabilitation
of the City of Shibam, Yemen
- Central
Market, Koudougou, Burkina Faso
- University
of Technology Petronas, Bandar Seri Iskandar, Malaysia
- Restoration
of the Amiriya Complex, Rada, Yemen
- Moulmein
Rise Residential Tower, Singapore
- Royal
Netherlands Embassy, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
- Rehabilitation
of the Walled City, Nicosia, Cyprus
- School
in Rudrapur, Dinajpur, Bangladesh
With its emblematic high-tech architecture, the University
of Technology Petronas provides an inspiring structure
for progressive education in this rapidly developing nation.
The Award will be presented to the architects, Foster +
Partners and GDP Architects, and the Petronas Corporation
(the Petronas Towers won an Award in the 2004 cycle).
In
1979, the representatives of the Greek Cypriot and Turkish
Cypriot communities held a historic meeting under United
Nations auspices to create a master plan for the Rehabilitation
of the Walled City of Nicosia. A collaborative
and sustained effort, the project has been successful in
reversing the city’s physical and economic decline,
using architectural restoration and reuse as the catalyst
for improvement to the quality of life on both sides of
this divided city. The representatives of the Greek Cypriot
and Turkish Cypriot communities will share the Award with
the Nicosia Master Plan team.
The Samir Kassir Square is a restrained
and serene urban public space that skilfully handles the
conditions and infrastructure of its location in a city
that has undergone rapid redevelopment. The Award will go
to Vladimir Djurovic, the pre-eminent landscape architect
working in Lebanon today.
The
Rehabilitation of the City of Shibam is
part of a project that focuses on the preservation of this
unique place as a living community, with architectural restoration
integrated into the creation of new economic and social
structures. The Award recipients are the Yemeni government
and its cultural agencies, the German Technical Cooperation
(GTZ) and the community of Shibam.
Koudougou’s
Central Market introduces simple improvements to
a traditional material - stabilised earth - to create an
important space for civic exchange and economic opportunity,
helping enhance and strengthen a mid-sized town in Burkina
Faso. The Award will be shared by the Koudougou Municipality,
the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation (SDC),
and the architects, Laurent Séchaud and Pierre Jéquier.
With its reliance on local knowledge and experience, the
Restoration of the Amiriya Complex in Yemen
saw the revival of lost techniques of building and ornamentation.
The project represents a milestone in the protection of
cultural heritage in Yemen. The Award will be presented
to the project directors, renowned Iraqi archaeologist and
restorer Selma Al-Radi and her Yemeni counterpart, Yahya
Al-Nasiri.
Within
the constraints of a developer-driven brief, the Moulmein
Rise Residential Tower uses innovative techniques
and detailing that combine new principles for tropical design
and improvements for high-rise living. Wong Mun Summ and
Richard Hassell, partners at the Singapore firm WOHA Architects
will receive the Award.
The
guiding principle in the construction of the Royal
Netherlands Embassy in Addis Ababa was a respect
for place while addressing the functional requirements of
a working embassy, resulting in a contemporary structure
that fully engages its local environment. The Dutch architects
Dick van Gameren and Bjarne Mastenbroek will receive the
Award, together with the Ethiopian architects at the firm
ABBA Architects.
Hand-built
in four months by the local community and volunteer architects
from Germany and Austria, the School in Rudrapur,
Bangladesh, makes use of easily available local
materials to create a new model for school construction
that is beautiful, simple and humane. The architects Anna
Heringer and Eike Roswag will share the Award with the craftsmen
and volunteers who assisted in the building, and the Bangladeshi
NGO for sustainable rural development, Dipshikha.
For
media enquiries regarding
the 2007 Aga Khan Award Recipients or the ceremony held
on 4 september 2007 in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, please contact:
akaa @akdn.org.
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