A dome-less mosque
designed by a Bangladeshi woman architect and a Beirut institute by the late
Zaha Hadid were among six projects awarded the Aga Khan Award for Architecture Sunday.
AFP
report continues:
The
prestigious prize was awarded at a ceremony in Al-Ain oasis city, in the United
Arab Emirates, to the projects chosen from a list of 348 works.
They
will share a prize of US$1 million.
"Gone
are the dome and the ever-prevalent minarets, the decorative panels of designed
relief and calligraphy. In their place stand intricately structured brick walls
that imbue the structure within a unique aura of spirituality," said the
jury describing Dhaka's Bait ur Rouf mosque designed by Marina Tabassum.
As
well as Hadid's Issam Fares Institute at the American University of Beirut, the
winning projects included Tehran's Tabiat Pedestrian Bridge and Copenhagen's
Superkilen kilometre-long urban park.
They
also included the Friendship Centre in Gaibandha, a training facility for the
NGO Friendship that works with communities living in rural flatlands of
northern Bangladesh.
Beijing's
Hutong Children's Library and Art Centre was also among the winners.
Awarded
every three years, the prize was established in 1977 and is given to
"projects that set new standards of excellence in architecture, planning
practices, historic preservation and landscape architecture".
The awards were presented by UAE Prime Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum and the Aga Khan IV, the wealthy imam of Nizari Ismaili Shiites.
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