Title: Piyush Jalan
1Zaha Hadid
2Biography
- BIRTH
- ZAHA HADID was born in Bagdad (1950).
- EDUCATION
- Trained Maths at the American university of
Beirut (1968 - 1971)studied architecture at the
architectural association school (AA) in London,
UK (1972 - 1977) - PRACTISE
- Joined OMA (office of metropolitan
architecture) and became a partner (1977).Own
practice 'ZAHA HADID office' (from 1980).
3Childhood
- Zaha Hadid was raised in a liberal, open-minded
family which allowed her to explore new ways of
doing things and think critically. - She was born in Baghdad, Iraq in 1950 to
aristocratic parents. Hadid's father played an
important role in her creative development. - He exposed her to many different cultures while
always stressing the importance of her heritage. - He demonstrated this through his studies at the
London School of Economics and participation in
the fight for Iraqi independence from foreign
occupation. - His progressive views on the industrialization of
Iraq, housing issues, and the nationalization of
the oil production influenced Zaha in her views
of the world. - Hadids childhood experiences encouraged a belief
in open communication between different groups of
people, but also a strong conviction in Iraqi
independence.
4EDUCATION
- Hadid's elementary education in England and
Switzerland exposed her to many different
cultures. - She attended school with Christian, Jewish,
Muslim, and Islamic girls. - This is the first indication of marginality in
her life. She felt distanced from her Muslim
heritage at the school because of its Christian
educational style. - "I NEVER HAD A TRADITIONAL EDUCATION AS A MUSLIM.
IN THE ARAB WORLD, ISLAMIC CULTURE AND ARAB
CULTURE ARE THE SAME. IT'S A CULTURAL SITUATION,
NOT A RELIGIOUS SITUATION." (HADID 1995)
5- This dissension between Arab and Western
influences reoccurred as she developed her
architectural style. - Hadid first became interested in architecture at
age eleven, although she pursued other interests
before attending architecture school. - A friend of the family was designing a home for
Hadid's aunt and would bring the models by and
show Zaha. - Her mother and father increased her interest by
taking her to architectural exhibitions. - Before pursuing higher education in
architecture, Hadid studied mathematics at the
American University in Beirut in 1968. - The field of modern mathematics and the
relationship between philosophy, physics and math
interested her briefly before studied
architecture. (Hadid 1995)
6CONCEPT
- "GRAVITY-DEFYING",
- "FRAGMENTARY"
- "REVOLUTIONARY"
- A MAIN THEME OF HADID'S DESIGNS EXHIBITS THAT A
BUILDING CAN FLOAT AND DEFY GRAVITY.
7MAXXI, ROME
- MAXXI stands for Museo nazionale delle arti del
XXI secolo (National Museum of 21st Century
Art). - The museum will become the joint home of the
MAXXI Arts and MAXXI Architecture and Italys
first national museum solely dedicated to
contemporary arts. - Zaha Hadid architects, out of 273 candidates, won
the architectural competition to design the
building in 1998 with a design that responds to
the form and arrangement of existing industrial
buildings on the site. The program offers a
flexible, interdisciplinary arena for the
exhibition of contemporary art and architecture
and for live events.
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9MAXII, ROME
- It acts as a tie between the geometrical elements
already present - It is built on the site of old army barracks
between the river tiber and via guido reni, the
centre is made up of spaces that flow freely and
unexpectedly between interior and exterior, where
walls twist to become floors or ceilings. - The building absorbs the landscape structures,
dynamizes them and gives them back to the urban
environment. - Hadid's architecture can thus be understood as an
intensification of the surrounding space.'a
scene for thought, with art as a player on the
cene' says hadid.
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11Zaha Hadid
- Zaha Hadid stated "I see the MAXXI as an
immersive urban environment for the exchange of
ideas, feeding the cultural vitality of the city.
It's no longer just a museum, but an
urban cultural centre where a dense texture of
interior and exterior spaces have been
intertwined and superimposed over one another.
It's an intriguing mixture of galleries,
irrigating a large urban field with linear
display surfaces".
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13The architecture of MAXXI
- Two principle architectural elements characterize
the project - the concrete walls that define the exhibition
galleries and determine the interweaving of
volumes - and the transparent roof that modulates natural
light. The roofing system complies with the
highest standards required for museums and is
composed of integrated frames and louvers with
devices for filtering sunlight, artificial light
and environmental control.
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16Galleries, Walkway and Materials
- Located around a large full height space which
gives access to the galleries dedicated to
permanent collections and temporary exhibitions,
the auditorium, reception services, cafeteria and
bookshop. - Outside, a pedestrian walkway follows the outline
of the building, restoring an urban link that has
been blocked for almost a century by the former
military barracks in Rome. - Materials such as glass (roof), steel (stairs)
and cement (walls) give the exhibition spaces a
neutral appearance, whilst mobile panels enable
curatorial flexibility and variety.
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18Sinuous shape
- The fluid and sinuous shapes, the variety and
interweaving of spaces and the modulated use of
natural light lead to a spatial and functional
framework of great complexity, offering
constantly changing and unexpected views from
within the building and outdoor spaces.
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31PROJECT NUMBERS
Total site area 29,000 m2 / Exterior spaces
19,640 m2 / Interior spaces 21,200 m2 / Display
space 10.000 m2 / Services (auditorium,
library-video library, cafeteria, restaurant,
etc.) 6,000 m2 / MAXXI Arts 4.077 m2 / MAXXI
Architecture 1,935 m2 / Total volume 113,000 m3
/ Maximum height 22.90 m / Demolitions of
existing structures 100,000 m3 / Structural
steel 6,000,000 kg / Steel roof trusses 700,000
kg / Site poured structural concrete 50,000 m3 /
Formwork area 40,000 m2 of which 20,000 m2
exposed / Area of glass skylights 2,600 m2 /
Number of people employed by the MAXXI an
average of 100 people per day (technicians and
labourers) for 1,500 days / Hours of construction
time 1,250,000 / Project cost 150 million Euro
/ Visitor forecast between 200 and 400 thousand
per year.
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