Pages

Wednesday, 24 June 2015

8 MODERN MOSQUES THAT BLEND AN ANCIENT RELIGION WITH CONTEMPORARY DESIGN


wps559.tmp
8 Modern Mosques That Blend an Ancient Religion with Contemporary Design
By P. David,
Architizer, 18 June 2015.

Designing a mosque entails very specific challenges for architects: the strict and detailed requirements for the typology were established centuries ago and remain paramount in creating a place of worship for Muslims. Consequently, these buildings have long been associated with conservative styles employing well-recognized, traditional forms and aesthetic details. Even so, architects have set out to prove that it is possible to design a modern mosque that speaks to the younger Islamic generation while respecting those age-old traditions.

Here, on the occasion of Ramadan, are eight projects that bring modernism (and occasionally post-modernism) to mosques - each with their own contemporary twist…

1. Islamic Community Centre and Mosque by Henning Larsen Architects - Copenhagen, Denmark

wpsBF44.tmp

In March, Henning Larsen Architects unveiled plans for a contemporary mosque in Copenhagen, displaying a sculptural cluster of domes in a felicitous mix of Nordic and Islamic styles.

wps404C.tmp

The volumes are drawn together to form a large central space under an undulating ceiling, with a circular pool in the central court acting as a reflective focal point. The walls and ceiling are pierced by a constellation of windows and skylights that throw light across the interior in a manner similar to Jean Nouvel’s perforated Louvre in Abu Dhabi.

The domed forms and minimalist detailing form an abstract interpretation of traditional Arabic architecture, a daring move that has been harnessed by a number of firms venturing into the realms of Islamic design in recent times.

2. Islamic Cultural Centre and Museum of Tolerance by BIG - Bjarke Ingels Group - Tirana, Albania

wps579A.tmp

BIG Architects won a competition to design a mosque, Islamic centre, and museum in Tirana, Albania - called the Islamic Cultural Centre and Museum of Tolerance.

wpsC63B.tmpwps4173.tmp

Their proposal is a formal inversion of the traditional domed mosque volume, with three buildings clustered around a public plaza that is intended as a spatial and programmatic extension of the internal spaces.

3. Masjid Permata Qolbu by MASS - Jakarta, Indonesia

wpsAAC8.tmp

Constructed in 2013 in Jakarta, Indonesia, the Masjid Permata Qolbu by MASS is a mosque defined by distinctive white ribs that possess rhythmic qualities similar to buttresses seen in Christian ecclesiastic buildings.

 wpsD965.tmpwps58F7.tmp

The building’s architectural language is carried across to the mosque’s very modern minaret, comprising two intersecting fins and a loudspeaker that announces prayer time.

4. The Vanishing Mosque by Rux Design - United Arab Emirates

wpsEA41.tmp

Rux Design asked themselves: “What if a mosque was not a building? What if it vanished into the fabric of a city?” Their answer was the Vanishing Mosque, a minimalist open-air place of worship in an angular urban courtyard in the U.A.E.

wps8D68.tmp

The ground plane appears to have been lifted up by a single corner, forming a diminishing terrace of stone prayer steps oriented toward Mecca.

5. Halide Edip Adivar Mosque by Manco Architects - Istanbul, Turkey

wps2813.tmp

The Halide Edip Adivar Mosque concept by Manco Architects attempts to fuse the introverted privacy of the traditional “Kulliye” (a complex of mosque and supplementary buildings with various functions) with the open public spaces now popular in contemporary civic design.

wps199E.tmpwpsE134.tmp

The focal point is a simple, pixelated concrete box, employing a subtle use of light that transforms the mosque into an urban lantern by night.

6. King Abdullah Financial District Mosque by FXFOWLE Architects - Riyadh, Saudi Arabia

wpsEBED.tmp

Designed in collaboration with Buro Happold Consultants, the King Abdullah Financial District Mosque by FXFOWLE Architects is designed as part of a huge development in the fast-growing city of Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

wpsD498.tmpwps923.tmp

The proposal utilizes the traditional materials of black and white marble in a contemporary way, forming a faceted box covered with aluminium screens, each of which is laser-cut with abstract interpretations of the eight-pointed Islamic star.

7. Camlica Mosque by Tuncer Cakmakli Architects - Istanbul, Turkey

wps50B7.tmp

This competition entry by Tuncer Cakmakli Architects for a site on Istanbul’s prominent Camlica Hill aims to put nature at the heart of the Camlica Mosque. A towering green wall of roses, jasmines, and other flowers wraps around a huge central plaza intended to evoke the sensation of gathering with a Garden of Eden.

wps5883.tmpwpsBB55.tmp

The concept will remain just that, however, as the winning design for a highly traditional mosque by Bahar Mizrak and Hayriye Gül Totu is now under construction.

8. Wall Dome by Paolo Venturella - Prishtina, Kosovo

wps765C.tmp

Perhaps the most unorthodox design in our collection, Paolo Venturella’s competition proposal for the Wall Dome in Prishtina, Kosovo, is envisaged as a monolithic marriage of the two primary elements of mosque architecture, the “Kiblah Wall” and the “Dome.”

wpsB997.tmpwps66BD.tmp

The modern abstraction of these elements is complemented by the modern treatment of its external surface, which incorporates photovoltaic louvers to help power the complex.

Top image: The Vanishing Mosque. Credit: Rux Design.

[Source: Architizer. Edited.]

No comments:

Post a Comment

Please adhere to proper blog etiquette when posting your comments. This blog owner will exercise his absolution discretion in allowing or rejecting any comments that are deemed seditious, defamatory, libelous, racist, vulgar, insulting, and other remarks that exhibit similar characteristics. If you insist on using anonymous comments, please write your name or other IDs at the end of your message.