List of works by Zaha Hadid
Appearance
This a list of projects, both realised and unrealised, by British Iraqi architect Zaha Hadid.
Projects
Image | Title | Year | Location | Status | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Malevich's Tektonik | 1976-77 | London | Not realised. | Fourth-year student design project for a hotel on the Hungerford Bridge over the Thames.[1] | |
Museum of the Nineteenth Century | 1977–78 | London | Not realised. | Fifth-year student design thesis; "one of my first ideological and conjectural projects".[2] | |
Dutch Parliament Extension | 1978–79 | The Hague | Not realised. | Extension of the Binnenhof complex for parliamentary accommodation. With Rem Koolhaas and Elia Zenghelis.[2] | |
Irish Prime Minister's Residence | 1979–80 | Dublin, Phoenix Park | Not realised. | Residence and state function room for the Taoiseach. "The objective was to create a weightlessness, freedom from the stress of public life."[3] | |
59 Eaton Place | 1981–82 | London | Not realised. | Renovation of a turn-of-the-century town house.[4] Hadid received the Gold Medal for Architectural Design, British Architecture for this design.[5] | |
Parc de la Villette | 1982–83 | Paris | Not realised. | Design of a park housing public facilities devoted to science and music and located outside central Paris.[4] Bernard Tschumi's project eventually won the competition. | |
The Peak[6] | 1982–83 | Hong Kong, Victoria Peak | Not realised. | Proposal to re-design the Peak with a cliff-top resort characterised by a "Suprematist geology".[7] The project won the international competition's first prize, in part because of Hadid's spectacular drawings and paintings, and catapulted Hadid to international fame.[8] It was never executed on account of complications associated with Hong Kong's return to China.[9] | |
Grand Buildings | 1985 | London, Trafalgar Square | Not realised. | Re-design of Trafalgar Square and the buildings surrounding it with towers that "appear to mutate from shards that penetrate the square's surface into a single solid mass".[10] | |
Melbury Court | 1985 | London | Not realised. | Re-design of a small flat aiming to "explode the rigid box rooms" and featuring furniture on tracks or pivots for flexibility.[11] | |
Hamburg Docklands | 1986 | Hamburg | Not realised. | Masterplan for the redevelopment of the harbour area, particularly the Speicherstadt.[12] | |
Kurfürstendamm 70[13] | 1986 | Berlin | Not realised. | Office building on a very narrow site (2.7 × 16 metres).[14] | |
IBA housing | 1986–93 | Berlin, Stresemannstraße 109. 52°30′23″N 13°22′47″E / 52.5063°N 13.3797°E | Built. | 3-floor housing development with a wedge-shaped, metal-clad 8-floor tower for the Internationale Bauausstellung.[14] This, together with the Vitra Fire Station, was Hadid's first realised project. Hadid was one of three women commissioned to design social housing complexes, following the efforts of the Feministische Organisation von Planerinnen und Architektinnen to increase female contributions to the IBA program.[15] | |
Azabu-Jyuban[16] | 1986 | Tokyo, Azabu Juban | Not realised. | Commercial development on a "narrow site in a canyon of random buildings near the Roppongi district."[17] | |
Tomigaya[18] | 1986 | Tokyo, Azabu Juban | Not realised. | Small mixed-use project related to the Azabu-Jyuban project, featuring an elevated angular glass pavilion as its centerpiece.[19] | |
West Hollywood Civic Centre | 1987 | Los Angeles, Azabu Juban | Not realised. | Design for a civic centre in a "relatively context-free environment", allowing "objects [to] float and interact in a way that is only possible in wide-open spaces".[20] | |
Al Wahda Sports Centre[21] | 1988 | Abu Dhabi | Not realised. | ||
Berlin 2000 | 1988 | Berlin | Not realised. | Urban masterplan for a Berlin without the Berlin Wall, commissioned a year before the Wall's actual fall.[22] | |
Victoria City Areal[23] | 1988 | Berlin | Not realised. | Design for a re-development of a cruciform site on Kurfürstendamm, envisioning a "bent slab" of a hotel hovering above the street.[24] | |
A New Barcelona | 1989 | Barcelona | Not realised. | Project of a "new urban geometry" for Barcelona based on the diagonal axes of Cerdà's 19th century plan, which are twisted into "skewed, interlocking fragments".[25] | |
Tokyo Forum[26] | 1989 | Tokyo | Not realised. | Design for a municipal Cultural Centre, based on a "void - a glass container - out of which smaller voids are dramatically hollowed and which house the building's cultural and conference areas.[27] | |
Hafenstrasse development[28] | 1990 | Hamburg, Hafenstraße | Not realised. | Project of a mixed-use development in two gaps in a row of houses on the Elbe embankment, featuring angular, semi-transparent slabs on pillars.[29] | |
Moonsoon[30] | 1989–90 | Sapporo | Built.[31] | Interior design of a restaurant with tables like "sharp fragments of ice" and a "plasma of biomorphic sofas".[32] | |
Folly 3[33] | 1990 | Osaka | Built. | Folly in the grounds of the Expo '90 fair, a "series of compressed and fused elements to expand in the landscape and refract pedestrian movement." Hadid describes the sculpture as a "half scale experiment for the Vitra Fire Station".[34] | |
Vitra fire station | 1994 | Weil am Rhein | Built. | ||
[ | Cardiff Bay Opera House | 1995 | Cardiff, Wales, UK | Not realised. | |
Serpentine Gallery Pavilion | 2000 | London, UK | Built. Temporary. | ||
Serpentine Sackler Gallery | 2013 | London, UK | Built. | ||
Hoenheim-North Terminus & Car Park | 2001 | Hoenheim, France | Built. | ||
One-North Masterplan | 2001 | Singapore | Ongoing. | ||
Bergisel Ski Jump | 2002 | Innsbruck, Austria | Built. | ||
Rosenthal Center for Contemporary Art | 2003 | Cincinnati, Ohio | Built. | ||
Ordrupgaard Museum extension | 2001-05 | Copenhagen, Denmark | Built. | ||
BMW Central Building | 2005 | Leipzig, Germany | Built. | ||
Phaeno Science Center | 2005 | Wolfsburg, Germany | Built. | ||
Szervita Square Tower | 2006 | Budapest, Hungary | Not realised. | ||
File:IFI Building.jpg | Issam Fares Institute for Public Policy and International Affairs | 2006-14 | Beirut, Lebanon | Built. | |
Kartal-Pendik Waterfront Regeneration Masterplan | 2006 | Istanbul, Turkey | Not realised. | ||
Maggie's Centres at the Victoria Hospital | 2006 | Kirkcaldy, Scotland | Built. | ||
Tondonia Winery Pavilion[35] | 2001-06 | Haro, Spain | Built. | ||
Eleftheria Square redesign | 2007 | Nicosia, Cyprus | On hold. | ||
Hungerburgbahn stations | 2007 | Innsbruck, Austria | Built. | ||
Vilnius Guggenheim Hermitage Museum | 2008 | Vilnius, Lithuania | Not realised. | ||
Bridge Pavilion | 2008 | Zaragoza, Spain | Built. | ||
JS Bach Chamber Music Hall | 2009 | Manchester, UK | Built. | For the Manchester International Festival | |
File:Tour cma cgm 1 credits Exmagina.jpg | CMA CGM Tower | 2005-10 | Marseille, France | Built. | |
MAXXI - National Museum of the 21st Century Arts | 1998-2010 | Rome, Italy | Built. | Winner of the 2010 Stirling Prize | |
Guangzhou Opera House | 2005-10 | Guangzhou, China | Built. | ||
Evelyn Grace Academy | 2006-10 | Brixton, London, UK | Built. | Winner of the 2011 Stirling Prize | |
File:Sheikh Zayed Bridge - Abu Dhabi, UAE.jpg | Sheikh Zayed Bridge | 2007-10 | Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates | Built. | |
London Aquatics Centre | 2008-11 | London, UK | Built. | ||
Riverside Museum | 2007-11 | Glasgow, Scotland, UK | Built. | ||
Capital Hill Residence | 2011 | Barvikha Forest, Moscow | Built. | This private residence was built for Russian real estate developer Vladislav Doronin and is the only private residence Hadid designed in her lifetime.[36][37] | |
Heydar Aliyev Cultural Center | 2007-12 | Baku, Azerbaijan | Built. | ||
File:Pierresvives (3).jpg | Pierres Vives Building | 2002-12 | Montpelier, France | Built. | |
Napoli Afragola railway station | 2003-12 | Napoli, Italy | Ongoing. | ||
Salerno Maritime Terminal | 1999-12 | Salerno, Italy | Ongoing. | ||
Innovation Tower | 2009-13 | Hong Kong SAR, China | Built. | ||
Learning Center, Vienna University of Economics and Business | 2010-2013 | Vienna, Austria | Built | ||
File:Dongdaemun Design Plaza.jpg | Dongdaemun Design Plaza & Park | 2007-14 | Dongdaemun, Seoul, South Korea | Built. | |
Wangjing SOHO | 2009-14 | Beijing, China | Built. | ||
Investcorp Building, St Antony's College | 2013-15 | Oxford, England | Built. | ||
Grace on Coronation | 2014 | Brisbane, Australia | Proposed. | 3 residential skyscrapers with civic space within a new riverside park. | |
Messner Mountain Museum Corones | 2015 | Kronplatz mountain, Italy | Built. | Sixth addition to the Messner Mountain Museum | |
Port Authority | 2016 | Antwerp, Belgium | Built. | ||
King Abdullah Petroleum Studies and Research Center (KAPSARC)[38] | 2009-17 | Riyadh, Saudi Arabia | Built. | A 70,000 square meter research center |
References
- Hadid, Zaha; Betsky, Aaron (1998). Zaha Hadid: The Complete Buildings and Projects. London: Thames and Hudson. ISBN 0-500-28084-3.
- "Zaha Hadid Works". Thames and Hudson. Archived from the original on April 1, 2008. Retrieved 2009-01-18.
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suggested) (help) - "Zaha Hadid: Opere e progetti 1976-2002" (in Italian). Direzione generale per la qualità e la tutela del paesaggio, l'architettura e l'arte contemporanee. Archived from the original on 2008-06-25. Retrieved 2009-01-18.
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Footnotes
- ^ The Complete Buildings and Projects, 16.
- ^ a b The Complete Buildings and Projects, 17.
- ^ The Complete Buildings and Projects, 18.
- ^ a b The Complete Buildings and Projects, 19.
- ^ "Architonic.com biography". Archived from the original on November 4, 2008. Retrieved 2009-01-17.
{{cite web}}
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ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - ^ The Peak Leisure Club - Hongkong-Wettbewerb at archINFORM
- ^ The Complete Buildings and Projects, 20.
- ^ Rattenbury, Kester (2002). This is Not Architecture: Media Constructions. Routledge. ISBN 0-415-23180-9.
- ^ CBS Team. The Romance of Construction - II. CBS Forum. ISBN 81-901948-1-X.
- ^ The Complete Buildings and Projects, 25.
- ^ The Complete Buildings and Projects, 28.
- ^ The Complete Buildings and Projects, 32.
- ^ Bürohaus am Kurfürstendamm at archINFORM
- ^ a b The Complete Buildings and Projects, 34.
- ^ Dokumentation. http://www.frauenwohnprojekte.de/. Retrieved 9 November 2015.
{{cite web}}
: Missing or empty|title=
(help) - ^ Azabu Jyuban Gebäude at archINFORM
- ^ The Complete Buildings and Projects, 42.
- ^ Tomigaya Gebäude at archINFORM
- ^ The Complete Buildings and Projects, 43.
- ^ The Complete Buildings and Projects, 44.
- ^ Al Wahda Sportzentrum at archINFORM
- ^ The Complete Buildings and Projects, 47.
- ^ Viktoria-Stadt-Areal at archINFORM
- ^ The Complete Buildings and Projects, 49.
- ^ The Complete Buildings and Projects, 50.
- ^ Kulturzentrum Tokio at archINFORM
- ^ The Complete Buildings and Projects, 51.
- ^ Gebäude in der Hafenstraße at archINFORM
- ^ The Complete Buildings and Projects, 52-53.
- ^ Moonsoon Restaurant at archINFORM
- ^ "Zaha Hadid". ScottishArchitecture.com. Retrieved 2009-01-18.
- ^ The Complete Buildings and Projects, 56.
- ^ Expo 90 Osaka Folly at archINFORM
- ^ The Complete Buildings and Projects, 60.
- ^ "Tondonia Winery Pavilion / Zaha Hadid". archdaily. 14 May 2009. Retrieved 7 August 2009.
- ^ "Norman Foster discusses Zaha Hadid's "extraordinary" Capital Hill Residence". Dezeen. Retrieved 8 September 2016.
- ^ "There's Nothing Understated about Vladislav Doronin". Surface. Retrieved 8 September 2016.
- ^ Giovannini, Joseph (16 March 2018). "Zaha Hadid's Desert Think Tank: Environmental Beauty and Efficiency". The New York Times. Retrieved 17 March 2018.