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The Aga Khan Award for Architecture: Voices from DohaDohaland Seminar Wednesday January 12th 2011AKAA Technical Review and Jury Process:A Recent ExperienceDr. Yasser MahgoubAssociate Professor of Architecture, QU
Qatar Projects                                                                                                                              National MuseumDoha, Qatar The First Cycle , 1975
Qatar Projects                                                                                                                              SouqWaqifDoha, Qatar Short Listed 11th Cycle , 2010
The Award’s objectivesEncourage architecture that reflects the pluralism that has always characterized Muslim communities.” No fixed criteria for the type, nature, location or cost of projects to be consideredEligible projects must be designed for or used by Muslim communities, in part or in whole, wherever they are located.The Agra Fort has won the Aga Khan Award for Architecture in the year 2004
Project Identification and NominationThe Award encourages and accepts recommendations for projects to be considered from all possible sources.All interested persons can submit projects for the Award by completing a simple form or by completing the on-line form.Architectsand others associated with projects are welcome to recommend their own works.The Award invites younger architects and emerging talentsto submit their works.
Eligibility CriteriaAll projects must meet the eligibility criteria.Eligibility criteria focus on projects completed during the last two cycles of the Award, covering the last six-year. Eligible projects must be completed and have been in use for at least one full year.
Eligibility CriteriaLarge and/or long-term projects that are not yet fully completed – such as urban design, area conservation, and community upgrading schemes, among others – are also eligible so long asa tangible portion has been completed and demonstrates the potential success of the long-term project.Re-Forestation Programme of the Middle East Technical University, Ankara, TurkeySixth Award Cycle, 1960 and ongoing
Eligibility CriteriaAll types of building projects that affect today’s environmentsFrommodest small-scale interventions tomajor complexes and urban or regional design.HousingCommunity and neighborhood projectsUrban areas and issuesInfrastructureTransportationIndustryOffices and commercial facilitiesEducational and health facilities.
Eligibility CriteriaThe Award has encouraged submissions under the following three categories for the 2010 cycle, which were under-representedamong nominated projects:Rural developmentIndustry and places of workPublic spaces, small and large
On-Site Project ReviewProject Reviewers are architectural professionals specializing in various disciplines, including housing, urban planning, landscape design and restoration. Their task is to examine on site each of the projects shortlisted by the Master Jury, verifying project data and seeking additional informationsuch as user reactions.
On-Site Project Review ReportReviewers report on projects located outside their native countries.two to four days on-site, exclusive of travel.Detailed set of criteriain their written reports, and must also respond to specific concerns and questions prepared by the Master Jury for each project.
Report OutlineThe report is conceived in two sections: The firstsection should seek to be objective, and will form the basis of public reports, releases, and various publications of the Award.The secondsection will be an internal document and should reflect the reviewer’s personal judgment of the project.
Report OutlineSection II. IntroductionII. Contextual InformationIII. ProgrammeIV. DescriptionV. Construction Schedule and CostsVI. Technical AssessmentVII. UsersVIII. Persons involvedIX. BibliographySection IIX. Project SignificanceXI. Conclusion
Project Presentation to Master JuryReviewers travel to Geneva one or two days in advance of the final meetings of the Master Jury.On the first two days, reviewers are required to report on each of the projects they visited, with a prepared visual presentation of materials including photographstaken by the project photographer and other materials collected by the reviewer or available at the Award office.
Review and Selection Procedures Master JuryThe review of projects and the selection of award recipients is the responsibility of an independent Master Jury specially appointed for each Award cycle.Each jury is pluridisciplinary, and brings together specialists in such fields as history, engineering, philosophy, architectural conservation, and contemporary arts, as well as practicing architects, landscape architects and urban planners.SouleymaneBachirDiagne (Professor, Department of Philosophy, Columbia University, USA) Omar AbdulazizHallaj (Architect; Chief Executive Officer, Syria Trust for Development, Syria) Salah M. Hassan (Art historian and curator; director of Africana Studies and Research Center, Cornell University, USA) FaryarJavaherian (Architect and curator; co-founder of Gamma Consultants, Iran) AnishKapoor (Artist, UK) Kongjian Yu (Landscape architect and urbanist; founder and dean of Graduate School of Landscape Architecture, Peking University, China) Jean Nouvel (Architect; founding partner, Ateliers Jean Nouvel, France Alice Rawsthorn (Design critic, International Herald Tribune, UK) Basem Al Shihabi (Architect; Managing Partner, Omrania & Associates, Saudi Arabia) 
Review and Selection Procedures Master JuryFor the Eleventh Award Cycle, the Master Jury held two meetings to arrive at its final decisions.At its first meeting, the jury reviewed the submissions enrolled through the nomination programme.The jury examines the documentation on each project and select approximately twenty-five to thirty projects for On-Site Project Review by experts selected by the Award.At the second week-long meeting of the Master Jury, the Project Reviewers make personal presentations on the projects they have reviewed.
Selection of Award RecipientsAfter evaluating the projects in closed sessions, the Jurors select the Award recipients and determine the apportionment of the US$ 500,000 prize fund.Master Jury apportions prizes among the contributors - architects, other design and construction professionals, craftsmen, clients and institutions - whom it considers most responsible for the success of each project.The decisions of the Master Jury are final.
Shortlisted ProjectsAmerican University of Beirut Campus Master Plan, Beirut, LebanonChandgaon Mosque, Chittagong, BangladeshCBF Women’s Health Centre, Ouagadougou, Burkina FasoConservation of Gjirokastra, Gjirokastra, AlbaniaNishorgo Visitor Interpretation Centre, Teknaf, BangladeshTulou Collective Housing, Guangzhou, ChinaPalmyra House, Alibagh, IndiaGreen School, Bali, IndonesiaReconstruction of Ngibikan Village, Yogyakarta, IndonesiaDowlat II Residential Building, Tehran, IranRestoration of the Rubber Smokehouse, Lunas, Kedah, MalaysiaRehabilitation of Al Qaraouiyine Mosque, Fez, MoroccoSouk Waqif, Doha, QatarYodakandyia Community Centre, Hambantota District, Sri LankaBridge School, Xiashi, ChinaWadiHanifa Wetlands, Riyadh, Saudi ArabiaMadinat Al-Zahra Museum, Cordoba, SpainRevitalization of the recent Heritage of Tunis, Tunis, TunisiaIpekyol Textile Factory, Edirne, TurkeyThe shortlist of 19 nominees for the 2010 cycle of Aga Khan Award for Architecture was announced by the Master Jury. The nominees, which range from a textile factory in Turkey to a school built on a bridge in China, are located in Albania, Bangladesh, Burkina Faso, China, India, Indonesia, Iran, Lebanon, Malaysia, Morocco, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Spain, Sri Lanka, Tunisia and Turkey.
Winners of the 2010 Aga Khan Award for ArchitectureWadiHanifa WetlandsRiyadh, Saudi ArabiaPlanners: Moriyama & Teshima Planners Limited & BuroHappold in joint ventureClient: High Commission for the Development of Arriyadh/Arriyadh Development AuthorityRevitalisation of the Hypercentre of TunisTunis, TunisiaArchitect: Association de Sauvegarde de la Médina de TunisClient: Municipality of TunisBridge SchoolXiashi, Fujian Province, ChinaArchitect: Li Xiaodong AtelierClient: Xiashi Village Madinat al-Zahra MuseumCordoba, SpainArchitect: Nieto SobejanoArquitectos, Fuensanta Nieto & Enrique SobejanoClient: Junta de Andalucía, Consejería de CulturaIpekyol Textile FactoryEdirne, TurkeyArchitect: EAA - EmreArolat ArchitectsClient: IpekyolGiyimSanayi
Five Projects Received 2010 Aga Khan Award The five projects selected for the 2010 Aga Khan Award for Architecture were announced at a ceremony held at the Museum of Islamic Art in Doha, November 24, 2010.His Highness Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani the Emir of Qatar and Her Highness SheikhaMozabint Nasser joined His Highness the Aga Khan in presiding over the ceremony. 
Summary of the Review ProcessEligibility Criteria
2010 On Site Review ReportAmerican University in BeirutBeirut, Lebanon (3980.LEB)By: Yasser Mahgoub
Basic InformationPlanner/Architect:SASAKI and Machado/SilvettiClient:American University in BeirutDesign:2000 - 2001Implementation:2002 – On going
The Master Plan Successes PlacePeoplePlanProductProcess
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The Aga Khan Award for Architecture Technical Review and Jury Process: A Recent Experience

  • 1. The Aga Khan Award for Architecture: Voices from DohaDohaland Seminar Wednesday January 12th 2011AKAA Technical Review and Jury Process:A Recent ExperienceDr. Yasser MahgoubAssociate Professor of Architecture, QU
  • 4. The Award’s objectivesEncourage architecture that reflects the pluralism that has always characterized Muslim communities.” No fixed criteria for the type, nature, location or cost of projects to be consideredEligible projects must be designed for or used by Muslim communities, in part or in whole, wherever they are located.The Agra Fort has won the Aga Khan Award for Architecture in the year 2004
  • 5. Project Identification and NominationThe Award encourages and accepts recommendations for projects to be considered from all possible sources.All interested persons can submit projects for the Award by completing a simple form or by completing the on-line form.Architectsand others associated with projects are welcome to recommend their own works.The Award invites younger architects and emerging talentsto submit their works.
  • 6. Eligibility CriteriaAll projects must meet the eligibility criteria.Eligibility criteria focus on projects completed during the last two cycles of the Award, covering the last six-year. Eligible projects must be completed and have been in use for at least one full year.
  • 7. Eligibility CriteriaLarge and/or long-term projects that are not yet fully completed – such as urban design, area conservation, and community upgrading schemes, among others – are also eligible so long asa tangible portion has been completed and demonstrates the potential success of the long-term project.Re-Forestation Programme of the Middle East Technical University, Ankara, TurkeySixth Award Cycle, 1960 and ongoing
  • 8. Eligibility CriteriaAll types of building projects that affect today’s environmentsFrommodest small-scale interventions tomajor complexes and urban or regional design.HousingCommunity and neighborhood projectsUrban areas and issuesInfrastructureTransportationIndustryOffices and commercial facilitiesEducational and health facilities.
  • 9. Eligibility CriteriaThe Award has encouraged submissions under the following three categories for the 2010 cycle, which were under-representedamong nominated projects:Rural developmentIndustry and places of workPublic spaces, small and large
  • 10. On-Site Project ReviewProject Reviewers are architectural professionals specializing in various disciplines, including housing, urban planning, landscape design and restoration. Their task is to examine on site each of the projects shortlisted by the Master Jury, verifying project data and seeking additional informationsuch as user reactions.
  • 11. On-Site Project Review ReportReviewers report on projects located outside their native countries.two to four days on-site, exclusive of travel.Detailed set of criteriain their written reports, and must also respond to specific concerns and questions prepared by the Master Jury for each project.
  • 12. Report OutlineThe report is conceived in two sections: The firstsection should seek to be objective, and will form the basis of public reports, releases, and various publications of the Award.The secondsection will be an internal document and should reflect the reviewer’s personal judgment of the project.
  • 13. Report OutlineSection II. IntroductionII. Contextual InformationIII. ProgrammeIV. DescriptionV. Construction Schedule and CostsVI. Technical AssessmentVII. UsersVIII. Persons involvedIX. BibliographySection IIX. Project SignificanceXI. Conclusion
  • 14. Project Presentation to Master JuryReviewers travel to Geneva one or two days in advance of the final meetings of the Master Jury.On the first two days, reviewers are required to report on each of the projects they visited, with a prepared visual presentation of materials including photographstaken by the project photographer and other materials collected by the reviewer or available at the Award office.
  • 15. Review and Selection Procedures Master JuryThe review of projects and the selection of award recipients is the responsibility of an independent Master Jury specially appointed for each Award cycle.Each jury is pluridisciplinary, and brings together specialists in such fields as history, engineering, philosophy, architectural conservation, and contemporary arts, as well as practicing architects, landscape architects and urban planners.SouleymaneBachirDiagne (Professor, Department of Philosophy, Columbia University, USA) Omar AbdulazizHallaj (Architect; Chief Executive Officer, Syria Trust for Development, Syria) Salah M. Hassan (Art historian and curator; director of Africana Studies and Research Center, Cornell University, USA) FaryarJavaherian (Architect and curator; co-founder of Gamma Consultants, Iran) AnishKapoor (Artist, UK) Kongjian Yu (Landscape architect and urbanist; founder and dean of Graduate School of Landscape Architecture, Peking University, China) Jean Nouvel (Architect; founding partner, Ateliers Jean Nouvel, France Alice Rawsthorn (Design critic, International Herald Tribune, UK) Basem Al Shihabi (Architect; Managing Partner, Omrania & Associates, Saudi Arabia) 
  • 16. Review and Selection Procedures Master JuryFor the Eleventh Award Cycle, the Master Jury held two meetings to arrive at its final decisions.At its first meeting, the jury reviewed the submissions enrolled through the nomination programme.The jury examines the documentation on each project and select approximately twenty-five to thirty projects for On-Site Project Review by experts selected by the Award.At the second week-long meeting of the Master Jury, the Project Reviewers make personal presentations on the projects they have reviewed.
  • 17. Selection of Award RecipientsAfter evaluating the projects in closed sessions, the Jurors select the Award recipients and determine the apportionment of the US$ 500,000 prize fund.Master Jury apportions prizes among the contributors - architects, other design and construction professionals, craftsmen, clients and institutions - whom it considers most responsible for the success of each project.The decisions of the Master Jury are final.
  • 18. Shortlisted ProjectsAmerican University of Beirut Campus Master Plan, Beirut, LebanonChandgaon Mosque, Chittagong, BangladeshCBF Women’s Health Centre, Ouagadougou, Burkina FasoConservation of Gjirokastra, Gjirokastra, AlbaniaNishorgo Visitor Interpretation Centre, Teknaf, BangladeshTulou Collective Housing, Guangzhou, ChinaPalmyra House, Alibagh, IndiaGreen School, Bali, IndonesiaReconstruction of Ngibikan Village, Yogyakarta, IndonesiaDowlat II Residential Building, Tehran, IranRestoration of the Rubber Smokehouse, Lunas, Kedah, MalaysiaRehabilitation of Al Qaraouiyine Mosque, Fez, MoroccoSouk Waqif, Doha, QatarYodakandyia Community Centre, Hambantota District, Sri LankaBridge School, Xiashi, ChinaWadiHanifa Wetlands, Riyadh, Saudi ArabiaMadinat Al-Zahra Museum, Cordoba, SpainRevitalization of the recent Heritage of Tunis, Tunis, TunisiaIpekyol Textile Factory, Edirne, TurkeyThe shortlist of 19 nominees for the 2010 cycle of Aga Khan Award for Architecture was announced by the Master Jury. The nominees, which range from a textile factory in Turkey to a school built on a bridge in China, are located in Albania, Bangladesh, Burkina Faso, China, India, Indonesia, Iran, Lebanon, Malaysia, Morocco, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Spain, Sri Lanka, Tunisia and Turkey.
  • 19. Winners of the 2010 Aga Khan Award for ArchitectureWadiHanifa WetlandsRiyadh, Saudi ArabiaPlanners: Moriyama & Teshima Planners Limited & BuroHappold in joint ventureClient: High Commission for the Development of Arriyadh/Arriyadh Development AuthorityRevitalisation of the Hypercentre of TunisTunis, TunisiaArchitect: Association de Sauvegarde de la Médina de TunisClient: Municipality of TunisBridge SchoolXiashi, Fujian Province, ChinaArchitect: Li Xiaodong AtelierClient: Xiashi Village Madinat al-Zahra MuseumCordoba, SpainArchitect: Nieto SobejanoArquitectos, Fuensanta Nieto & Enrique SobejanoClient: Junta de Andalucía, Consejería de CulturaIpekyol Textile FactoryEdirne, TurkeyArchitect: EAA - EmreArolat ArchitectsClient: IpekyolGiyimSanayi
  • 20. Five Projects Received 2010 Aga Khan Award The five projects selected for the 2010 Aga Khan Award for Architecture were announced at a ceremony held at the Museum of Islamic Art in Doha, November 24, 2010.His Highness Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani the Emir of Qatar and Her Highness SheikhaMozabint Nasser joined His Highness the Aga Khan in presiding over the ceremony. 
  • 21. Summary of the Review ProcessEligibility Criteria
  • 22. 2010 On Site Review ReportAmerican University in BeirutBeirut, Lebanon (3980.LEB)By: Yasser Mahgoub
  • 23. Basic InformationPlanner/Architect:SASAKI and Machado/SilvettiClient:American University in BeirutDesign:2000 - 2001Implementation:2002 – On going
  • 24. The Master Plan Successes PlacePeoplePlanProductProcess