CASE STUDY ON THREE HORSEMANS OF POST
MODERN ARCHITECTURAL APOCALYPSE.
“FRAGMENTARY”, “
REVOLUTIONARY” AND
“AHEAD OF HER TIME”
    INTRODUCTION
•   Birth: 31 October 1950, Baghdad, Iraq
•   Bachelor degree in mathematics at
    American university of Beirut
•   Studied at the Architectural
    Association, London
•   Hadid established her own London
    based firm in 1979 and taught
    architecture at many places, including
    the Architectural Association, Harvard
    university, the University of Chicago,
    and Yale University.
•   Also worked as a furniture designer, a
    designer of interior spaces such as
    restaurants, and a set designer
ARCHITECTURAL BACKGROUND
• An architect who consistently pushes the
  boundaries of architecture and urban
  design.
• Experiments with new spatial concepts
  intensifying existing urban landscapes in
  the pursuit of a visionary aesthetic that
  encompasses all fields of design.
• Introduced the concept of fluidity in her
  designs.
• Revolutionary experimentation and
  research in the interrelated fields of
  urbanism, architecture and design.
ARCHITECTURAL STYLE:
• Deconstructivism, or Deconstruction, is an
   approach to building design that attempts to
   view architecture in bits and pieces.
1. The basic elements of architecture are
    dismantled.
2. Deconstructivist buildings may seem to have
    no visual logic. They may appear to be made
    up of unrelated, disharmonious abstract forms.
3. Deconstructive ideas are borrowed from the
    French philosopher Jacques Derrida
ARCHITECTURAL STYLE:
 Her public buildings are often described as
  dynamic, as if they're a freeze-frame of an
  action shot. Zaha Hadid's style embraces
  striking lines, sometimes bold with expressive
  curves; other times brutalist in essence.
 Ahead of her time, and responsive to
  emerging social demands, which express
  themselves through lavish, singular trophies.
  But it is different from the ideals she used to
  express, or of her achievements at their best.
ARCHITECTURAL STYLE:
 As a material and spatial practice, however,
  architecture is able to manifest fluidity in ways
  not readily allotted other fields
 Fluidity, however, elicits a set of complex
  relations in and through architecture that
  rejects any such divisive split; asking of
  architecture, not what flows or how to form
  flows.
 This reformation moves beyond explaining
  how architecture forms flows to offer clues to
  why fluidity appears as a defining image at the
  onset of the twenty first century.
AWARDS AND
ACHIEVEMENTS
• 2002, she won the International Design
  Competition to design Singapore's One North
  Master Plan. In 2005, her design won the
  competition for the New City Casino of Basel,
  Switzerland.
• 2004, Zaha became the first female and first
  Muslim recipient of the Pritzker Architecture
  Prize, architecture's equivalent of the Nobel
  Prize.
• 2006, she was honored with a retrospective
  spanning her entire work at the Guggenheim
  Museum in New York.
• 2008, she ranked 69th on the Forbes list of
  "The World's 100 Most Powerful Women". In
  2010, she was named by Time as an influential
  thinker in the 2010 TIME 100 issue.
    INTRODUCTION
      Location: Baku, Azerbaijan
      Year: 2007-2012
      Status: Completed
      Construction System – Concrete
      Site Area-101 801 meter square
       (Building: 57 519 met sq., Site: 111 292
       met sq. and Footprint: 15 514 met sq.)
• The Heydar Aliyev Cultural Centre is one of many buildings that will
  be erected in Azerbaijan, and it is one of several projects exhibiting
  progressive design elements and cutting-edge engineering
  solutions.
    VISION
   Zaha Hadid Architects created a building form
    that appears to emerge from the topography.
    The skin of the building – a single curving
    surface – rises, undulates, and wraps in.
   The curved surface allows a freedom of form
    that can simultaneously differentiate and unite
    the Heydar Aliyev Cultural Centre's three
    distinct programmatic elements.
    Its inward curl is formed into stairways and
    ramps that connect the lower floors to
    mezzanine levels; other circulation paths also
    emanate from the curves of the building
REALITY
   Zaha Hadid Architects’ vision of sublimity
    presented some very material challenges for
    the engineers and builders.
   It was necessary to construct a building that
    could seal out the elements and bear high
    wind and seismic loads without relying on
    interior support columns (which would have
    impeded the flow of space).
   Ultimately, a system was devised that utilized
    a space frame as its main structural element;
    the cladding is a curtain wall system
    comprised of various specially fabricated
    panels.
PLAN AND SPACES
    Baku complex actually consists of three
     buildings:
1.   a conference center with auditorium and halls,
2.   a museum and a library, connected via an interior
     space and the curve and "fluid" outer skin that winds
     throughout the structure.
3.   The complex also houses a restaurant and a parking.
    The center is designed to become the
     main building of cultural programs.
EXTERIOR ACCESS
   Visitors find the building through a long
    and steep park with a zigzag path, leading
    to a square paved with squares of white
    concrete,
   The landscape emerges from the ground
    to blend with the building. This area called
    Cultural Plaza.
   In response to plummeting to the ground
    above topographically divided into two,
    the project has a terraced landscape that
    provides alternative routes and
    connections between the public square,
    construction, and underground parking.
EXTERIOR ACCESS
EXTERIOR ACCESS
CULTURAL PLAZA
   The plaza, accessible to the public as part of
    the urban fabric of Baku rises to wrap an
    equally public interior space and define a
    sequence of event spaces dedicated to
    collective celebration of both contemporary
    and traditional Azeri culture.
    Extrapolated the fluid forms the center
    environment creating a series of terraces
    interlaced with mirrors, waterfalls, ripples,
    bifurcations, folds and flexures that turn the
    surface of the square in an architectural
    landscape that fulfills many functions.
CULTURAL PLAZA
INTERIORS
   The inside center is characterized by
    continuous surfaces that twist to transform
    the ceiling walls and ramps.
   The ground floor has several spaces
    lobbying aimed at creating public places that
    unite the different aspects of the program of
    the center.
   From these rooms welcome inside the
    building continues the theme of the merger,
    with continuous surfaces.
   Soils become ramps and walls, turning on
    ceiling ceilings, then keep turning and
    moving out of sight, forming endless white
    landscapes.
INTERIORS
INTERIORS
LIBRARY
   The Library is oriented north to take advantage of
    natural light and has its own entrance.
   Levels dedicated to reading and file are stacked
    one above the other, wrapped in the folds of the
    outer skin.
   The Library and Museum are also connected by a
    ramp that leads through the ground floor of the
    Library, to the first floor of the Museum and is
    connected to the conference room through a
    bridge that 'fly' over the entrance hall.
   Its shape reaches the Cultural Plaza, leaning to
    create the necessary slope leading to the seats of
    outdoor space.
AUDITORIUM
   The auditorium and its associated
    facilities have direct access to the
    Plaza.
   The main entrance is on the void
    created in the outer layer,
    "stretching" of the volume of the
    museum and the library tower.
   The secondary entrance is on the
    north side of the building.
AUDITORIUM
AUDITORIUM
CONCLUSION
With an example of revolutionary trendsetting building like Heydar Aliyev Cultural
center it is certainly clear that Zaha Hadid was a revolutionary architect whose
designs not only bounded towards the architectural horizon but also certainly set a
tone for the future. Thus “she” is one of the most influential architect of all time.
CHARLES CORREA
PREMIER ARCHITECT OF INDIA
WHOSE “AUTHENTIC MODERNITY”
SUPERSEDED “STALE COLONIAL
IMPORTS”
    INTRODUCTION
   Born in 1930, Charles Correa
    grew up in the city of
    Secunderabad in the Indian state
    of Andhra Pradesh
   University of Bombay, followed
    by the University of Michigan
    and then MIT Massachusetts
   Leading architect for urban
    growth centers and founder of
    the Urban Design Research
    Institute in Bombay, his work
    uses a combination of traditional
    and modern features in order to
    create cutting-edge designs.
 Professional Experience
1955-1958 Partner with G.M. BHUTA associates
1964-1965 Prepared master plan proposing twin city across the harbor
from Bombay.
1971-1975 Chief architect to CIDCO
1975-1976 Consultant to UN secretory-general for HABITAT
1975-1983 Chairman Housing Urban Renewal & Ecology Board
1985       Chairman Dharavavi planning commission
        Charles Correa and Le Corbusier
Like most architects of his generation he has been influenced by Le Corbusier , but by his response to
the Mediterranean sun with his grand sculptural decisions he believes that Corbusier’s influence in
the colder climates has not been beneficial because these heroic gestures had to withdraw into
defensible space, into mechanically heated (and cooled) interiors of the building.
On way back to Bombay in 1955 - saw the Jaoul House (le Corbusier) in Paris under construction. He
said:
‘I was absolutely knocked out . It was a whole new world way beyond anything being taught in
America at that time ,then I saw Chandigarh and his buildings in Ahmedabad . They seemed the only
way to build.”
INSPIRATIONS
“Charles Correa: From a child
with toy train to the origami
artist in stone”
 Hornby Trains:
Nothing very ambitious, really just
enough to run the trains around
your room, and the following day,
perhaps change the layout so that
they could run into the next room,
under a table and back again. That
was the marvelous thing about
those old tinplate rails.
They had flexibility. Every time one
finished playing, back they went
into their wooden box – to be
reincarnated the next day in a
totally new formation.
Chinese gardens
First you go through the sequence
of pond and bridge and dragon wall
in one direction, and then you find
yourself coming in from another
direction, experiencing them all in
another sequence, in another order,
from another height and so forth.
 The same handful of props are
used and reused, again and again.
And each time, because of a slight
change in angle, or in sequence,
they carry a new significance.
PRINCIPLES:
Incrementalism
Identity
Pluralism
Income generation
Equity
Open-to-sky space
Disaggregation.
                     Fig: Belapur housing being the one project
                     where he has literally used these principals
MP VIDHAN SABHA
     ‘Vidhan Bhavan is a public building which should say
  something very powerful about democracy, It is a building
  which has got to down with the idea of governing yourself.
  It has to express the role it has to play and tell people that
  this is your city, this is your state and you must participate
    in it, It must not be low-key. It should have a presence.’
                        -Charles Correa
INTRODUCTION
   The building is located in the
    centre of Bhopal.
   References of this circular form
    are – parliament building in New
    Delhi, Buddhist stupa near Sanchi
    some fifty kilometers away from
    the city, its site on the crest of a
    hill and perhaps the most
    determinant factor was the
    mandala- the cosmic
    of functions, sequences and
    spaces within the Hindu universe
PLAN SETUP
1. The plan is a pattern of gardens
within gardens, divided into 9
squares .
2.The five central ones are halls
and courtyards , while the 4 corner
positions are occupied by The
Vidhan Sabha , The Vidhan
Parishad, Central library, and
Combined hall.
3.It also contains a host of other
facilities : offices, cabinet rooms,
cafeterias, common rooms for
security staff etc..
4. According to the
requirements there are 3 main
entrances- for public, VP’s,
MLA’s
5. While moving along
verandah and overlooking
courtyards and gardens – as in
traditional architecture of India.
 Courtyards
• The movement inside the
  building has been carefully
  studied.
• For bureaucrats and
  politicians the circulation is
  along the side of the
  courtyards.
• Hence pathways have been
  created alongside the
  courtyards for free
  movements without any
  hindrance
 Circulation
 The whole building presents
  as extremely pleasing vision of
  powerful curves and straight
  vertical and horizontal lines.
 Voids and horizontal planes
  provides aesthetics and view
  of the surrounding spaces and
  gardens. Hence the path to
  the offices and waiting areas
  become a more pleasant
  experience.
 The whole composition is
  enclosed by a wall that defines
  its exterior form like a circular
  inner city.
 The building can be explained
  as series of energies connecting
  the inside to the outside and
  setting vibrations between its
  forms and users like a ying
  yang relationship.
Open To Sky Concept
 Correa has used open to sky
  courtyards and a labyrinthine
  pattern of pathways to organize
  the complex requirements of
  administrative and legislative
  functions.
 India’s tropical climate gave the
  great advantage of having a
  perfectly happy existence under
  the sky so long as some shade is
  available. This can help us build
  more economically, more in
  connection with nature.
BRITISH COUNCIL
       Charles Correa is the most perfect architect you could
     imagine. He first suggested that I think about the mural as
    an Indian flag turning into a Union Jack. I said no. Instead, I
      did a mural of a banyan tree. He was totally cooperative
                  and loyal. We are great friends.”
                     -Hodgon On Charles Correa
INTRODUCTION
   The building is located in the
    centre of Delhi and was built
    during the year 1987-1992.
   This landmark boasts the use of
    traditional materials.
   Materials : walls - red sandstone ,
    sculptures –black rock quarried
    from Mahabalipuram.
INTRODUCTION
   This new building for the British
    Council houses a number of
    diverse functions, including a
    Library, an Auditorium, an Art
    gallery and the Headquarters of
    their offices in India.
   Correa's design references
    Hinduism, Islam and the
    European Enlightenment as well
    as the importance of cosmic and
    religious symbolism to his work.
Design
Philosophy
    Correa’s challenge - to express
    the three basic cultural identities
    that have shaped contemporary
    India.
   These elements are arranged in a
    series of layers – represents the
    historic interfaces that have
    existed between India and Britain.
Courtyard
 1. He created a series of three
 courtyard representing the
 three cosmic focal points
 hat stand for the world centre
 in Hindu, Muslim and European
 cultures.
 2. The first node at the farthest
 end of the axis : mundi of
 Hinduism
 A spiral symbolizing bindu :
 energy center of the cosmos
 nite.
Courtyard
 4. The central node : It is the
 main courtyard of the building
 which is centered around          Courtyard 1
 another mythic image: the
 traditional Islamic Char Bagh,
 i.e. Garden of Paradise.
                                   Courtyard 2
 5. The third is the European
 icon : inlaid in marble and
 granite.
 Represents ‘Age of Reason’
 including mythical values of      Courtyard 3
 science and progress
Open To Sky Concept
• Extensive use of this concept   Courtyard 1
  is also seen in this design.
• Brought in use to counter
  the tropical climate that
  Delhi possesses.                Courtyard 2
• It also meant to bring the
  people closer to nature and
  provide a more livable
  habitat than suffocating        Courtyard 3
  spaces
m
“THE LE CORBUSIER DISCIPLE, WHO HARNESSED
      “MODERNISM” TO INDIAN CULTURE”
BIOPIC
1. A teacher, a speaker, an architect- Bal Krishna Vithaldas Doshi is a
   man who has worn several hats. Born in26 August 1927, Doshi led
   a he evolution of contemporary Indian architecture.
2. Applies Modernists concepts to an Indian context, and he has
   developed a theory of the city as an augmentation of layers and
   overlays. As a result, his work is a visual feast of diverse mediums,
   dimensions, and textures.
3. His extensive portfolio of educational, cultural, public
   administration, and residential projects is matched only by his
   contribution to architectural culture
4.    Noteworthy designs include:
•    Indian Institute of Management, Bangalore
•    Indian Institute of Management, Udaipur
•    Aranya Low Cost Housing (Aga Khan Award for Architecture)
BRIEF TIMELINE OF EVENTS
         1950, Completes his Bachelors from J. J. School of Art, Bombay and
         becomes a senior designer on Le Corbusier's projects in Ahmedabad
         and Chandigarh.
         1951-54, gets trained in his craft under Le Corbusier for four years between
         in Paris and returns to Ahmedabad to supervise Le Corbusier's projects.
         1955, His studio, Vastu-Shilpa (environmental design), was established.
         1961, Doshi worked closely with Louis Kahn and Anent raja , when Kahn designed
         the campus of the Indian Institute of Management.
         1977, He also founded and designed the School of Architecture and Planning in
         Ahmedabad .Doshi has worked in partnership as Stein, Doshi & Bhalla since then.
         1995, Aga Khan Award for Architecture, for the Aranya Community Housing in
         Indore, India.
         2018, becomes a laureate of Pritzker prize, the highest accolade in architecture.
GENERAL PHILOSOPHIES TOWARDS DESIGN
             • Flexible Rather Than Rigid Approach To The Structure
             • Timelessness In His Architecture .
             • Mythical Sense –Moving Beyond Historical Examples Of
               His Own Region
             • Transformation Between The Building And The People
               That Transcends The Functional Use.
             • Doshi Has Persisted A Deep Belief In Important Of Human
               Institutions.
             • The Notation Of Flexibility And Symbolism. Doshi Made An
               Intensive And Sustained Study Of Traditional Indian
               Philosophy And Ancient Architectural Texts, While
               Maintaining A Deep Commitment To Modernism.
             • Towards Materials Remain Thematically Strong
               Throughout His Works.
SANGATH: MOVING TOGETHER WHERE
ONE LEARNS, UNLEARNS AND RELEARNS.
 INTRODUCTION
    Location : Ahmedabad, India
    Project Year: 1981
    Building Type : Architectural Office
    Construction System – Concrete
    Site Area- 2346 SQ.M (585SQ.M)
    Cost- 0.6MILLION
Trivia:
• Sangath is Bal Krishna Doshi's own studio/
  workspace and uses secondary waste as a
  building material
THEME
“Sangath" is a design laboratory where
professionals from diverse disciplines are
invited to explore new visions, concepts     Etymology: Sangath Means 'moving
and solutions integrating arts, crafts,      Together Through Participation’.
engineering and philosophy of life.          Sangath Is Alive, Well And Growing.
Sangath to see that each individual in the
coming millennium is benefited from its
visions and design solutions.
PLAN
 Upon entering the complex, one
  immediately sees the silhouette of a vault
  lingering behind an exterior wall and a slight
  view of the interior is present through a small
  break in the surface.
 The path turns and forces the occupant off
  of the north-south axis. As one passes by the
  reflecting ponds that capture the vaults in
  still water the entrance is made apparent. It
  lies at the end of an angled approach to the
  vaults.
PLAN
PLAN
ENTRY
 The main entry lowers the visitor a few steps
  into the a vault and proposes the choice of
  ascending a flight of stairs in a three story
  height, or proceeding through small
  corridor by Doshi's office and into the main
  drafting hall.
 The underside of the vault in the main
  drafting room is finished with a textured
  concrete that dispersed natural light into the
  space. At the end of the hall lies the opening
  seen from the site entrance and one regains
  their sense of place along the main axis.
ENTRY
ORGANIC DISCIPLE
The overall form exaggerates the details of
nature with its rolling mounds, cave-like
spaces, terraced land, playful water channels,
and reflective surfaces.
Storm water in funneled through the site by
the slick, round vaults and water troughs.
Better Landscaping Techniques At
Open Spaces
ORGANIC DISCIPLE
 RELATION TO INDIAN VERNACULARITY
 In Ahmedabad, the summer temperature
  reaches 45 °C and the heat is very intense.
  Natural comfort conditions can be achieved
  by protecting spaces from the heat and
  glare of the sun.
 The sunken interior spaces are insulated by
  clay within the structure. Heat from the sun
  is reduced by grassy mounds and the white
  reflective china mosaic that covers each
  vault.
Courtyard for cross
ventilation, wind
circulation and micro
climate creation
 RELATION TO INDIAN VERNACULARITY
 Along with natural connections,
  Sangath holds connections to India's
  culture.
 The layout resembles the way that a
  temple develops a series of stages into
  a final platform while the form loosely
  imitates the boldness of a stupa
 Closely integrated with the outdoor
  spaces and shaded by dense trees
  towards the south and the west.
LIGHTS AND SHADOWS
• Interiors Are Characterized By The Building’s
  Various Shapes And Forms so as to permit
  the light and shadows to interplay each
  other.
• Light Enters From Different Directions:
i.     Large Opening at the Northern side
ii.    Skylights projected mass from the roof
iii.   Small cut outs on slab with hollow glass blocks
• Natural light is also filtered into the interior
  spaces during the day, while the moon is
  reflected in the ponds.
LIGHTS AND SHADOWS
OTHER CONNECTIONS TO MODERNISM
Other references to modern styles are
also apparent with :
• The Le Corbusier ear shaped pool
• Amphitheater steps resembling
   those by Aalto and Wright
• Gaudi's broken china mosaic
• And a water feature similar to that of
   Kahn's Salk Institute.
OTHER CONNECTIONS TO MODERNISM
Other references to modern styles are
also apparent with :
• The Le Corbusier ear shaped pool
• Amphitheater steps resembling
   those by Aalto and Wright
• Gaudi's broken china mosaic
• And a water feature similar to that of
   Kahn's Salk Institute.
AMDAVAD NI GUFA : AN EXPERIMENTAL TALE
OF FUSION BETWEEN AN ARTIST AND AN ARCHITECT
 INTRODUCTION
    Location : Ahmedabad, India
    Project Year: 1994
    Building Type : Architectural Office
    Construction System – Concrete
    Project Status: Built
    Cost- 0.8 MILLION
Trivia: The gallery was built so as to exhibit
the works of an Indian artist Maqbool Fido
Husain and was known as Hussain-Doshi ni
Gufa earlier.
INTRODUCTION
 Amdavad ni Gufa is an underground art
  gallery in Ahmedabad that represents a
  unique juxtaposition of architecture and
  art.
 The cave-like underground structure has a
  roof made of multiple interconnected
  domes, covered with a mosaic of tiles. On
  the inside, irregular tree-like columns
  support the domes.
 There are facilities for special painting
  exhibitions and for projecting films.
  Gardens and a café are located above
  ground.
THEME
                                             “Amdavad Ni Gufa, designed as an art
                                             gallery, transformed and became a
 The gallery is called gufa ("cave" in
                                             living organism and sociocultural
 Gujarati) because of its resemblance to a
                                             centre due to its unusual combination
 cave Later it was renamed after the city
                                             of computer aided design, use of
 of Ahmedabad, known locally as
                                             mobile ferro-cement forms and
 Amdavad.
                                             craftsmanship by local crafts people
                                             using waste products.
ENTRY
 The gallery space is below ground level.
  A partially hidden staircase leads to a
  circular door which opens into a cave-like
  space.
 Primitive inspired gate with natural
  curvilinear contour form and a touch of
  modernism with glass shades so as to
  connect the interior and exterior.
 Visual relationship is established so as to
  glorify the whole “Ajanta cave” and
  primitiveness concept.
STRUCTURE
 The entire design is made up of circles
  and ellipses. While the interior is divided
  into pockets of spaces by tree inspired
  columns.
 Though designed to display paintings,
  the cave has no straight walls, instead
  using a continuation of the curved dome
  structure which extends down to the floor.
 Buried spaces, earth mounds, raised
  volumes and china mosaic finish renders
  the architectural energy conscious.
CIRCULATION
 The building is oriented towards the
  north south direction allowing the
  skylights to face south. Even when the
  sun is at its lowest positon the shadows
  from the tree don't cover any part of the
  interiors.
 The rotundas have been sculpted so as to
  provide diffuse natural light which when
  experienced inside is deceiving.
 The skylights on the room aren’t
  imminently visible yet the lights inside
  provide ethereal quality.
CIRCULATION
CIRCULATION
 RELATION TO INDIAN VERNACULARITY
 Together they planned an
  underground structure capable of
  withstanding the area's severe summer
  heat.
 The cave was constructed by unskilled
  tribal laborers using only hand tools.
 Broken ceramic crockery and waste
  tiles were used to cover the domes'
  exterior, which bears a transversal
  mosaic of a snake.
 RELATION TO INDIAN VERNACULARITY
 Enigmatic in its spatial experience the
  form of Gufa is a direct translation of
  climatic and constructional obligations.
 Buried spaces, earth mounds, raised
  volumes and china mosaic finish
  renders the architectural energy
  conscious, in an otherwise harsh hot
  dry climate.
 Use of open to sky spaces and in
  designing the landscape and entrance,
  the architect connects the building to
  the extended world
CONNECTIONS TO ART NOVEAU
 The structure's contemporary architecture
  draws on ancient and natural themes.
 The domes are inspired by the shells of
  tortoises and by soap bubbles.
 The mosaic tiles on the roof are similar to
  those found on the roofs of the Jain
  temples at Garner, and the mosaic snake is
  from Hindu mythology.
 The interior is divided by tree trunks or
  columns similar to those found at
  Stonehenge.
CONNECTIONS TO ART NOVEAU
CONNECTIONS TO ART NOVEAU
CONCLUSION
In conclusion, Bal Krishna Doshi has always created an architecture that is serious, never flashy or a
follower of trends but has continually exhibited the objectives" of architecture's highest honor. His
exceptional architecture as reflected in over a hundred buildings he has realized, his commitment and his
dedication to his country and the communities he has served, his influence as a teacher, and the
outstanding example he has set for professionals and students around the world throughout his long
career is what makes him one of the most proficient architect of all times.
2018 FINALLY PAYS OFF: AFTER SIX AND A
HALF DECADES INTO THE FIELD!!!!!
IN A FIRST FOR PRITZKER PRIZE, ARCHITECTURE
AWARD GOES TO AN INDIAN ARCHITECT
Thank you