Was born in Baghdad (Iraq) into a middle-class family.
1950 - 2016
Synopsis
Zaha Hadid (1950 – 2016) was an Iraqi and British architect, representative of deconstructivism, bio-tech, leader of hypersurface design, winner of the Pritzker Prize (2004). Hadid was one of the renowned architects who contributed to the concept of architectural form and space from a new, innovative and futuristic perspective. She tended to introduce some features of Suprematism into other models, such as disregarding gravity and manipulating the earth on different floors, and smoothness and fluidity. Hadid saw architecture as an art that could be effectively used to meet the needs of its users. Her design style is the result of a comprehensive review of all design parameters with regard to aspects of rationality. It is a continuous and interactive exploration of form, function, society, culture and novelty.
Hadid’s ideas are close to the ideas of Kazimir Malevich, his architectons, and El Lissitzky.
Features of the author’s style of Zaha Hadid:
Main structures:
The building of the residential complex IBA in Berlin (1985)
In the work of Zaha Hadid, there was a beginning a period that will later be called deconstructivism. It is a smoothly deformed, almost regular parallelepiped. The sheer wall does not hide the gently curved slanted shell and the space delineated by the cantilever beams. These distortions and deformations create a sense of the new.
The Vitra Weil am Rhein fire station (1989-1993) on the border with Switzerland was built in 1989-1993. “The idea was to arrange the new building, modest in size, so that it would not get lost among the existing monumental volumes. It had to pick up the general rhythm, be included in the general structuring of the axis space. The station was originally designed as an external limitation and completion of the landscape zone, alley, rather as an element defining space… “. Such an active space-forming position is realized by a long narrow structure, more precisely, a set of parallel walls, which seem to go behind each other. In accordance with the functional necessity, the walls open in places, tilt and part. The relationship between form and function in a fire station is ambiguous. External forms do not correspond at all to internal spaces, that is, functions. The building of the fire station is of fundamental importance in the work of Hadid. First of all, she proved that her complex spatial plans can be realized.
Residential complex Spittellau in Vienna (2008). A complex composition of sharp-angled, oblique and dynamic volumes. The striving for novelty and uniqueness of the image dominates the functional side of the building: due to its planning imperfection, it remained unoccupied.
Cable car station in Innsbruck (2004 – 2007). When designing, the peculiarities of the behavior of ice in nature, the location and displacement of ice blocks were taken into account; as a result, Hadid designed four stations with frosted glass overlap, which in shape was an imitation of frozen water movement.
Bridge pavilion at EXPO 2008 in Zaragoza (2004 – 2008). The project consists in filling solid materials and static structures with dynamics, flowing energy inherent in liquids, because water was the main subject of the exhibition. The bridge consisted of four modules-compartments, the shape of which, generated on the basis of a diamond-shaped section, made the structure as stable as possible.
Hydropius in Haarlemmermeer (2002). The pavilion was built for the World Exhibition of Gardening Art and should symbolize the achievements of the national economy of the region. The architecture of the pavilion is metaphorical, reminiscent of a futuristic seaplane, consisting of two volumes, covered with inclined metal planes, which give the impression of an image of the wings of an airplane.
1950
1972 - 1977
1979
1980
1999
Was born in Baghdad (Iraq) into a middle-class family.
After graduating from the American University of Beirut, Hadid attended the Architecture School of the Architectural Association in London, where her teachers were Rem Koolhaas and Elia Zenghelis.
She started practice at the workshop of Koolhaas.
She founded her own company.
Hadid’s work began to gain international recognition in 1999, when planning the Rosenthal Center for Contemporary Art in Cincinnati (USA – opened 2003) began. From that moment on, the worldwide recognition of the architect began. The pinnacle of her recognition was the Pritzker Prize – for the first time a woman became a laureate of the architectural Nobel.
description
The project consists in filling solid materials and static structures with dynamics, flowing energy inherent in liquid media, because water was the main subject of the exhibition. The bridge consisted of four modules-compartments, the shape of which, generated on the basis of a diamond-shaped section, made the structure very stable.
2004 - 2008
description
In the work of Zaha Hadid, a period begins, it will later be called deconstructivism. This is a smoothly deformed, almost regular parallelepiped. The sheer wall does not hide the gently curved slanted shell and the space delineated by the cantilever beams. These distortions and deformations create a sense of the new.
1985