AEB 1966 - 2016: Fifty Years of Architectural Design in Qatar
Author: Luca Molinari
Format: Hardback, 240mm x 280mm, 2240g, 328 pages
Published: Skira, Italy, 2016
Through a selection of about thirty projects illustrated by photographs and drawings, the book reveals the capacity of the Arab Engineering Bureau to respect tradition and at the same time espouse the future of Qatar, which is currently involved in preparations for the 2022 World Cup, and the economic, social and environmental development plan Qatar National Vision 2030. Ibrahim Mohamed Jaidah's critical commitment to acknowledge the vernacular architectural tradition, along with his great experience stemming from important collaborations of a contemporary nature outside the Persian Gulf nations, have led to the consolidation of the Arab Engineering Bureau as one of the most important firms within the process of Qatar's modernization, which looks to architecture as an instrument capable of building identity and culture, and to the project as "a benefactor for a sustainable environment, the economy and the local community."
The architect and critic Luca Molinari has been associate professor of the History of Contemporary Architecture at the University of Naples since 2003 and guest professor at the Guangzhou Academy of Fine Arts (China).
Author: Luca Molinari
Format: Hardback, 240mm x 280mm, 2240g, 328 pages
Published: Skira, Italy, 2016
Through a selection of about thirty projects illustrated by photographs and drawings, the book reveals the capacity of the Arab Engineering Bureau to respect tradition and at the same time espouse the future of Qatar, which is currently involved in preparations for the 2022 World Cup, and the economic, social and environmental development plan Qatar National Vision 2030. Ibrahim Mohamed Jaidah's critical commitment to acknowledge the vernacular architectural tradition, along with his great experience stemming from important collaborations of a contemporary nature outside the Persian Gulf nations, have led to the consolidation of the Arab Engineering Bureau as one of the most important firms within the process of Qatar's modernization, which looks to architecture as an instrument capable of building identity and culture, and to the project as "a benefactor for a sustainable environment, the economy and the local community."
The architect and critic Luca Molinari has been associate professor of the History of Contemporary Architecture at the University of Naples since 2003 and guest professor at the Guangzhou Academy of Fine Arts (China).