Zaha Hadid has died of a heart attack. The Iraqi-British star architect was known for her radical deconstructivist designs.
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The incredible architecture of Zaha Hadid
The visionary designer Zaha Hadid has created the most outstanding structures worldwide. Some new projects are now being built in Germany.
Image: ORF
A ship to drive design in Asia
Zaha Hadid created the Jockey Club Innovation Tower, which has housed the School of Design of the Hong Kong Polytechnic University since 2013. In the competition to design the building, her firm described its concept as "a beacon structure symbolizing and driving the development of Hong Kong as a design hub in Asia."
Image: Zaha Hadid Architects
Launching a star architect
This is Zaha Hadid's spectacular debut: In 1993, she created the Vitra fire station for the furniture manufacturer Vitra, located in Weil am Rhein. The heavy concrete structure appears light and dynamic thanks to its unusual layers of walls. Until then, her architectural plans had been considered impossible to build. Her career as an architect took off after this project.
Image: Zaha Hadid Architects/Christian Richters,
Monument for a dictator?
Could this flowing building symbolize the renewal and modernization of a closed society? Zaha Hadid designed the spectacular Heydar Aliyev Cultural Center built in Baku, the capital of Azerbaijan. Criticized by human rights activists for his dictatorial rule, President Ilham Aliyev wanted to build a monument to his father and predecessor.
Image: Zaha Hadid Architects/Hufton+Crow
Architecture with a terrific view
To create Reinhold Messner's new museum, Zaha Hadid hollowed out a cliff. There, she designed underground rooms with terraces overhanging the valley which offer spectacular panoramic views. Messner, who is the first person to have climbed the world's 14 mountains over 8,000 meters, said this project gave him "many white hairs" and ironically claimed this was his "15th peak over 8,000."
Image: Zaha Hadid Architects/Werner Huthmacher
With a time machine through the Eternal City
Concrete, glass, steel, impossible curves, stacked concrete tubes, cubes, and filigree columns: This all makes up the MAXXI, the contemporary art museum in Rome created by Hadid. The building itself feels like a walk-in sculpture. When you enter it, the floor appears to drift away. Each step opens up a new perspective on the architectural space and the city - a unique experience.
Image: Zaha Hadid Architects/Helene Binet
The end of the right angle
The costs to build the art museum MAXXI exploded and it took over 10 years to complete the project, but it was worth the wait. According to "The Guardian," Zaha Hadid's museum is "a masterpiece fit to sit alongside Rome's ancient wonders."
Image: Zaha Hadid Architects/Helene Binet
Futuristic perspectives
The central square of the Galaxy Soho also looks futuristic: Right angles are replaced by flowing forms and sweeping lines in this office and commercial complex. Designed by Zaha Hadid in 2012, this building in the center of Beijing is made up of four towers connected by walkways and footbridges.
Image: Zaha Hadid Architects/Hufton+Crow
Prize-winning architecture for BMW
The BMW plant in Leipzig wanted its new central building to radiate openness and transparency. Zaha Hadid's design links the office complex to the production halls. It houses the main entrance to the plant as well as the cafeteria, the laboratories and the workshops. For this concept, Hadid won the German Architecture Prize.
Image: Zaha Hadid Architects/Helene Binet
Hamburg river promenade
The second construction phase of the new Hamburg river promenade just began in November 2015. Zaha Hadid conceived this new structure too. This meandering promenade will revitalize the riverside of Hamburg by linking the key areas and highlighting the potential of "one of the most exciting sites in this port city," according to the star architect's proposal. It will include, as usual, many curves.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/M. Scholz
A woman of exception
Though reputed for her difficult character, Zaha Hadid is brilliant. She made it to the top of a field dominated by men. She was the first woman to receive the equivalent of the Nobel Prize of architecture, the Pritzker Prize, in 2004, the highly prized Praemium Imperiale in 2009, and the Royal Gold Medal of British Architects in September 2015. Born in Baghdad, Hadid now lives in London.
Image: Zaha Hadid Architects,/Brigitte Lacombe
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The internationally renowned architect, whose designs included the London Aquatics Centre used in the 2012 London Summer Olympics, has died, aged 65, her company said on Thursday, March 31.
"It is with great sadness that Zaha Hadid Architects have confirmed that Dame Zaha Hadid died suddenly in Miami in the early hours of this morning," the company said in a statement.
"She had contracted bronchitis earlier this week and suffered a sudden heart attack while being treated in hospital."
Messages of condolence have started pouring in online, with Hadid trending heavily on social media.
Hadid wanted 'to make buildings fly'
Hadid's projects included the MAXXI museum in Rome, the Heydar Aliyev Center in Baku, and a condominium along Manhattan's High Line park. Her light and airy style were celebrated around the world. She was one of the most recognized architects of our time.
Dame Zaha Hadid was born in 1950 in Baghdad and became the first woman to be awarded the Pritzker Architecture Prize in 2004. She studied mathematics at American University in Beirut, and later went to London to study at the Architectural Association.
In 1979, Hadid established her own London-based firm and gained international recognition in 1983 with a competition-winning entry - a "horizontal skyscraper" - for The Peak, a leisure and recreational center in Hong Kong. The design for The Peak was never realized, and neither were most of her other radical designs in the 1980s and early 1990s.
Still, much of her work can be found all around the world with several of her designs being featured in the UK, the US, Germany and elsewhere in Europe.
The incredible architecture of Zaha Hadid
The visionary designer Zaha Hadid has created the most outstanding structures worldwide. Some new projects are now being built in Germany.
Image: ORF
A ship to drive design in Asia
Zaha Hadid created the Jockey Club Innovation Tower, which has housed the School of Design of the Hong Kong Polytechnic University since 2013. In the competition to design the building, her firm described its concept as "a beacon structure symbolizing and driving the development of Hong Kong as a design hub in Asia."
Image: Zaha Hadid Architects
Launching a star architect
This is Zaha Hadid's spectacular debut: In 1993, she created the Vitra fire station for the furniture manufacturer Vitra, located in Weil am Rhein. The heavy concrete structure appears light and dynamic thanks to its unusual layers of walls. Until then, her architectural plans had been considered impossible to build. Her career as an architect took off after this project.
Image: Zaha Hadid Architects/Christian Richters,
Monument for a dictator?
Could this flowing building symbolize the renewal and modernization of a closed society? Zaha Hadid designed the spectacular Heydar Aliyev Cultural Center built in Baku, the capital of Azerbaijan. Criticized by human rights activists for his dictatorial rule, President Ilham Aliyev wanted to build a monument to his father and predecessor.
Image: Zaha Hadid Architects/Hufton+Crow
Architecture with a terrific view
To create Reinhold Messner's new museum, Zaha Hadid hollowed out a cliff. There, she designed underground rooms with terraces overhanging the valley which offer spectacular panoramic views. Messner, who is the first person to have climbed the world's 14 mountains over 8,000 meters, said this project gave him "many white hairs" and ironically claimed this was his "15th peak over 8,000."
Image: Zaha Hadid Architects/Werner Huthmacher
With a time machine through the Eternal City
Concrete, glass, steel, impossible curves, stacked concrete tubes, cubes, and filigree columns: This all makes up the MAXXI, the contemporary art museum in Rome created by Hadid. The building itself feels like a walk-in sculpture. When you enter it, the floor appears to drift away. Each step opens up a new perspective on the architectural space and the city - a unique experience.
Image: Zaha Hadid Architects/Helene Binet
The end of the right angle
The costs to build the art museum MAXXI exploded and it took over 10 years to complete the project, but it was worth the wait. According to "The Guardian," Zaha Hadid's museum is "a masterpiece fit to sit alongside Rome's ancient wonders."
Image: Zaha Hadid Architects/Helene Binet
Futuristic perspectives
The central square of the Galaxy Soho also looks futuristic: Right angles are replaced by flowing forms and sweeping lines in this office and commercial complex. Designed by Zaha Hadid in 2012, this building in the center of Beijing is made up of four towers connected by walkways and footbridges.
Image: Zaha Hadid Architects/Hufton+Crow
Prize-winning architecture for BMW
The BMW plant in Leipzig wanted its new central building to radiate openness and transparency. Zaha Hadid's design links the office complex to the production halls. It houses the main entrance to the plant as well as the cafeteria, the laboratories and the workshops. For this concept, Hadid won the German Architecture Prize.
Image: Zaha Hadid Architects/Helene Binet
Hamburg river promenade
The second construction phase of the new Hamburg river promenade just began in November 2015. Zaha Hadid conceived this new structure too. This meandering promenade will revitalize the riverside of Hamburg by linking the key areas and highlighting the potential of "one of the most exciting sites in this port city," according to the star architect's proposal. It will include, as usual, many curves.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/M. Scholz
A woman of exception
Though reputed for her difficult character, Zaha Hadid is brilliant. She made it to the top of a field dominated by men. She was the first woman to receive the equivalent of the Nobel Prize of architecture, the Pritzker Prize, in 2004, the highly prized Praemium Imperiale in 2009, and the Royal Gold Medal of British Architects in September 2015. Born in Baghdad, Hadid now lives in London.