Saving 1970s and '80s architecture of the United Arab Emirate

The architecture that was created in the emirate in the years after gaining its independence in 1971 purchased by the foundation as part of a campaign to conserve the emirate's 1970s and '80s architecture, which is increasingly under threat of demolition.

"The foundation wants to keep all the layers in the city – including the 1970s and '80s," said Mona El Mousfy, who is the architecture consultant for the triennial and partner organisation the Sharjah Art Foundation, which has also been purchasing buildings from the era. 

Al Jubail Vegetable Market is one of the Sharjah Architecture Triennial venues

According to El Mousfy, the 1970s and '80s architecture in the emirate is often not considered to have architectural merit, which means many buildings from this period have been lost.

El Mousfy believes that the 1970s and 1980s buildings do not fit with how Sharjah may want to portray itself, but the low-key architecture can still be a valuable assert for the emirate.

"It doesn't represent wealth, it's too modest," explained El Mousfy.

"But the buildings have an architectural character, they are responsive to the climate and to the city. Like the school – it may not be spectacular, but when you are siting in the school the air blows through. It has really adapted well to students, so it could well be adapted to another use."

Built in the mid 1970s the Al-Qasimiyah School

The triennial is renovating the fruit market to host installations and the Al-Qasimiyah School will become the triennial's permanent home – hosting year-round events.

The Sharjah Art Foundation purchased numerous buildings across the emirate, including Sharjah's concrete flying-saucer restaurant, an ice factory and a cinema.

However, much of Sharjah's 1970s architecture is still under threat. A large central area of the city, which contains many buildings from the period, is set to be levelled as part of the Heart of Sharjah masterplan. This includes a series of blocks on Bank Street designed in 1977 by Spanish architects Tecnica y Proyectos.

Sharjah Art Foundation is campaigning to save this area and El Mousfy believes that the growing interest in architecture from this period means there made be a chance to save these buildings.

Khor Fakkan cinema, 1978, by unknown architect

The front of cinema has a distinctive low-relief frieze that features a camel, traditional dhow boat, gazelle and palm trees. 

The cinema closed in 2006. Sharjah Art Foundation swapped the building for a property in the city of Sharjah and intends to turn it into a film school with a working cinema.

Al-Qasimiyah School, mid 1970s, by Khatib & Alami

Designed by architecture studio Khatib & Alami for the Ministry of Education. All of the orange-coloured schools have classrooms in repetitive, flat, vaulted bays arranged around covered courtyard spaces.

Following its closure, the school was purchased from the government by the Sharjah Architecture Triennial and renovated by El Mousfy.


Al Jubail Vegetable Market, early 1980s, by Halcrow Group

Designed as part of the city's Jubail Sou complex by British engineering firm the Halcrow Group, the market is fronted by a long curved arcade. 

The market was abandoned in 2015 when the new fish market opened, with Sharjah Architecture Triennial then taking over the building.

Flying saucer restaurant, 1978, by unknown architect

The flying saucer was built to house French chef Gérard Reymond's first restaurant in the city. The restaurant was topped by a distinctive 32-pointed concrete dome, which was supported by triangulated, intersecting columns.

Following the closure of Reymond's restaurant in 1980, the building became a grocery store and then a fast-food restaurant. The building was purchased by the Sharjah Art Foundation in 2012 and has been used to host installations since 2015. 


Kalba Kindergarten, 1979, by George Rais and Jaafar Tukan

Kindergartens built across the emirate that are based on a 1974 prototype designed by Lebanese architect George Rais and Palestinian-Jordanian architect Jafar Tukan.

The kindergarten contains 12 classrooms, which each have a pyramidal roof topped with an integrated wind-tower. These classrooms are grouped in threes alongside a larger communal room, which are each topped with larger pyramidal roofs.

Sharjah Art Foundation acquired the building and turning it into a community centre.

Ice Factory, 1970s, by unknown

Sharjah Art Foundation purchased the former ice-factory in the town of Kalba, on the eastern coast of the emirate, to host art installations.

Located near the creek and the Al Qurm mangrove swamp, the ice factory has a distinctive saw-tooth shaped roof made from corrugated metal and an open, concrete frame.

In 2015 the building was used as the site of a large installation by Argentinian artist Adrián Villar Rojas.


Source: Sharjah's 1970s and '80s architecture is being saved by the architecture triennial - DEEZEN

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