Architecture In Kuwait - Lost Identity العمارة في الكويت - هوية مفقودة

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Architecture In Kuwait - Lost Identity العمارة في الكويت - هوية مفقودة
A platform to share knowledge about architecture and urbanism in Kuwait
One of the best platforms available today that “share[s] knowledge about architecture and urbanism in Kuwait.”
An interesting piece discussing the Arts in Kuwait, “Culture in the Wake of the Kuwaiti Oil Boom: A conversation with Farida Al Sultan.”
Source: http://bidoun.org/articles/farida-al-sultan
It was not so much "architecture without architects" as architecture expanding the notion of what architecture non-architects could make with the tools architects give.
Aaron Betsky http://www.architectmagazine.com/design/exhibits-books-etc/alejandro-aravenas-promise-for-the-2016-venice-biennale_o
Palm Jumeirah, Dubai. ©January 2015 Bauzeitgeist.
Kuwait Neighborhood, unknown date.
Source: https://rememberingletters.wordpress.com/2013/10/27/kuwait-neighborhood/
The foundation of al-Mansur’s ‘Round City’ in 762 was a glorious milestone in the history of urban design. It developed into the cultural centre of the world
In the first in a 50-part series charting the history of the planet’s urbanisation, Jack Shenker explores the ancient metropolis of Alexandria, which set a powerful precedent for future cities all over the world
مواويل عطش النخيل، لعلي عبدالله خليفة. رسومات الفنان ناصر اليوسف.
Contemplating the creative life
The Social Life of Small Urban Spaces: William H. Whyte
Always fun to re-watch.
Hope to do some of these studies in the upcoming future.
Anyone for Tennis? Relaxation and Social Mingling in the Gulf
“As royalty and celebrities gather at Wimbledon for finals weekend, during a fortnight in which players, tournament officials and spectators have had to cope with soaring temperatures, it does well to ponder the prospect of playing a match in the heat and humidity of the Gulf in the first half of the twentieth century. Although this may sound quite unappealing, tennis formed a vital part of the daily routine for the British officials posted there, alleviating boredom and stress. It also became an important meeting point with the Ruling Families in the Gulf.
For these reasons, if a tennis court was not available it could add considerably to the frustration of a posting. In 1911 Captain David Lockhart Robinson Lorimer, Political Agent in Bahrain, made a request to Lieutenant-Colonel Sir Percy Cox, Political Resident in the Persian Gulf, for provision of a court in Bahrain. He submitted that he had already built one at his own expense in Ahwaz, Persia, such was the importance of the facility.
A tennis court also formed an essential part of the fabric of social interaction between British officials and the Ruling Families. Brian Stoddart pinpoints the role tennis played as a game introduced by Britain into its areas of imperial influence and empire: “Tennis was different in social purpose and directed towards a different social clientele. It was deemed a ‘social game’, meaning that it was designed to bring people of like mind and social rank together in a leisure setting rather than to stimulate competition, stress development of sporting skills, or strive for excellence. Consequently, tennis ‘parties’ (the term itself suggesting a nonserious purpose) were invariably staged at courts in the grounds of private homes, with participants drawn from upper social echelons”. Thus in the 1930s, Shaikh Hamad, was pleased to have a court and pavilion built where he could entertain European guests.
In the same way that Wimbledon today forms an important part of the social calendar of ‘the great and the good’, so in the early 20th century, the tennis court with a pavilion in the gardens of the Gulf was a venue for influential social mingling before the area was transformed by oil and luxurious hotels (with tennis courts) assumed a similar role.”
Francis Owtram Gulf History Specialist, British Library/Qatar Foundation Partnership
Further Reading: 'File 3/2 Agency Buildings, from 1912' IOR/R/15/2/53 'File [B 29] Arab States monthly summaries from 1929 to 1931' B. Stoddart, (2006) ‘Sport, Cultural Imperialism and Colonial Response in the British Empire’, Sport in Society: Cultures, Commerce, Media and Politics, p.871
Find more images on the link.
Source: http://britishlibrary.typepad.co.uk/untoldlives/2015/07/anyone-for-tennis-relaxation-and-social-mingling-in-the-gulf.html
(via https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jJ-Xj8TNwAk)
تجمّع طلبةالكويت بالقاهرة تنديداً بإعتداءالعراق1973م-حادثةالصامتة
Where are those programmers that can make the impossible possible.
Architects seems to have established and dogmatized an ensemble of significations, as such poorly developed and variously labelled as ‘function’, 'form', 'structure', or rather functionalism, formalism, and structuralism. They elaborate them not from the significations perceived and lived by those who inhabit, but from their interpretation of inhabiting. It is graphic and visual...Given that these architects form a social body, they attach themselves to institutions, their system tends to close itself off, impose itself and elude all criticism. There is cause to formulate this system, often put forward without any other procedure or precaution, as planning by extrapolation.
Henri Lefevbre
Kuwait Urban Study and Mat-building (1968-72) Alison & Peter Smithson
Site plan of the ground level with the open spaces of mat-building between the parking squares.
Civic engagement in Saudi Arabia has been viewed mostly from the angle of labor, nationalist, or sectarian activism that evolves in phases of political or social tension.[1] In this essay, I examine civic engagement in the 1950s and 1960s through ...