Zahahadid 150608012328 Lva1 App6891 PDF
Zahahadid 150608012328 Lva1 App6891 PDF
Presented by:
Presented by: Deepak Kumar (11-ARB-564)
Deepak Kumar
Ahmad Faraz Ahmad Faraz (11-ARB-567)
I don't think that architecture is only about shelter, it is only about a very simple enclosure. It should
be able to excite you, to calm you, to make you think…
-Zaha Hadid
2
Contents
An Introduction to Zaha Hadid Seminal Works
Architectural Background I. Vitra Fire Station, Germany
II. MAXII: Museum of XXI Century Arts, Italy
Architectural Philosophy
III. Phaeno Science Centre, Germany
Architectural Style- Deconstructivism
IV. Guangzhou Opera House, China
Concept of Fluidity V. London Aquatics Centre, United Kingdom
Architectural Works VI. Heydar Aliyen Centre, Azerbaijan
Awards & Recognition Other Architecture Related Works
List of Awards & Honors Conclusion
Museum Exhibitions Zaha Hadid’s Team
Critics Bibliography
Education
Alma Mater: American University of Beirut, Architectural Association School of Architecture
She read mathematics at the American University of Beirut before moving to study at the
Architectural Association School of Architecture in London, where she met Rem Koolhaas,
Elia Zenghelis and Bernard Tschumi. She worked for her former professors, Koolhaas and
Zenghelis, at the Office for Metropolitan Architecture, in Rotterdam, the Netherlands; of
which she became a partner in 1977.
Teaching
Dame Zaha Hadid has taught at the Harvard Graduate School of Design, where she was the Kenzo Tange Professorship and the
Sullivan Chair at the University of Illinois at Chicago's School of Architecture. Zaha was named an honorary member of the
American Academy of Arts and Letters and an honorary fellow of the American Institute of Architects. She has been on the
board of trustees of The Architecture Foundation. She is currently professor at the University of Applied Arts Vienna in Austria.
Zaha Hadid is an architect who consistently pushes the boundaries of architecture and urban
design. Her work experiments with new spatial concepts intensifying existing urban
landscapes in the pursuit of a visionary aesthetic that encompasses all fields of design,
ranging from urban scale through to products, interiors and furniture.
Best known for her seminal built works (Vitra Fire Station, Land Formation-One, Bergisel Ski
Jump, Strasbourg Tram Station and Rosenthal Centre for Contemporary Art in Cincinnati) her
central concerns involve a simultaneous engagement in practice, teaching and research.
Zaha Hadid was awarded the Pritzker Architecture Prize (considered to be the Nobel
Prize of architecture) in 2004 and is internationally known for both her theoretical and
academic work. Each of her dynamic and innovative projects builds on over thirty
years of revolutionary experimentation and research in the interrelated fields of
urbanism, architecture and design.
Hadid’s work constantly tests the boundaries of architecture and design. She
introduced the concept of fluidity in her designs.
Hadid's first building was a fire station near the German-Swiss border, for the furniture
company Vitra. Since then Hadid has been widely quoted as saying that since there are 360
degrees, she sees no reason to restrict herself to just one), on the grounds of the Vitra
Furniture Company in Weil am Rhein. The building consists of numerous irregular angles
(which others considered as negative spaces).
The main components of philosophy behind her design are-
DECONSTRUCTIVISM
Fluidity
Vitara fire station near the German-Swiss Gravity-Defying
Border Fragmentary &
Insight Revolutionary
Hadid remains ahead of her time, and responsive to emerging social demands, in the sense that the
world is becoming a series of concentrations of wealth and power, which express themselves through
lavish, singular trophies. To this extent there is a reality to the work. But it is different from the ideals
she used to express, or of her achievements at their best. There has always been conflict, or tension,
between her artistic ego and her public spirit, which is what made her interesting, but it's getting
hard to see the latter.
The term "Deconstructivism" in contemporary architecture is opposed to the ordered rationality of Modernism
and Postmodernism. Deconstructivism took a confrontational stance to architectural history, wanting to "disassemble"
architecture. While postmodernism returned to embrace the historical references that modernism had shunned, possibly
ironically, deconstructivism rejected the postmodern acceptance of such references, as well as the idea of ornament as an
after-thought or decoration.
Insight
1) Her style is Deconstructivism (breaking architecture, displacement and distortion,
leaving the vertical and the horizontal, using rotations on small, sharp angles,
breaks up structures apparent chaos).
3) Deconstructivist buildings may seem to have no visual logic. They may appear to be
made up of unrelated, disharmonious abstract forms.
Guangzhou Opera House (2010) Guangzhou,
4) She is an architect known worldwide for her talent in various disciplines such as People’s Republic of China is one of the Prime
Example of Deconstructivism in Buildings
painting, graphic arts, three-dimensional models and computer design.
by architect Zaha Hadidc
In 2002, she won the International Design Competition to design Singapore's One North Master Plan. In 2005, her
design won the competition for the New City Casino of Basel, Switzerland.
In 2004, Zaha became the first female and first Muslim recipient of the Pritzker Architecture Prize, architecture's
equivalent of the Nobel Prize. In 2006, she was honoured with a retrospective spanning her entire work at the
Guggenheim Museum in New York; that year she also received an Honorary Degree from the American University of
Beirut.
In 2008, she ranked 69th on the Forbes list of "The World's 100 Most Powerful Women".
In 2010, she was named by Time as an influential thinker in the 2010 TIME 100 issue. In September 2010, the British
magazine New Statesman listed Zaha Hadid at number 42 in their annual survey of "The World's 50 Most Influential
Figures 2010". Hadid was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in 2002 and Dame
Commander of the Order of the British Empire (DBE) in the 2012 Birthday Honours for services to architecture.
She was listed as one of the fifty best dressed over 50s by the Guardian in March 2013.
Three years later, she was assessed as one of the 100 most powerful women in the UK
by Woman's Hour on BBC Radio 4.
She won the Stirling Prize two years running: in 2010, for one of her most celebrated
works, the Maxxi in Rome, and in 2011 for the Evelyn Grace Academy, a Z-shapes
school in Brixton, London. She is also the designer of the Dongdaemun Design Plaza & Zahad Hadid with the Pritzker Prize way
Park in Seoul, South Korea, which was the centrepiece of the festivities for the city's back in 2004
designation as World Design Capital 2010 which was later completed in March 2014.
She became the 41st Winner of the Veuve Clicquot UK Business Woman Award in the
year 2013.
She was elected as International Member, American Philosophy Society in the year
2013.
1982: Gold Medal Architectural Design, British 2005: RIBA European Award for BMW Central Building
Architecture for 59 Eaton Place, London 2006: RIBA European Award for Phaeno Science Centre
1994: Erich Schelling Architecture Award 2007: Thomas Jefferson Medal in Architecture
2001: Equerre d'argent Prize 2008: RIBA European Award for Nordpark Cable Railway
2002:Austrian State Prize for Architecture for 2009: Praemium Imperiale
Bergiselschanze 2010: RIBA European Award for MAXXI
2003: European Union Prize for Contemporary 2012: Jane Drew Prize for her "outstanding contribution
Architecture for the Strasbourg tramway terminus and to the status of women in architecture"
car park at Hoenheim in Strasbourg, France 2012: Jury member for the awarding of the Pritzker Prize
2003: Commander of the Civil Division of the Order of to Wang Shu in Los Angeles, CA.
the British Empire (CBE) For services to Architecture 2013: 41st Winner of the Veuve Clicquot UK Business
2004: Pritzker Prize Woman Award
2005: Austrian Decoration for Science and Art 2013: Elected international member, American
2005: German Architecture Prize for the central building Philosophical Society
of the BMW plant in Leipzig
2005: Designer of the Year Award for Design Miami
Year: 1990-1993
Status: Completed
Conceived as the end note to existing factory buildings, the Vitra Fire Station defines rather then occupies the space-
emerging as a linear, layered series of walls, between which program elements are contained- a representation of
“movement frozen”- an “alert” structure, ready to explode into action at any moment.
It was a simple project from Zaha Hadid’s point of view but an important one as it marked the beginning of her career.
Completed in 1993, the Vitra fire station was Hadid’s first realized project of her career.
In this project Hadid’s showcased work that delves into the deconstructivist theoretical language that she developed
through her paintings as a conceptual mediator of finding spatial relationships and form.
It was built within the factory complex in order to protect all Vitra buildings after fire demonstrated the need for one.
Concept
They started the project with an intention to deploy elements of the project
so that would not be lost among the huge sheds of the ships that make up
the factory. They also used these elements to structure the entire site, giving
identity and rhythm to the main street that runs through the complex.
Functional Layout
The design unifies two very different parts of the program: the housing of fire trucks
and the provision of various facilities for the firefighters.
The concept of the stacked walls encompasses both parts, whereby a break or bend
in the line of the building expresses the intersection of the two. The entrance to the
building is precisely at this junction.
Functional Layout
The fire station is a composition of concrete planes that bend, tilt, and
break according to the conceptual dynamic forces that are
connecting landscape and architecture.
Interior View
The building is not only unique from the exterior side, but also from the
interior the materials choice and the color combination is itself speaking of
its class and the amount of time Zaha Hadid has devoted on it.
The interior of the fire station is just as complex formally and spatially as the Interior Views of the Vitra Fire Station by
Architect Zaha Hadid
exterior of the building.
Layout Features
The second floor is slightly off balance with the ground
floor, which creates a sense of spatial instability within.
Layout Features
Materials
Year: 1998-2009
Status: Completed
MAXXI super cedes the notion of the museum as ‘object’ or- presenting a field of buildings accessible to all, with no firm
boundary between what is ‘within’ and what is ‘without’. Central to this new reality are confluent lines- walls intersecting
and separating to create interior and exterior spaces.
In 2010 she got the RIBA European Award for underdoing MAXXI: Museum of XXI Century Arts.
Description
Bird Eye View of the Project- MAXXI: Museum of XXI Century Arts by
Architect Zaha Hadid
Interiors
Interior Views of the MAXXI: Museum of XXI Century Arts by Architect Zaha Hadid
Interiors
Interior Views of the MAXXI: Museum of XXI Century Arts by Architect Zaha Hadid
Year: 2000-2005
Status: Completed
Described variously as “an architectural adventure playground” and “the magic box”. Phaeno realizes our continuing vision
of creating ‘complex, dynamic and fluid spaces’- from the gently undulating artificial hills and valleys created below the
main elevated structure, to the crater-like museum floor, naturally lit spaces and accessible funnels within.
Conceptual Analysis of the Phaeno Science Conceptual Analysis of the Phaeno Science
Center by Architect Zaha Hadid Center by Architect Zaha Hadid
Spaces
The building allows people to walk and climb down one part of the pavement
to get inside. In other places, the ground floor takes visitors to a public square.
Downstairs open broad prospects, exposing the context of the city, between Artificial Landscape of the Phaeno Science
the concrete cones. Center by Architect Zaha Hadid
So called piles, appointed by the architect as cones, which are widening as they rise. There are 10 of them
and each one is identified by its curvature and tilt. These piles are inhabited with windows, and sliding glass
doors.
The building does not tread the earth completely. Much stands on a square with a series of large inverted
conical shapes with rounded corners that act as legs and give an effect of weightlessness.
Plan of the Phaeno Science Center by Architect Zaha Hadid Section & Elevation of the Phaeno Science Center by
Architect Zaha Hadid
The building is made in exposed concrete. The roof structure is made of steel.
Glazed Areas: They used large glass shades. Furthermore you can see skylights, respecting the diamond
pattern was made in the concrete.
27 cubic meters of concrete and more than 3,500 steel beams were used in construction.
Images taken during the Construction of the Phaeno Science Center by Architect Zaha Hadid
Images taken during the Construction of the Phaeno Science Center by Architect Zaha Hadid
Year: 2003-2010
Status: Completed
At the heart of Guangzhou’s cultural sites development, a lasting, state-of-the-art monument to the new millennium
overlooking the Pearl River. Its contoured profile, unique twin boulder design and approach promenade enhances urban
function, opens access to the riverside and dock areas and creates a new dialogue with the emerging town.
Site Layout
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REFERENCE: HTTP://[Link]/ARCHITECTURE/GUANGZHOU-OPERA-HOUSE-13/
Cont’d…
Description
The Guangzhou Opera House has been the catalyst for the
development of cultural facilities in the city including new museums,
library and archive.
Longitudinal Section
Year: 2005-2011
Status: Completed
Area: 36 875 meter square London Aquatics Centre by Architect Zaha Hadid
A concept inspired by the fluid geometry of water in motion, creating spaces and a surrounding environment in sympathy
with the river landscape of the Olympic Park. An undulating roof sweeps up from the ground as a wave, enclosing the
pools of the Center with its unifying gesture.
Layout
Layout
Pool Section of the London Aquatics Center by Architect Zaha Hadid
The pool hall is expressed above the podium by a large roof which arches along the same axis as the pools.
Double-curvature geometry has been used to generate a parabolic arch structure that creates the unique
characteristics of the roof.
The roof undulates to differentiate between the volumes of competition pool and the diving pool.
Steel Used: 2,800 tonnes of steel were needed to give the 160-
metre-long and 80-metre-wide roof its light and floating look.
Construction Work of the London Aquatics Center by
Architect Zaha Hadid
Diving Platform: The unique six-board diving platform is made
from 462 tonnes of concrete.
The aluminium roof covering was provided by Kalzip. The steel structure
was built in cooperation with Rowecord Engineering, of Newport, Wales.
The ceiling was built with 30,000 sections of Red Lauro timber. The three
pools hold around 10 million litres (2.6 million gallons) of water.
North Elevation
West Elevation
Longitudinal Section
Cross Section
North Elevation
West Elevation
Cross Section
Year: 2007-2012
Status: Completed
As part of the former Soviet Union, the Urbanism and architecture of Baku, the capital of Azerbaijan on the Western coast
of the Caspian Sea, was heavily influenced by the planning of that era. Since its independence in 1991, Azerbaijan has
invested heavily in modernizing and developing Baku’s infrastructure and architecture, departing from its legacy of
normative Soviet Modernism.
It is part of a larger redevelopment area and is expected to Conceptual Analysis of the Heydar Aliyev
be a bellwether of the city’s intellectual and cultural life. Centre by Architect Zaha Hadid
Zaha Hadid Architects created a building form that appears to emerge from
the topography. The skin of the building – a single curving surface – rises,
undulates, and wraps inward at its base to completely envelop the building’s
various volumes.
The Reality
For aesthetic purposes, the cladding needed to give the building a monolithic
appearance, not only to make it read as a continuous volume but also to
accomplish the transition to the plaza surface. All visible seams needed to run
parallel to one another, reinforcing the building’s wavelike design. The cladding A View during construction of the Heydar
material had to meet various practical considerations, such as UV resistance and Aliyev Centre by Architect Zaha Hadid
light reflectivity.
Longitudinal Section
Cross Section
North Elevation
West Elevation
Construction Images
A View during construction of the Heydar Aliyev Centre by Architect Zaha Hadid
Construction Images
A View during construction of the Heydar Aliyev Centre by Architect Zaha Hadid
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REFERENCE: HTTP://[Link]/ARCHITECTURE-COMPETITION/ABU-DHABI-PERFORMANCE-ARTS-CENTRE-5/
Project: Beijing New Airport Terminal Building, Beijing, China
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REFERENCE: HTTP://[Link]/ARCHITECTURE-COMPETITION/BEIJING-AIRPORT-TERMINAL-8/
Project: Al Wakrah Stadium (Under FIFA), State of Qatar
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REFERENCE: HTTP://[Link]/ARCHITECTURE-COMPETITION/BAL-WAKRAH-STADIUM-1/
A PRESENTATION ON ARCHITECT “ZAHA HADID” BY DEEPAK KUMAR & AHMAD FARAZ 103
A PRESENTATION ON ARCHITECT “ZAHA HADID” BY DEEPAK KUMAR & AHMAD FARAZ 104
Project: Casa Atlantica, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
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REFERENCE: HTTP://[Link]/ARCHITECTURE-COMPETITION/CASA-ATLANTICA-0/
Other Architecture Related Works
Zaha Hadid has been famous around the Globe for her Architectural Related Works, but along with that she
being a good designer, artist, painter and good in sketching. She has also worked on Z Car Hydrogen Powered
three-wheeled automobile. As a result of which there are some of her works beyond the design of buildings in
some sort of interior related works as follows:
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REFERENCE: HTTP://[Link]/ARCHITECTURE-SUNDRY-01/
Aria Pendant Lamp
A light piece that is charged with Hadid’s dramatic sense of motion combined with the intrinsic weightlessness of
technically advanced materials. With its 50 layers of Crystalflex®, this suspension light has a complex harmonic yet
fluid contemporary quality. With its translucent black overly, a fascinating sculpture in light.
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REFERENCE: HTTP://[Link]/ARCHITECTURE-SUNDRY-01/
Celeste Necklace & Cuff
The Celeste Necklace and Cuff was designed by Zaha Hadid in 2008 and with the collaboration of Atelier
Swarovski.
Materials Used: Blackened Pure Silver & Other Stones, White Topaz, Smoky Quartz and Black Spaniel.
Necklace: Length 43cm & Width 40cm
Cuff: Length 45cm & Width 10cm
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REFERENCE: HTTP://[Link]/ARCHITECTURE-SUNDRY-01/
The Odrupgaard Bench
This bench in solid ash was designed by the Iraqi born architect, Zaha Hadid in 2005, as part of the interior
of the annex she designed for Ordrupgaard Museum in Charlottenlund just north of Copenhagen.
The bench became part of PP Møbler´s collection in the spring 2006. PP Møbler has made ten pieces of the
bench with four benches in the museum and one bench sold privately. The last five benches were used at
the COP15 conference in Copenhagen in December 2009.
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REFERENCE: HTTP://[Link]/ARCHITECTURE-SUNDRY-01/
Tide Shelving
Architect Zaha Hadid developed this project starting from the idea of a light
shaped object, which could express the transition from the solid traditional
furniture to the slight thickness of plastic: from this starting point the idea of
going back to the algorithm of the minimum surfaces.
The possibility to build and rebuild up the module to fit to the space around
or to the different needs makes this project an unity, where full and empty
spaces follow each other without interruption.
Images of Specimens of Tide Shelving
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REFERENCE: HTTP://[Link]/ARCHITECTURE-SUNDRY-01/
Floating Staircase
Architect Zaha Hadid gave the concept and design of the Floating Staircase.
The new floating staircase maintains the lightness of the gallery space. Each suspended step is articulated
as a separate ribbon cast from Ductal®, an ultra-high performance concrete with exceptional structural as
well as aesthetic qualities. The tensile strength of Ductal® allows the ribbons to remain relatively thin with
each tread cast from a single adjustable mold that was engineered in Italy by Il Cantiere.
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REFERENCE: HTTP://[Link]/ARCHITECTURE-SUNDRY-01/
Aqua Table
Architect Zaha Hadid gave the concept and design of the Aqua Table, which was a different and beyond
the imagination of many other architects/designers of that time.
The enigmatic liquid form of the Aqua table awakens one’s curiosity. ---The user is invited to explore the
forces of motion that created such a form.
1) The form is blurring the relationship between the horizontal top and vertical legs
2) The three blisters bulging out to form legs below the table surface register as indentations
at the top surface
3) The Aqua table is an organic body flowing within space.
4) Rather than being static, it implies motion by adopting the dynamic gestures of liquid to
form a continuous surface.
5) The table’s asymmetrical, irregular tabletop and varying edges create an ergonomic solid
that offers endless relationship possibilities with its user and its environment
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REFERENCE: HTTP://[Link]/ARCHITECTURE-SUNDRY-01/
Cont’d…
Table-II
Table-I
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REFERENCE: HTTP://[Link]/ARCHITECTURE-SUNDRY-01/
Chandeliers
Architect Zaha Hadid gave the concept and design of the different types of Chandeliers.
The design idea of these chandeliers are based on fluidity and seamlessness. Their complex curvi-linearity
follows a double Helix, connecting its beginning to its end and therefore forming an endless ribbon of
light.
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REFERENCE: HTTP://[Link]/ARCHITECTURE-SUNDRY-01/
Critics
With the type of flowing design Zaha Hadid is famous brings the controversy on almost every one out of five projects
which she does. Almost the majority of the present day architects are not of the Zaha Hadid’s philosophy. As a result is
always ends up in coming up of the critics. Hadid’s architectural language has been described as "famously extravagant"
with many of her projects sponsored by "dictator states".
Rowan Moore described Hadid's Heydar Aliyev Center as "not so different from the colossal cultural palaces long
beloved of Soviet and similar regimes".
Architect Sean Griffiths characterised Hadid's work as "an empty vessel that sucks in whatever ideology might be in
proximity to it".
Arthistorian Maike Aden criticises in particular the foreclosure of Zaha Hadid's architecture of the MAXXI in Rome
towards the public and the urban life that undermines even the most impressive program to open the museum.
Qatar Controversy
As the architect of the most distinctive stadium for the 2022 FIFA World Cup, in Qatar, Hadid defended her involvement in
the project, despite revelations relating to the working conditions imposed on migrant workers in Qatar. She
acknowledged that there was a serious problem with the number of migrant workers who have died during construction
work related to the World Cup. She also said that she believed it was a problem for the Qatari government to resolve.
A PRESENTATION ON ARCHITECT “ZAHA HADID” BY DEEPAK KUMAR & AHMAD FARAZ 115
REFERENCE: [Link]/PROFILE ; GOOGLE NEWS- ZAHA HADID, FIFA WORLD CUP- QATAR NEWS
Conclusion
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REFERENCE: HTTP://[Link]/ARCHITECTURE-SUNDRY-01/
Museum Exhibitions
1978 – Guggenheim Museum, New York 2006 – (3 June – 25 October) – Solomon R. Guggenheim
1983 – Retrospective at the Architectural Association, Museum, New York
London 2006 – (1 June – 29 July) – Ma10 Mx Protetch Gallery,
1985 – GA Gallery, Tokyo Chelsea, NYC
1988 – Deconstructivist Architecture Show at MoMA, 2007 – (29 June – 25 November) – Design Museum,
New York London
1995 – Graduate School of Design at Harvard University 2011/2012 – (20 September 2011 – 25 March 2012) –
1997 – San Francisco MoMA Zaha Hadid: Form in Motion at the Philadelphia Museum
2000 – British Pavilion at the Venice Biennale of Art
2001 – Kunstmuseum, Wolfsburg 2013–(29 June – 29 September) – Zaha Hadid: World
2002 – (10 May – 11 August) Centro nazionale per le arti Architecture at the Danish Architecture Center
contemporanee, Rome
2003 – (4 May – 17 August) – MAK – Museum für
angewandte Kunst (Museum of Applied Arts) in Vienna
A PRESENTATION ON ARCHITECT “ZAHA HADID” BY DEEPAK KUMAR & AHMAD FARAZ 117
REFERENCE: [Link]/PROFILE ; WIKIPEDIA- ZAHA HADID
Zaha Hadid’s Team
A PRESENTATION ON ARCHITECT “ZAHA HADID” BY DEEPAK KUMAR & AHMAD FARAZ 118
REFERENCE: HTTP://[Link]
Bibliography
1) Zaha Hadid- The Complete Buildings and Projects by Thames and Hudson
2) Wikipedia- The Free Encyclopaedia ([Link]-Zaha Hadid)
3) Google Search Engine & Zaha Hadid Official Website for Works & Images
4) Website- [Link]
5) Zaha Hadid’s Webiste- [Link] Contact:
Zaha Hadid Architects
Studio London
10 Bowling Green Lane
London
United Kingdom
A PRESENTATION ON ARCHITECT “ZAHA HADID” BY DEEPAK KUMAR & AHMAD FARAZ 119
Thank You !!