ARPT Headquarters by Mario Cucinella Architects

News: Italian firm Mario Cucinella Architects has won a competition to design a telecommunications agency headquarters in Algeria with proposals for a fin-like form referencing sand dunes and traditional Mediterranean architecture (+ slideshow).

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Mario Cucinella Architects also used the pointed arch typical in Islamic regions as a reference for the shape, which also resembles the dunes of the surrounding desert landscape.

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The building’s form contributes to natural cooling by channeling hot winds over the convex surface of the north facade, while a concave wall on the opposite side helps draw in cool air at night.

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Occupying a location next to a major road and close to a new urban park on the outskirts of Algiers, the ARPT (Autorité de Régulation de la Poste et des Télécommunications) building is intended as “the reference point within a neighbourhood and a city where tradition and modernity merge”.

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Turkish firm Tabanlıoğlu Architects employed natural ventilation and cooling systems in their design for Bodrum International Airport, which won the transport category at last year’s World Architecture Festival, while Foster + Partners has designed a museum in Abu Dhabi with five curving towers that act as thermal chimneys to draw in cool air.

Here are some more details from the architects:


International Competition – ARPT new Headquarters (Autorité de Régulation de la Poste et des Télécommunications)

The building has been conceived as an icon where tradition and modernity are melted, both in form (which arises from a pointed arch typical of Mediterranean architecture and the inclination of the solar diagram) as well as in the treatment of the surface of the body.

The project is inspired by the Algerian desert landscape where the dunes of seem natural buildings, manufactured by wind and sand. Analysing the urban fabric, the location of the lot along a highway of great importance and especially the proximity to the new urban park Bab Ezzouar, offer the possibility to create a building highly visible and representative. An institutional building as the new ARPT headquarters should be the reference point within a neighborhood and a city where tradition and modernity merge each other to create new symbolic and cultural scenarios. For this reason the project proposal draws a highly iconic building far from the predominant aesthetics of the area and which exploits the direct contact with the new park. The desire to create a building that would work according to the principles of bioclimatic architecture and in particular by the natural cooling techniques of the past, such as the tu’rat, suggested an aerodynamic shape, convex on the North side to divert the hot winds, and concave on the South side to capture the cool breezes during the night, and thus to promote the natural ventilation of the building.

Form, energy and tradition are transformed then into a new building that will become a symbol of the development of Algeria.

Place: Algeri, Algeria
Year: 2013
Type: International Competition – winner project
Progetto: Mario Cucinella Architects

Team: Mario Cucinella, Luca Sandri, Alberto Casarotto, Alberto Bruno, Giulia Mariotti, Rossana Romano, Michele Olivieri, Giuseppe Perrone
Stuctures and engineering: Favero & Milan

Rendering: MIR, Engram Studio

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Mario Cucinella Architects
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Mosquée d’Algérie by KSP Jürgen Engel Architekten

Mosquée d’Algérie by KSP Jürgen Engel Architekten

Construction is about to commence in Algiers on the third largest mosque in the world, which will only be smaller than the pilgrimage sites of Mecca and Medina.

Mosquée d’Algérie by KSP Jürgen Engel Architekten

German firm KSP Jürgen Engel Architekten won a competition to design the Mosquée d’Algérie back in 2008.

Mosquée d’Algérie by KSP Jürgen Engel Architekten

At the centre of the proposals is a 265 metre-high minaret, which will contain lifts to an elevated museum and research centre at its pinnacle.

Mosquée d’Algérie by KSP Jürgen Engel Architekten

A prayer hall at the far end of the site will accommodate up to 37,000 worshippers beneath a 50 metre-wide domed ceiling.

Mosquée d’Algérie by KSP Jürgen Engel Architekten

The complex will also include a cultural centre, a Muslim school, a library, a fire station and apartments, surrounding a central square. The entire project is scheduled for completion in 2016.

Mosquée d’Algérie by KSP Jürgen Engel Architekten

KSP Jürgen Engel Architekten completed an art museum in China last year, which we published on Dezeen – see the project here.

See also: more stories about mosques, including a twisted mosque by BIG.

Here’s some more information from the architects:


Laying of the foundation stone for the new “Mosquée d’Algérie”, Algeria

As part of the celebrations of Algeria’s National holiday on November 1st the foundation stone for the new “Mosquée d’Algérie” was laid at an official cere-mony in Algiers. This formal act marks the beginning of the construction of the world’s third largest mosque after the Islamic pilgrimage sites in Mecca and Medina. With its prayer hall for up to 37,000 people and the approx. 265-meter high minaret, the Mosque will in future be one of the largest religious buildings in the Islamic world. The complex offers space for up to 120,000 visitors daily and, in addition to the prayer hall and the minaret, boasts further facilities such as a cultural center, an Imam School, a library, apartments, a fire station, a museum, and a research center. Located a mere six kilometers east of the historical town center and not far from the airport, the new mosque com-plex, which has a gross surface area of approx. 400,000 square meters, is an important stimulus for the future development of adjacent districts. The new focal point combines religion, culture and research, while at the same time serving as a new center for the surrounding quarters.

Construction of the complex is due to commence in early 2012, once the requisite preparatory measures have been concluded. Commissioning is planned for 2016.

The entire complex is being built on behalf of the Algerian government on the basis of plans drawn up by a consortium consisting of KSP Jürgen Engel Architekten and the engineering firm Krebs und Kiefer International in Darmstadt, Germany. In 2008 the design submitted by the consortium from Germany won the international competition, and the ceremony for the signing of the contract for the planning services was held in July 2008 in Algiers in the presence of the German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

Project Data

Developer: ANARGEMA Agence Nationale de Ré-alisation de Gestion de la Mosquée d’Algérie
GSA (total surface): approx. 400,000 m²
Gross volume (converted space): 1,750,00 m³
Height of the minaret: 265 m
Competition: 01/2008, 1st prize
Laying of the foundation stone: Oct. 31, 2011
Start of construction work: Early 2012
Commissioning: Mid-2016


See also:

.

The Vanishing Mosque
by RUX Design for Traffic
Cultural centre in Tirana
by BIG
Dezeen’s top
ten: churches