Zaha Hadid’s architecture in 8 key works

We review the work of the great Iraqi-British architect, 2004 Pritzker Prize winner and master of deconstructivism: from China to Italy via Dubai, a perfect alchemy of form and function, of vision and complex technology.

Iraqi by birth and Londoner by adoption, Zaha Hadid (1950-2016) was one of the most outstanding personalities in contemporary architecture. A woman in a professional milieu that is still predominantly masculine, she was awarded the Pritzker Prize in 2004.
In her work, the visionary genius and solid technical-scientific skills, the search for abstraction to push creativity beyond unthinkable limits (stemming from her original affection for the art avantgardes) and the attention to user as the ultimate goal of her compositional path, converge at the same time.

domus 650, 1984 zaha hadid cover
Zaha Hadid on the cover of Domus 650, May 1984

In her work, perhaps more than in other authors, the perfect alchemy between art, architecture, design and engineering is concretely represented and expressed over the years through a few recurrent motifs: the celebration of movement as a constitutive feature of reality, through fluid and dynamic geometries that determine (and spring from) transit flows (of people, light, etc.) and to which the designer gives form through parametric modelling; material and technological experimentation that drives her to explore and codify innovative materials, adapting them to different contexts through technical solutions of elevated and lucid complexity.

Since Hadid’s untimely death, Zaha Hadid Architects has picked up the material and spiritual legacy of its founder, carrying on a work that, although within the vocabulary she traced, makes research and experimentation at any scale, functional programme and geographical-cultural context its leitmotif.

Nearly nine years after her death, we recount Hadid’s thought through 8 selected projects that she designed and supervised herself, ranging from museums to infrastructures and hotels, and spanning the globe from Rome to Beijing via Dubai, giving an insight into her intellectual stature.

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