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The UK's Foster + Partners wins Sheikh Zayed National Museum international design competition
- United Arab Emirates: Wednesday, December 12 - 2007 at 13:14
- PRESS RELEASE
Foster + Partners Ltd, one of the UK's leading architectural firms which is strongly associated with its Pritzker Architecture Prize winning founder, Lord Norman Foster, has been declared the winner of the international design competition staged to find an inspiring concept for the planned Sheikh Zayed National Museum in Abu Dhabi, the capital of the United Arab Emirates.
The winning concept was selected from four short listed submissions invited to proceed to the second presentation stage.
The museum will honour the legacy of the late Sheikh Zayed Bin Sultan Al Nahyan, the former UAE President and Ruler of Abu Dhabi who played an instrumental role in the formation of the UAE Federation and was a highly respected international statesman and award-winning environmental pioneer. The Sheikh Zayed National Museum is to be built within the Cultural District of Saadiyat Island - a natural island which lies just 500 metres offshore the UAE's capital city.
Foster + Partners' concept was judged to have best met the requirements of the competition brief to deliver a unique and defining public monument for the founder of the nation and a national museum for Abu Dhabi and the UAE.
"We will now begin discussions with Foster + Partners to develop the design of this important national asset," said His Excellency Sheikh Sultan Bin Tahnoon Al Nahyan, Chairman of the Abu Dhabi Tourism Authority (ADTA) and of Tourism Development & Investment Company (TDIC). "There will be further dialogue as we move into a working phase of close engagement between the architects and stakeholders culminating in a final design."
While in Abu Dhabi to present the Foster + Partners concept Lord Norman Foster spoke of the need to deliver a building symbolic of the character and mission of the late Sheikh Zayed.
"A visitor needs to find this an oasis - an area of calm in a bustling part of the Cultural District. The project calls for more than a museum, rather for a national monument to values which will evoke an element of contemplation and knowledge absorption and which, by definition, would therefore have a greater spiritual element than the other projects in the district," he said.
The international design competition jury was chaired by Zaki Nusseibeh, Adviser to the UAE Ministry of Presidential Affairs. The jury also included: Mohsen Mostafavi, Dean of Cornell University's College of Architecture, Art and Planning; Robert A. M. Stern, a practising architect and Dean of the Yale University School of Architecture; Farshid Moussavi, a practicing architect and Professor In Practice at Harvard University's graduate School of Design and member of the Agha Khan Architectural Award Steering Committee; Peter Wilson, Director of the Royal Shakespeare Company's redevelopment project and Head of Collections and former Director of Major Projects for London's Tate Gallery; Qingyum Ma, Dean University of Soutern California's School of Architecture and principal of the firm MADA s.p.a.m., one of the most visible Chinese practices on the international scene and Elie Haddad, architect and associate professor of architecture at the Lebanese American University in Byblos.
The Sheikh Zayed National Museum features galleries individually devoted to UAE Heritage, Environment, The Transformation of the Emirates, Unity Through Leadership, and Education. The museum will also include an education centre, theatre, shops and a café and a visitor services area.
The Sheikh Zayed National Museum will be a key asset in Saadiyat Island's Cultural District proposition, which also includes the Guggenheim Abu Dhabi modern and contemporary art museum, the Louvre Abu Dhabi universal museum, a performing arts centre, maritime museum and a park with pavilions devoted to culture and the arts. Some of the world's most eminent architects have already been commissioned for the museum designs including, Frank Gehry for the Guggenheim Abu Dhabi, Jean Nouvel for the Louvre Abu Dhabi, Zaha Hadid for the performing arts centre and Tadao Ando for the maritime museum. Together the museums make up the world's largest single cluster of premier cultural assets.
An exhibition on Saadiyat Island's Cultural District and its museums and arts centre concepts is currently running at the Emirates Palace Hotel in Abu Dhabi and is open to the public from 10am until 10pm daily. The exhibition offers a fascinating insight into the Abu Dhabi of tomorrow and is unique in that it gathers together, in one place, the latest work of some of the most recognised architects of the 21st century.
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Notes and media contacts
About Saadiyat Island:Saadiyat Island - which translates from Arabic as Island of Happiness - is the largest single mixed-use development in the Arabian Gulf. The 27 square kilometre natural island - half the size of Bermuda - lies only 500 metres offshore Abu Dhabi island - the capital city of the United Arab Emirates. Saadiyat Island is being developed into a complete visitor, residential and cultural destination.
Saadiyat Island represents one of the most important development opportunities in Abu Dhabi's history. The island, which has 30kms of water frontage and boasts many natural eco-features including mangrove forests, is being developed as a world class residential, tourism and cultural destination and marks a new era in the rapid evolution of Abu Dhabi, the largest of the seven emirates which form the UAE Federation.
Saadiyat Island, which, in Wall Street Journal research, has been named by international tourism scouts as one of the world's top 10 emerging 'trendy' destinations will be developed in three phases with total completion scheduled for 2018. The masterplan envisages seven highly individual districts and includes hotels, marinas with combined berths for around 1,000 boats, two golf courses - one the UAE's first Gary Player Signature course and the first in the Arabian Gulf with beach-front holes - civic and leisure facilities, sea-view apartments and elite villas. The island will also be home to the world's largest single cluster of world-class cultural assets including the Guggenheim Abu Dhabi designed by Frank Gehry, the Louvre Abu Dhabi, designed by Jean Nouvel and the Sheikh Zayed National Museum, which is currently subject to an international design competition.
Saadiyat Island is expected to be home to a community of more than 150,000 people - the same population size as Chang Mai in Thailand, Oxford in the UK or Hollywood in the USA.
Saadiyat Island will be linked to the main Abu Dhabi island and the Abu Dhabi mainland via two, 10-lane freeways making the destination easily accessible to Abu Dhabi International Airport, which will be just a 25 kilometre drive away.
Saadiyat Island is being developed by the Tourism Development & Investment Company (TDIC), an independent public joint stock company of which Abu Dhabi Tourism Authority is the sole shareholder. TDIC's strategy is to dispose of development land on the island to private investors who will each develop their sites in accordance with the masterplan and supporting planning regulations and design guidelines.
About Tourism Development & Investment Company:
Tourism Development & Investment Company (TDIC) is a public joint stock company established under Law No: 12 of 2005 as decreed by the Abu Dhabi Ruler and UAE President, His Highness Sheikh Khalifa Bin Zayed Al Nahyan. TDIC is an independent organisation empowered to manage the tourism investment zones of the Abu Dhabi Tourism Authority (ADTA), which directs and implements strategy for the expansion of the emirate's tourism sector. TDIC will develop the real estate assets that support ADTA's mission of assisting UAE economic diversification through tourism development.
TDIC, launched with an initial paid-up capital of Dhs100m ($27.5m) with its shareholding fully owned by ADTA, operates along strictly commercial lines with its projects being self-sustaining and economically feasible. Its activities include creating development and tourism related concepts for specific sites and locations, disposing of, or repositioning, government-owned tourism related assets, entering into joint ventures with investment partners for assets such as hotels or residential products, as well as serving as the master developer for large scale projects.
For further information:
Bassem Terkawi. PR & Communications Manager, TDIC
Tel: +9712 4443000;
fax: +9712 4443111.
or
Barbara Saunders, MCS/Action.
Tel: +9714 390 2960; fax: +9714 390 8161
Or visit Saadiyat Island online at: www.saadiyat.ae or www.tdic.ae
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