Aga Khan Award for Architecture 2025

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kmaherali
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Joined: Thu Mar 27, 2003 3:01 pm

Aga Khan Award for Architecture 2025

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Colourful, impactful, bold: meet the Aga Khan Award for Architecture 2025 winners

From resilient flood-proof homes in Bangladesh to a bold creative hub in Palestine, the seven winners of the Aga Khan Award for Architecture 2025 reimagine how buildings can foster community, resilience and cultural dialogue across Asia and Africa

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Majara Residence: The project prioritises place-based, incremental growth by identifying and activating local resources in adaptable and sustainable ways, rather than depending on external investment and high-cost infrastructure.
(Image credit: © Aga Khan Trust for Culture / Deed Studio (photographer))

The Aga Khan Award for Architecture 2025 winners have just been announced. The top spot is shared among seven winners – all projects which 'explore architecture’s capacity to serve as a catalyst for pluralism, community resilience, social transformation, cultural dialogue and climate-responsive design,' the organisation explains.

Established in 1977 by His late Highness Prince Karim Aga Khan IV, the award was designed to celebrate excellent architecture of 'communities in which Muslims have a significant presence.' Now in its 16th edition (each has a three-year cycle), this prize is one that also rewards the engineers, consultants, artisans and clients - as opposed to focusing on the architects- behind works that can 'be a catalyst for hope.'

Meet the Aga Khan Award for Architecture 2025 winners

The seven awarded projects span six countries in Asia and Africa, and share the honour this year – as well as a $1 million award between them. Scroll down to find out who they are.


Khudi Bari, Bangladesh

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People living on these ephemeral shoals are vulnerable to floods and land erosion. The distinctive two-story Khudi Bari structure enables them to stay through the rainy season, transforming how they inhabit the char.

(Image credit: © Aga Khan Trust for Culture / City Syntax (F. M. Faruque Abdullah Shawon, H. M. Fozla Rabby Apurbo))

Architect Marina Tabassum and her team in Dhaka, Bangladesh, started working on the Khudi Bari house model in 2018. Meaning 'little house' in Bengali, the project was designed as a response to Bangladesh's recurrent and frequent flooding disasters, a result of climate change. The country's positioning on the Bengal Delta, at the mouths of three large rivers, makes it prone to flooding as the Himalayan glaciers melt due to Earth's rising temperatures. A staggering 80 per cent of Bangladesh is floodplain. The simple structure uses chevron-braced bamboo, which is joined together with steel connectors, and can be easily assembled and disassembled if its owners need to move due to rising water levels.


West Wusutu Community Centre, China

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Aerial view of the centre showing the roof and the courtyard. This building is designed around spaces for community activity.

(Image credit: © Aga Khan Trust for Culture / Dou Yujun (photographer))

'The West Wusutu Village Community Centre shifts the paradigm of contemporary architectural design beyond object-based and aesthetic end-results, orienting it towards translating users’ daily community needs into a well-conceived architectural vehicle. The dynamics of this project significantly enhance social interaction, cultural experience, and environmental resilience,' writes the jury citation on the Inner Mongolia project by the Inner Mongolian Grand Architecture Design Co., Ltd group, including lead architect Zhang Pengju. The panel praised the scheme's multifunctional nature and fluid spaces, which create an 'inclusive communal microcosm within a rural human macrocosm.'


Revitalisation of Esna, Egypt

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General view of a significant building, with al-Qisariyya Traditional Street Market after restoration and upgrading. Initiated in 2016, the project was conceived not only as a response to urban decay, but as a strategic intervention designed to reposition Esna as a model for heritage-led urban regeneration in medium-sized Egyptian cities.

(Image credit: © 2021 Takween ICD / Ahmed Mostafa)

Created by the Takween Integrated Community Development, this project in the city of Esna, Egypt, employs urban strategies and physical interventions to revitalise a neglected part of the historic city and address challenges produced by cultural tourism. The jury explains: 'The initiative to revitalise historic Esna goes beyond the usual limits of an urban conservation project that is formally framed in advance and instead presents a bottom-up strategy through an inclusive, socially structured programme to gradually improve the heritage environment. Hence, residents play a major role in maintaining the urban synergy through its living.'


Jahad Metro Plaza, Iran

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The capital's subway network opened in 1999 and is now one of the largest in the Middle East, with 159 stations and 7 lines. Jahad Metro Plaza is part of a wider city-supported effort to transform metro stations into vibrant public spaces.

(Image credit: © Aga Khan Trust for Culture / Deed Studio (photographer))

Designed in Tehran, by KA Architecture Studio, this was once a dilapidated metro station. Now, the building has been revived using locally handmade bricks that transformed it into a textural, urban landmark. 'The redevelopment of the station entrance transformed a once conventional and modest access point into an open public space: a plaza that encourages passage, encounters and events. Unlike the former structure, which closed off stairways at ground level, the new design opens the station to the sky and neighbourhood, converting former stair areas into a pedestrian zone with direct street access and improving accessibility,' says the jury.


Majara Residence and Community Development, Iran

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Majara Residence is located along the island's ring road, approximately 4 kilometres west of Hormuz City. It was designed to offer high-quality lodging with a capacity for 75 guests while maintaining an open, community-oriented layout.

(Image credit: © Aga Khan Trust for Culture / Deed Studio (photographer))

This colourful complex provides sustainable accommodation for tourists who wish to visit the unique landscape of Hormuz Island. The jury citation explains: 'The project can be understood as a vibrant and colourful archipelago of varying programmes that serve to incrementally define a truly alternative model for tourism in this context and beyond. Following on from its first new structure – the simple viewing and interpretation organisation called Rong Cultural Centre – the Majara Residence presents an offer within a growing global industry. Choosing not to follow a hyper-luxurious and resource-demanding typology, it leans instead towards a pluralist and inclusive framework that counters excess and becomes part of a community-driven evolutionary process of growth.'

Vision Pakistan, Pakistan

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Located on the side of a busy road, the site was chosen for its ease of access using public transportation. The client wanted to ensure that all students coming to the school would be able to come by their own means.

(Image credit: © Aga Khan Trust for Culture / Usman Saqib Zuberi (photographer))

DB Studios is behind this colourful, multistorey office facility in Islamabad, which houses a charity aiming to empower disadvantaged youth through vocational training. The design's defining feature, its facade, impressed the jury: 'The architectural expression of this new building is provided by its concrete screen, held in front of the two street facades. This applied grid of 9 squares high and 10 squares long both protects the interior and expresses this contemporary building to the city. It does this by reinterpreting the familiar and historic jaalis, metal screens, both in various geometric patterns and in different colours. This combination of interpreting history to provide a visually controlled, yet joyful facade gives this building an easily recognisable and distinct surface.'

Wonder Cabinet, Palestine

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Western facade at sunrise. Decorative elements are minimal, consisting primarily of spinning stainless-steel letters on the roof acting as a weathervane.

(Image credit: © Aga Khan Trust for Culture / Mikaela Burstow (photographer))

The Wonder Cabinet in Bethlehem, Palestine, was conceived to foster creativity and cultural production in its region. The building, a piece of brutalist architecture in raw concrete, was designed by AAU Anastas, a practice headed creatively by architects Elias and Yousef Anastas. The structure acts as a hub for craft, design and innovation. The scheme's use of material had an impact on the jury: 'Borrowing from the contemporary language of the concrete frame construction prevalent in Bethlehem and its environs, the project demonstrates that spatial complexity and richness can be achieved through the judicious application of standardised construction methods and minimal material use. The concrete grid becomes an inhabited infrastructure of cultural production as well as a domestic monument – anonymous in its expression and scale, yet monumental in its impact.'

https://www.wallpaper.com/architecture/ ... 25-winners
kmaherali
Posts: 23275
Joined: Thu Mar 27, 2003 3:01 pm

Re: Aga Khan Award for Architecture 2025

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Winners of the 2025 Aga Khan Award for Architecture announced

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The independent Master Jury has chosen seven winners to share the $1 million award.

Award honours groundbreaking architecture shaping a sustainable future

Bishkek, Kyrgyz Republic, 2 September 2025
– The independent Master Jury of the 16th Award Cycle (2023-2025) has selected seven winners after considering on-site reviews of shortlisted projects that were announced in June. The recipients explore architecture’s capacity to serve as a catalyst for pluralism, community resilience, social transformation, cultural dialogue and climate-responsive design. They will share the $1 million award, one of the largest in architecture.


Recipients of the 2025 Aga Khan Award for Architecture are:


Bangladesh

Khudi Bari
, in various locations, by Marina Tabassum Architects – a replicable solution built with bamboo and steel for displaced communities affected by climatic and geographic changes. The Jury recognised the project’s deep ecological framing, contributing to the global advancement of bamboo as a material.

China

West Wusutu Village Community Centre
, in Hohhot, by Inner Mongolian Grand Architecture Design Co., Ltd – a centre built from reclaimed bricks that provides social and cultural spaces for residents and artists, while addressing the cultural needs of the local multi-ethnic community, including Hui Muslims. The Jury noted that the project generates a valuable shared and inclusive communal microcosm within a rural human macrocosm.

Egypt

Revitalisation of Historic Esna
, by Takween Integrated Community Development – a project that addresses cultural tourism challenges through physical interventions, socioeconomic initiatives and innovative urban strategies, transforming a neglected site into a prospering historic city. The Jury acknowledged the ways the project is stimulating a historic urban metabolism to cope with the contemporary challenge of improving human conditions.

Iran

Majara Residence and Community Redevelopment
, in Hormuz Island, by ZAV Architects – a colourful complex whose domes reflect the rainbow island's ochre-rich soils, providing sustainable accommodations for tourists who visit the unique landscape of Hormuz Island. The Jury described the project as a vibrant archipelago of varying programmes that serve to incrementally build an alternative tourism economy.

Jahad Metro Plaza, in Tehran, by KA Architecture Studio – a once dilapidated station transformed into a vibrant urban node for pedestrians. The Jury highlighted the use of local handmade brick as strengthening the connection with Iran’s rich architectural heritage, while its warm subtle texture emphasises the station’s status as a new urban monument.

Pakistan

Vision Pakistan
, in Islamabad, by DB Studios – a multistorey facility boasting joyful facades inspired by Pakistani and Arab craft, while housing a charity that aims to empower disadvantaged youth through vocational training. The Jury noted that the building not only contains a new type of education, but is full of light, spatially interesting and economically efficient.

Palestine

Wonder Cabinet
, in Bethlehem, by AAU Anastas – a multipurpose, non-profit exhibition and production space built with the input of local artisans and contractors, to become a key hub for craft, design, innovation and learning. The Jury found that the building provides a model for an architecture of connection, rooted in contemporary expressions of national identity, and asserts the importance of cultural production as a means of resistance.

This 16th cycle’s prize-giving ceremony will be held at the Toktogul Satylganov Kyrgyz National Philharmonic in Bishkek, Kyrgyz Republic on 15 September. The Award will not only reward architects, but also municipalities, builders, clients, master artisans and engineers who have played important roles in the projects.

Video; https://youtu.be/SfWIDKdDBzQ

Enlarge Icon
The Aga Khan Award for Architecture (AKAA)


“Inspiring younger generations to build with environmental care, knowledge and empathy is among the greatest aims of this Award. Architecture today must engage with the climate crisis, enhance education and nourish our shared humanity. Through it, we plant seeds of optimism – quiet acts of resilience that grow into spaces of belonging, where the future may thrive in dignity and hope.”

- His Highness Prince Rahim Aga Khan V, AKAA Steering Committee Chair

The Aga Khan Award for Architecture was established in 1977 by His late Highness Prince Karim Aga Khan IV, to identify and encourage building concepts that successfully address the needs and aspirations of communities in which Muslims have a significant presence. The Award’s selection process emphasises architecture that not only provides for people’s physical, social and economic needs, but that also stimulates and responds to their cultural aspirations. In the past 16 triennial cycles of the Award, 136 projects have been awarded and nearly 10,000 building projects documented.


“Architecture can – and must – be a catalyst for hope, shaping not only the spaces we inhabit but the futures we imagine. In an age defined by climate crisis, resource inequality and rapid urbanisation, the Aga Khan Award for Architecture celebrates projects that unite society, sustainability and pluralism to empower a more harmonious and resilient world,” said Farrokh Derakhshani, Director of the Aga Khan Award for Architecture.


Download assets from the Award’s online press kit https://the.akdn/en/how-we-work/our-age ... 25-winners


Read more about the Award’s 2025 Master Jury https://the.akdn/en/how-we-work/our-age ... aster-jury and 2025 Steering Committee https://the.akdn/en/how-we-work/our-age ... -committee

For more information, please contact:

Nadia Siméon, Deputy Director, Aga Khan Award for Architecture
akaa@akdn.org

Optimism and Architecture, edited by Lesley Lokko, will be published by ArchiTangle in September 2025. It presents the awarded and shortlisted projects for the 2025 Aga Khan Award for Architecture. Through essays and conversations, this volume examines how architecture can reinvigorate tradition through innovation, connect local practices with global conversations, and create inclusive spaces where diverse cultures and histories converge. Read more https://architangle.com/.


NOTES


AKAA is a programme of the Aga Khan Trust for Culture, an agency of the Aga Khan Development Network (AKDN). Founded and guided by His Late Highness Karim Aga Khan IV, AKDN works in 30 countries to improve the quality of life and to create opportunity for people of all faiths and origins. Its agencies operate over 1,000 programmes and institutions – some more than a century old. The Network’s approach to development spans a range of cultural, social, economic and environmental endeavours. The mandates of its agencies include education and health, agriculture and food security, micro-finance, human habitat, crisis response and disaster reduction, protection of the environment, art, music, architecture, urban planning and conservation, and cultural heritage and preservation. AKDN employs approximately 96,000 people, the majority of whom are based in developing countries. Its annual expenditures for non-profit development activities are approximately $1 billion.

https://the.akdn/en/resources-media/wha ... -announced
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