Showing posts with label neo futuristic architecture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label neo futuristic architecture. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 25, 2017

Neo Futuristic Architecture - Qatar World Cup 2022 Stadium

The Saoud bin Abdul Rahman Al-Thani Stadium, also known as Al-Wakrah SC Stadium, is a multi-purpose stadium in Al Wakrah, Qatar. It is currently used mostly for football matches. It is the home venue of Al-Wakrah Sports Club.

Neo Futuristic Architecture - Qatar World Cup 2022 Stadium

Al-Bayt Stadium with unique tent design exactly mimicking Bedouin Tent design, from which it also takes its name. Canvas-alike façade is dominated by black colour, but with strongly contrasting white stripes. In original tents, the stripes were a way of signaling which tribe or family the tent belongs to. Also inside the stadium décor will resemble that from traditional tents with warm and cosy red color.

Neo Futuristic Architecture - Qatar World Cup 2022 Stadium

Lusail Iconic Stadium is a proposed football stadium which will be built in Lusail, Qatar in time for the finals of the 2022 FIFA World Cup. The stadium will be used for the opening and final games of the 2022 FIFA World Cup.

Neo Futuristic Architecture - Qatar World Cup 2022 Stadium

Qatar Foundation Stadium has a design that draws on the rich history of Islamic architecture, blending it with striking modernity. The façade features triangles that form complex, diamond-esque geometrical patterns, appearing to change colour with the sun’s movement across the sky. Like diamonds, the stadium’s design represents quality, durability and resilience, and will become something to be treasured – both for the memories it holds, and its future value to the country and region.

Neo Futuristic Architecture - Qatar World Cup 2022 Stadium

Al Rayyan Stadium is the story of Qatar. Its most striking feature is a glowing façade, made from patterns that characterise different aspects of the country: the importance of family, the beauty of the desert, the native flora and fauna, local and international trade. A seventh shape, that of a shield, brings together all the others and represents the strength and unity that is particularly relevant to the proud desert town of Al Rayyan.

Neo Futuristic Architecture - Qatar World Cup 2022 Stadium

Khalifa International Stadium most recognisable features of the arena were always its dual arches, sweeping across the skyline and acting as a magnet for football fans. These icons remain, but there will now be a wide canopy stretching out below them, complementing the stadium’s cooling system to maintain a comfortable temperature for fans.
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Tuesday, September 6, 2016


This Neo Futuristic Architecture inspired by fly's eye. Buckminster Fuller design this following his idea about affordable and portable home in the future, with windows and openings in the dome to hold solar panels and systems for water collection, thus allowing the dome to be self sufficient.



Neo Futuristic Architecture - Fly's Eye Dome


Neo Futuristic Architecture - Fly's Eye Dome

Neo Futuristic Architecture - Fly's Eye Dome

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Monday, June 6, 2016

The Heydar Aliyev Cultural Centre building located in Baku, Azerbajian. This neo futurist architecture design by iraqi-british architect Zaha Hadid.

 The Heydar Aliyev Center represents a fluid form which emerges by the folding of the landscape’s natural topography and by the wrapping of individual functions of the Center. All functions of the Center, together with entrances, are represented by folds in a single continuous surface. This fluid form gives an opportunity to connect the various cultural spaces whilst at the same time, providing each element of the Center with its own identity and privacy. As it folds inside, the skin erodes away to become an element of the interior landscape of the Center.

 Heydar Aliyev Center had an official soft-opening ceremony on 10 May 2012 held by current president of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev. An internationally recognized futurist architectural work, the building of the Heydar Aliyev Center has become a signature landmark of modern Baku due to its innovative and futuristic design. Extending on eight floor levels, the center accommodates a 1000-seat auditorium, temporary exhibition spaces, a conference center, workshops, and a museum.The building was nominated for awards in 2013 at both the World Architecture Festival and the biennial Inside Festival. In 2014, Centre won the Design Museum’s Design of the Year Award 2014 despite concerns about the site's human rights record. This makes Zaha Hadid the first woman to win the top prize in that competition.
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