Heydar Aliyev Centre as Zaha Hadid's calling card: the synthesis of parametricism, politics, and new plasticity
The Heydar Aliyev Centre (HAC) in Baku (opened in 2012) is not just one of Zaha Hadid's most famous buildings, but also her programmatic manifesto and a unique synthesis of advanced technology, political narrative, and transformation of the architectural language. This project concentratively embodies all the key principles of her creativity, elevating them to the level of a national symbol.
Architectural concept: the rejection of the angle as a political gesture
The form of the HAC is a direct challenge to both the Soviet architectural heritage of Baku (rigid constructivism and heavy Stalinist empire) and the global practice of building typical cultural centers. The building, devoid of straight angles and columns, appears as a monolithic mass that grows out of the ground.
「Melting」and fluidity: Visually, the building resembles a giant shawl or wave frozen in motion. This is the materialization of Hadid's key concept of「ice-flow,」where architecture is perceived as a malleable substance under the influence of external forces.
Integration with the landscape: The plastic lines of the facade smoothly transition into the square and park, creating a continuous public space. Architecture does not oppose the landscape but becomes an organic, albeit futuristic, part of it. This was particularly important in the context of creating a new image of Baku as an ultra-modern capital.
Parametric design as the foundation of form
The HAC is a classic example of parametric architecture, where every curve is calculated by algorithms.
Structural grid: The entire shell of the building is based on a complex curved grid of thousands of unique steel trusses. There are no two identical elements of the frame or facade panels. To manage this complex mass of data, the highest level of BIM modeling (Building Information Modeling) was used.
Data materialization: The form was not created ...
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