Nous avons un fil en fil international d'architecture pour Neo architecture historique, ou de nouveaux bâtiments construits dans un style traditionnel avec la même fidélité de l'artisanat que les bâtiments historiques.
Nous avons de nombreux exemples de bâtiments de partout dans le monde, mais nous manquons de respect de l'architecture marocaine. Pourriez-vous nous aider en donnant des exemples de nouveaux bâtiments traditionnels marocains?
Nous apprécierions vraiment que l'architecture marocaine est parmi les plus exquis et fleuri dans le monde entier.
We have a thread in international architecture thread for Neo Historic Architecture, or new buildings built in a traditional style with the same fidelity of craftsmanship as historic buildings.
We have numerous examples of buildings from all over the world but are lacking with respect to Moroccan architecture. Could you help us out by giving examples of new traditional Moroccan buildings?
We would really appreciate it as Moroccan architecture is some of the most exquisite and ornate the world over.
I think the 2 threads are complementary.
But I don't know wether it should be deplaced or not in the Moorish.
Regardinds new buildings built with traditional moroccan architecture, I have noticed few ones in Rabat:
- Constitutional Court, Bab Laalou
- Dar Al hadith Al Hassania, Hay Ryad
- Emaar HQ, Hay al Fath, route côtière
- A building close to Magic Park and to the new My Youssef bridge
- You also have many palaces of some princes of the Gulf (eg: in front of Mega Mall) which are not public buildings but have interesting architecture
I have heard that city of Rabat, crippled with debts plans to build a new towm hall.
Why don't they build something traditional (like the new Modern Art Museum) instead of these so common new glassy public buildings that popped up in Hay Ryad?
Cities and houses are made by the people. And where they build, they should consider going vernacular/traditional,
to get something that is sustainable, eco-friendly, valuable, affordable, beautiful, livable and eternal.
Agree with this - we need to stop levelling and uglyfying our cities
with bland uniform globalist-modernist architecture, that looks the same everywhere:
Classical is the base we build upon.
Something to contemplate for once. Just breathe it in.
"The symbolic hard currency of architecture is classical,...
It's gold in the bank. The other stuff is leveraged buy-outs and soybean futures."
- Jaquelin T. Robertson
“The thing of first importance in architecture is beauty.”
- Zivkovich-Connolly
Buildings of 10 years of Driehaus Prize winners arranged in one picture, painted 2013.
Oil on canvas by Carl Laubin. Source.
Architects, elevate our architecture further.
But always be aware where we come from and what makes a place a good place to live and stay around!
Indeed, there are plenty of newly built traditional projects in those cities and also in other regions, the problem is that it's difficult to find their architect or more informations about them.
Here's another moroccan architect that it specialized in traditional berber architecture of Morocco, Salima Naji
@The-s: Thanks again, another lovely example! Do you know where Salima Naji has her office? I couldn't tell from the website. Please share if there are any more architects you come across. It helps to empower the vernacular architecture traditions.
@The-s: Thanks again, another lovely example! Do you know where Salima Naji has her office? I couldn't tell from the website. Please share if there are any more architects you come across. It helps to empower the vernacular architecture traditions.
Merci beaucoup pour ces photos The-S. C'est la première fois que je vois à quoi ressemble la gare rénovée de Ksar El Kebir et c'est franchement pas mal ! Un seul regret (d'autant plus regrettable que ce n'est pas un cas isolé) : le plafond en plâtre m'a l'air vraiment laid !
Pas sur. La medina de Sousse a des tours carrés et d'autres rondes qui correspondent à des périodes d'extension différentes. C'est peut être le cas dans l'Est marocain.
C'est vrai, je l'ai constaté sur tes photos d'ailleurs. Les tours sont rondes parfois. Les tours carrées correspondent souvent au style Almohade ou Amoravide dans le Maghreb et dans la péninsule ibérique.
Ceci dit il n'existe presque pas de constructions dans style au Maroc, encore moins à l'Est, où l'achitecture des ksour et qasbah est carrée plus que ronde.
This is an older thread, you may not receive a response, and could be reviving an old thread. Please consider creating a new thread.
Related Threads
?
?
?
?
?
SkyscraperCity Forum
139.4M posts
1.1M members
Since 2002
A truly global community dedicated to skyscrapers, cities, urban development, and the metropolitan environment. Join us to share news, views and fun about architecture, construction, transport, skylines, and much more!