A building in the Naba'ah area: Sharjah, like the other emirates, benefited architecturally from the UAE being part of the Non-Aligned Movement, or the countries that sided neither with the US nor the USSR during the Cold War. Among them, they developed an
architectural style that captured a kind of utopian optimism: often expressed in residential complexes for middle-income housing, and referring, via Modernism’s architectural motifs, to the social ideals of that movement. Photo / Ammar Al Attar
Al Mutanabbi Bookshop Building aka Old Sharjah Electricity & Water Authority building, Mina Road, Sharjah. Designed: 1974 by Egyptian architect: Ali Nassar of the International Company for Construction and Trade. Photo / Reem Khorshid
Sultan Al Qassemi pictured at Al Qasba in Sharjah. Jeffrey E Biteng / The National
Al Qassemi has gone to great lengths to name the architects that designed Sharjah. Al Boorj Avenue, part of the 1977 Cordoba Buildings, is by Spanish architects Tecnica y Proyectos (TYPSA). Photo / Ammar Al Attar
Another view of the Cordoba Buildings. Photo / Ammar Al Attar
The Al Saud Co Building, which houses the offices of Sultan Sooud Al Qassemi, was designed by British architect Alistair McCowen in 1978. Photo / Ammar Al Attar
A building in King Faisal Street being renovated. Photo / Ammar Al Attar
“I want to show people that there was a history between the arish houses and the glass towers,” Al Qassemi says of his new project. Building Sharjah is working to celebrate this under-studied era – and to help galvanise the preservation of the history. A number of these buildings are being torn down or renovated beyond all recognition. Photo / Ammar Al Attar
A building in the Naba'ah area: Sharjah, like the other emirates, benefited architecturally from the UAE being part of the Non-Aligned Movement, or the countries that sided neither with the US nor the USSR during the Cold War. Among them, they developed an
architectural style that captured a kind of utopian optimism: often expressed in residential complexes for middle-income housing, and referring, via Modernism’s architectural motifs, to the social ideals of that movement. Photo / Ammar Al Attar
Al Mutanabbi Bookshop Building aka Old Sharjah Electricity & Water Authority building, Mina Road, Sharjah. Designed: 1974 by Egyptian architect: Ali Nassar of the International Company for Construction and Trade. Photo / Reem Khorshid
Sultan Al Qassemi pictured at Al Qasba in Sharjah. Jeffrey E Biteng / The National
Al Qassemi has gone to great lengths to name the architects that designed Sharjah. Al Boorj Avenue, part of the 1977 Cordoba Buildings, is by Spanish architects Tecnica y Proyectos (TYPSA). Photo / Ammar Al Attar
Another view of the Cordoba Buildings. Photo / Ammar Al Attar
The Al Saud Co Building, which houses the offices of Sultan Sooud Al Qassemi, was designed by British architect Alistair McCowen in 1978. Photo / Ammar Al Attar
A building in King Faisal Street being renovated. Photo / Ammar Al Attar
“I want to show people that there was a history between the arish houses and the glass towers,” Al Qassemi says of his new project. Building Sharjah is working to celebrate this under-studied era – and to help galvanise the preservation of the history. A number of these buildings are being torn down or renovated beyond all recognition. Photo / Ammar Al Attar
A building in the Naba'ah area: Sharjah, like the other emirates, benefited architecturally from the UAE being part of the Non-Aligned Movement, or the countries that sided neither with the US nor the USSR during the Cold War. Among them, they developed an
architectural style that captured a kind of utopian optimism: often expressed in residential complexes for middle-income housing, and referring, via Modernism’s architectural motifs, to the social ideals of that movement. Photo / Ammar Al Attar