JUNE 30 2014 (The Conway Bulletin) – Baku’s newly built Heydar Aliyev Centre, likened to a whirl of whipped cream, won the prestigious British Design Museum’s “Design of the Year” award for its iconic shape and feel.
The award is a triumph for Baku on a civic scale. It has worked hard to transform itself into a modern city. Millions of dollars of oil cash has been spent on beautifying the city and this means building iconic structures.
The Heydar Aliyev building is just one example of the city’s ambitious rebuilding project — others include the three feline 190m-high Flame Towers and the sparkling Crystal Hall that hosted the 2012 Eurovision contest — and its curves certainly leave an impression.
“It is an intoxicatingly beautiful building by the most brilliant architect at the height of her office’s powers,” the Guardian quoted juror Piers Gough, of CZWG Architects, as saying.
“It is as pure and sexy as Marilyn’s blown skirt.”
But as with most of Baku’s architectural accolades, and it has attracted a reasonable bag, they come with criticism of Azerbaijan’s human rights record.
Human Rights Watch and other lobby groups criticised the Design Museum for honouring a country whose record on free speech has been worsening. They said that Dame Zaha Hadid, the Iraqi-born Britain-based architect of the museum, should use her award to promote human rights.
ENDS
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(News report from Issue No. 190, published on July 2 2014)