Winners of the 2022 Aga Khan Award for Architecture Announced
The winners of the 2022 Aga Khan Award for Architecture (AKAA) were announced on 22 September 2022.
The six Award winners, who will share the $1 million award, one of the largest in architecture, show promise for communities, innovation and care for the environment.
Winners
Urban River Spaces, Jhenaidah - Bangladesh
Through consistent community participation and appropriation, extensive involvement of women and
marginalised groups, and a local workforce, the seemingly simple undertaking of cleaning up the
access to the Nabaganga river in Jhenaidah led to a thoughtful and minimal landscaping project with
local materials and construction techniques, thus transforming a derelict informal dump site into an
attractive and accessible multifunctional space that is valued by Jhenaidah’s diverse communities. As
such, the project managed to reverse the ecological degradation and health hazards of the river and
its banks, and induce effective ecological improvement of the river, in one of the most riverine
countries on earth. [Extract, Jury Citation]
Community Spaces in Rohingya Refugee Response, Cox’s Bazar - Bangladesh
The six temporary community spaces of the Rohingya Refugee Response programme provide a
dignified, sensitive and ingenious response to emergency needs related to the major influx of
Rohingya refugees into Bangladeshi host communities, with particular attention to the safety of
women and girls. The concept and design of the six spaces are the result of appropriate planning,
solid partnerships and inclusive processes involving the diverse refugee and host communities, such
as defining spatial and functional needs. [Extract, Jury Citation]
Banyuwangi International Airport, Blimbingsari, East Java - Indonesia
Arising from a sea of a paddy fields, the building extends the language of the landscape into a
concentrated event that coalesces architecture, functionality and setting in a seamless yet discernible
disposition. Modern and efficient in all aspects, but at home in its place, Banyuwangi International
Airport may be a game-changer in airport architecture, especially considering that the Indonesian
government is set to build some 300 airports in the near future. [Extract, Jury Citation]
Argo Contemporary Art Museum and Cultural Centre, Tehran - Iran
In the dense urban neighbourhood that is Tehran’s historical centre, this untypical reuse and
conservation project has transformed the Argo Factory – a former brewery whose activities were
moved 10 years before the Iranian Revolution, for pollution reasons, to a site outside the city – into a
private museum for contemporary art. From the ruins of the original building, the existing brewery
was renovated and new surfaces built with a subtle approach and design. A variety of spaces for
exhibitions, talks and films were developed over four levels, and a new artist residence was built
adjacent to the museum. [Extract, Jury Citation]
Renovation of Niemeyer Guest House, Tripoli - Lebanon
The renovation of the Niemeyer Guest House is an inspiring tale of architecture’s capacity for
repair, at a time of dizzying, entangled crisis around the world, and in Lebanon in particular, as the
country faces unprecedented political, socio-economic and environmental collapse. Located on the
outskirts of Tripoli – one of the oldest and most beautiful port cities, once renowned for its craft but
today ravaged by extreme poverty, migration and lack of public space – the rehabilitation of the
Guest House is part of the Rachid Karami International Fair (RKIF), the unfinished masterpiece of
the architect Oscar Niemeyer. [Extract, Jury Citation]
Kamanar Secondary School, Thionck Essyl - Senegal
A campus replete with infrastructure, buildings, landscapes and furnishings, the Kamanar
Secondary School is unique in that it addresses the multiple scales of urbanism, landscape,
architecture and building technologies with equal commitment and virtuosity. The site’s topography
and flora are the key founding conditions of this project, prompting the introduction of a grid of
classroom pods organised around pre-existing tree canopies, adopting their shade as social spaces
that serve the students and teachers alike. [Extract, Jury Citation]
The Aga Khan Award for Architecture was established in 1977 by His Highness the Aga Khan, 49th hereditary Imam of the Ismaili Muslims, to identify and encourage building concepts that successfully address the needs and aspirations of communities in which Muslims have a significant presence.
The Award’s selection process emphasises architecture that not only provides for people’s physical, social and economic needs, but that also stimulates and responds to their cultural aspirations.
This year marks AKAA’s 45th anniversary. In a meeting in February 2022, an independent Master Jury shortlisted 20 projects from a pool of 463 projects nominated for the 15th Award Cycle (2020-2022). Subsequently, after on-site reviews of the shortlist by a team of experts, the jury awarded six projects amongst them.