From corporate towers to humanitarian work, Yasmeen Lari reflects on her architectural career
From corporate towers to humanitarian work, Yasmeen Lari reflects on her architectural career
“I feel like I am atoning for some of what I did,” says Yasmeen Lari with an embarrassed chuckle. “I was a ‘starchitect’ for 36 years, but then my egotistical journey had to come to an end. It’s not only the right of the elite to have good design.”Oliver Wainwright talks with Yasmeen Lari, who was named the 2020 Jane Drew Prize laureate earlier this year. She looks back on her architectural career, which began with designing glitzy corporate monuments and then switched to humanitarian work after the devastating 2005 Pakistan earthquake. She also shares what she's learned about disaster preparedness, how design has helped raise the status of women in Pakistan, and how she feels about winning the notable Jane Drew Prize.
“I feel like I am atoning for some of what I did,” says Yasmeen Lari with an embarrassed chuckle. “I was a ‘starchitect’ for 36 years, but then my egotistical journey had to come to an end. It’s not only the right of the elite to have good design.”Oliver Wainwright talks with Yasmeen Lari, who was named the 2020 Jane Drew Prize laureate earlier this year. She looks back on her architectural career, which began with designing glitzy corporate monuments and then switched to humanitarian work after the devastating 2005 Pakistan earthquake. She also shares what she's learned about disaster preparedness, how design has helped raise the status of women in Pakistan, and how she feels about winning the notable Jane Drew Prize.
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