Global Architects, Local Contexts: Navigating Identity in the Gulf’s Cultural Landmarks
In recent years, the Gulf region has emerged as a global center for cultural and architectural development, commissioning internationally acclaimed architects to design its most high-profile museums and institutions. These projects, ranging from Louvre Abu Dhabi by Jean Nouvel to Museum of Islamic Art in Doha by I. M. Pei, are often designed by foreign architects, yet they aim to embed themselves within their context through strategies that reference the region's landscape, climate, and architectural traditions. This raises a fundamental question: What defines local architecture in the 21st century?
![Global Architects, Local Contexts: Navigating Identity in the Gulf’s Cultural Landmarks](https://images.adsttc.com/media/images/67ab/c9ae/dae3/4801/8ae8/8bec/medium_jpg/global-architects-local-contexts-navigating-identity-in-the-gulfs-cultural-landmarks_2.jpg?1739311540#)
![Diriyah Art Futures Contemporary Art Hub / Schiattarella Associati. Image © Antoine Horenbeek Diriyah Art Futures Contemporary Art Hub / Schiattarella Associati. Image © Antoine Horenbeek](https://images.adsttc.com/media/images/67ab/c9ae/dae3/4801/8ae8/8bec/medium_jpg/global-architects-local-contexts-navigating-identity-in-the-gulfs-cultural-landmarks_2.jpg?1739311540)
In recent years, the Gulf region has emerged as a global center for cultural and architectural development, commissioning internationally acclaimed architects to design its most high-profile museums and institutions. These projects, ranging from Louvre Abu Dhabi by Jean Nouvel to Museum of Islamic Art in Doha by I. M. Pei, are often designed by foreign architects, yet they aim to embed themselves within their context through strategies that reference the region's landscape, climate, and architectural traditions. This raises a fundamental question: What defines local architecture in the 21st century?