Architecture firm Adjaye Associates has completed the Abrahamic Family House complex located on Saadiyat Island, a cultural hub positioned off the coast of Abu Dhabi, UAE. An interfaith group of buildings, which concept look "to dissolve the notion of hierarchal difference", comprised of three religious spaces: a mosque, a synagogue, and a church, all of them on a secular visitor pavilion, with a mission of “nurturing the values of peaceful co-existence and acceptance among different beliefs, nationalities, and cultures.”

The Abrahamic Family House, an interfaith complex incorporating three separate houses of worship for the three Abrahamic religions Christianity, Judaism and Islam, is set to open in the Saadiyat Cultural District on March 1st.
The trio of standalone cubic buildings with flat roofs, designed by Adjaye Associates, each equal in volume but distinguished by their own features including differently sized courtyards, allows inside each of the three places of worship, visitors will be able to observe religious services, listen to scriptures, and experience sacred rituals. The fourth sacred space will meanwhile serve as a centre for people of all faiths, offering educational and event-based programming.
 
"Each building's architectural articulation is unique, and specifically oriented to its siting and religious references."
David Adjaye.

The project’s architectural form was derived from a study of the similarities between the three faiths. The resulting scheme is composed of what the team calls “powerful plutonic forms with a clear geometry,” with three cubes sitting on a plinth.

While each cube is orientated differently and articulates its own motif of colonnades, screens, and vaults, the commonality is found through shared massing and materiality to create a coherent silhouette. Meanwhile, the centre of the ensemble holds a public garden imagined by the team as “a safe space where community, connection, and civility combine.”
 
"As an architect, I want to create a building that starts to dissolve the notion of hierarchical difference – it should represent universality and totality – something higher, that enhances the richness of human life."
 
David Adjaye.

His Holiness Francis Church. Abrahamic Family House, by Adjaye Associates. Photograph by Dror Baldinger.


Imam Al-Tayeb Mosque. Abrahamic Family House, by Adjaye Associates. Photograph by Adjaye Associates.


Moses Ben Maimon Synagogue. Abrahamic Family House, by Adjaye Associates. Photograph by Dror Baldinger.
 

Project description by Adjaye Associates

The Abrahamic Family House is a collection of three religious spaces: a mosque, a synagogue and a church, all of which sit upon a secular visitor pavilion. The house will serve as a community for inter-religious dialogue and exchange, nurturing the values of peaceful co-existence and acceptance among different beliefs, nationalities and cultures. Within each of the houses of worship, visitors will have the opportunity to observe religious services, listen to holy scripture, and experience sacred rituals. The fourth space — not affiliated with any specific religion — will serve as a centre for all people of goodwill to come together as one. The community will also offer educational and event-based programming.

The form is translated from the three faiths, carefully using the lens to define what is similar as opposed to what is different, and using the power of these revelations to make the form. The design appears as powerful plutonic forms with clear geometry, three cubes sitting on a plinth – though not aligned, they each have different orientations. The story then starts to become apparent through the power of the silhouette, unified with commonality and the articulation of the three forms. These structures represent a safe space, each volume illustrated with colonnades, screens and vaults to represent sacred nature.

The discovery continues with the common ground, the public space in-between, where the difference connects. The garden is used as a powerful metaphor, a safe space where community, connection and civility combine – this space exists between the three chambers, the three faiths. The podium allows you to interact with each space with no preventative threshold, to dissolve the perceptions of not being included and encourage the celebration of this collective history and collective identity.

More information

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Architects
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Collaborators
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Wayfinding consultant.- Maynard, Signage.
Client project manager.- Arcadis.
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Client
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UAE Government.
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General Contractor
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Zublin Construction.
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Area
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7,700 m² / 82,882 ft².
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Dates
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First design.- 2019.
Opening.- on March 1st, 2023.
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Location
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Saadiyat Cultural District, Abu Dhabi, UAE.
[24.530933°N 54.406101°E].
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Photography
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Dror Baldinger, Arwa Alhati.
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David Adjaye was born in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, in 1966. The son of a Ghanaian diplomat who has lived in Tanzania, Egypt, Yemen, and Lebanon before moving to Britain at the age of nine, he led a privileged life and was privately educated. He earned his BA at London South Bank University, before graduating with an MA in 1993 from the Royal College of Art. In 1993, the same year of graduation, Adjaye won the RIBA Bronze Medal, a prize offered for RIBA Part 1 projects, normally won by students who have only completed a bachelor's degree.

Previously a unit tutor at the Architectural Association, he was also a lecturer at the Royal College of Art. After very short terms of work with the architectural studios of David Chipperfield (London) and Eduardo Souto de Moura (Porto), Adjaye established a practice with William Russell in 1994 called Adjaye & Russell, based in North London. This office was disbanded in 2000 and Adjaye established his own eponymous studio at this point.

Recent works include the Museum of Contemporary Art in Denver, the Nobel Peace Centre in Oslo, and the Skolkovo Moscow School of Management completed in 2010. On April 15, 2009, he was selected in a competition to design the $500 million National Museum of African American History and Culture, part of the Smithsonian in Washington, D.C., planned to open in 2015. His design features a crown motif from Yoruba sculpture.

Alongside his international commissions, Adjayes work spans exhibitions, private homes, and artist collaborations. He built homes for the designer Alexander McQueen, artist Jake Chapman, photographer Juergen Teller, actor Ewan McGregor, and artists Tim Noble and Sue Webster. For artist Chris Ofili, he designed a new studio and a beach house in Port of Spain. He worked with Ofili to create an environment for the Upper Room, which was later acquired by Tate Britain and caused a nationwide media debate. He also collaborated with artist Olafur Eliasson to create a light installation, Your black horizon, at the 2005 Venice Biennale. He has also worked on the art project Sankalpa with director Shekhar Kapur. Adjaye coauthored two seasons of BBC's Dreamspaces television series and hosts a BBC radio program. In June 2005, he presented the documentary, Building Africa: Architecture of a Continent. In 2008, he participated in Manifesta 7.

In February 2009, the cancellation or postponement of four projects in Europe and Asia forced the firm to enter into a Company Voluntary Arrangement (CVA), a deal to stave off insolvency proceedings which prevents financial collapse by rescheduling debts – estimated at about £1m – to creditors.

Adjaye currently holds a Visiting Professor post at Princeton University School of Architecture. He was the first Louis Kahn visiting professor at the University of Pennsylvania, and was the Kenzo Tange Professor in Architecture at Harvard Graduate School of Design. In addition, he is a RIBA Chartered Member, an AIA Honorary Fellow, a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters, and a Senior Fellow of the Design Futures Council. He also serves as member of the Advisory Boards of the Barcelona Institute of Architecture and the London School of Economics Cities programme.

The studio's first solo exhibition: "David Adjaye: Making Public Buildings" was shown at the Whitechapel Gallery in London in January 2006, with Thames and Hudson publishing the catalogue of the same name. This followed their 2005 publication of Adjaye's first book entitled "David Adjaye Houses".

http://www.adjaye.com

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Published on: February 28, 2023
Cite: "Adjaye Associates completes the Abrahamic Family House, an interfaith space" METALOCUS. Accessed
<http://www.metalocus.es/en/news/adjaye-associates-completes-abrahamic-family-house-interfaith-space> ISSN 1139-6415
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