Queen Alia International Airport, Amman, Jordan Architecture, Architect, Image, Design, Project
Queen Alia International Airport Amman
Contemporary Jordanian Building design by Foster + Partners
3 Jan 2014
This building is one of our picks from Buildings of 2013 : Architecture of the Year
e-architect’s selection of key architectural developments posted on the site in the last year
22 Mar 2013
Queen Alia International Airport Building
A highly efficient passive design, inspired by local traditions.
Gateway to Amman
Design: Foster + Partners
photo © Nigel Young – Foster + Partners
The architects have produced a majestic, elegant building for Jordan. The have taken the repetitive pattern and top-lit concept of their earlier Stansted Airport building and improved it with a wonderful treatment of concrete. The building is a heavyweight, concrete flowing but controlled – articulated by well-placed joints.
It seems like a return to the serious concrete structures of the past (Kahn, etc.) and certainly back to the simple power of Chep Lap Kok Airport – compared to some of the more lightweight structures in the practice’s oeuvre. This is successful, confident architecture that is infused with Middle Eastern traditions – rather than ignoring the local culture or indeed slavishly copying it – gaining power from the simplicity of the roof matrix.
How much does your building weigh Mr Foster?
Adrian Welch, e-architect Editor
22 Mar 2013 – Today marked the official opening of Queen Alia International Airport, the spectacular new gateway to Amman. The airport has a highly efficient passive design, which has been inspired by local traditions, and is based on a flexible modular solution that allows for future expansion – the new building secures the city’s position as the main hub for the Levant region and allows the airport to grow by 6 per cent per annum for the next twenty-five years, increasing capacity from 3.5 million to 12 million passengers per annum by 2030.
photo © Nigel Young – Foster + Partners
In response to Amman’s climate, where summer temperatures vary markedly between day and night time, the building is constructed largely from concrete, the high thermal mass of the material providing passive environmental control. The tessellated roof canopy comprises a series of shallow concrete domes, which extend to shade the facades – each dome provided a modular unit for construction.
The domes branch out from the supporting columns like the leaves of a desert palm and daylight floods the concourse through split beams at the column junctions. Echoing the veins of a leaf, a geometric pattern based on traditional Islamic forms is applied to each exposed soffit. The complex geometry of the roof shells and fabrication strategy was developed in conjunction with Foster + Partners in-house geometry specialists.
photo © Nigel Young – Foster + Partners
Two piers of departure gates run along either side of the central building, which contains the main processing areas and shops, lounges and restaurants. Between these volumes, open-air courtyards – a feature of vernacular architecture in the region – contribute to the terminal’s environmental strategy: the plants and trees help to filter pollution and pre-condition the air before it is drawn into the air handling system and reflecting pools bounce indirect natural light into the airport.
photos © Nigel Young – Foster + Partners
The terminal is glazed on all sides to allow views of the aircraft on the apron and to aid orientation. Horizontal louvres shade the facades from direct sunlight – to eliminate glare, the louvres become concentrated in more exposed areas close to the columns. The concrete structure incorporates local gravel to reduce maintenance requirements and the embodied energy of the material, and to harmonise with the natural shades of local sand.
photos © Nigel Young – Foster + Partners
Amman is one of the oldest continually inhabited cities in the world – the airport’s design resonates with a sense of place and local architecture, particularly in the domed roof, which from the air echoes the black flowing fabric of a Bedouin tent. There are also references to the Jordanian tradition of hospitality – in celebration of the custom for family groups to congregate at the airport, the forecourt has been enlarged to create a landscaped plaza with seating, shaded by trees, where people can gather to bid farewell or welcome returning travellers.
photos © Nigel Young – Foster + Partners
Mouzhan Majidi, Chief Executive, Foster + Partners:
“Queen Alia International Airport has been an extraordinary project – it has transformed Amman into a niche hub, while offering critical growth for the wider economy through regional links. The new terminal building is energy efficient, will accommodate phased expansion and provides a dynamic symbol for Jordan.
photos © Nigel Young – Foster + Partners
Our early involvement from the conceptual design stage, supporting the selection of operators, and through detailed design and work on site has involved many of our specialist in-house teams, from architects to climate analysts, space planners and geometry specialists. It has been a pleasure to work with our Jordanian colleagues and the team at AIG, and it is great to see the results of this work come to life today.”
photos © Nigel Young – Foster + Partners
photos © Nigel Young – Foster + Partners
photos © Nigel Young – Foster + Partners
Queen Alia International Airport images / information from Foster + Partners
Previously:
Queen Alia International Airport Building by Foster + Partners
Queen Alia International Airport
Amman, Jordan
2005-
Design: Foster + Partners
The design for the Queen Alia International Airport combines function, technology and a distinct sense of place to provide a greatly expanded and enhanced gateway to the region.
Queen Alia Airport images / information from Foster + Partners, UK
Location: Queen Alia Airport, Amman, Jordan, Middle East, Weastern Asia
Jordan Architecture Designs
Contemporary Jordan Architectural Selection
Jordanian Architecture Design – chronological list
‘Living Wall’ project, Amman, northern Jordan
Design: Foster + Partners
picture © Foster + Partners
Amman Building
Petra Visitors’ Centre, Arabah, Ma’an Governorate, southern Jordan
Design: Edward Cullinan Architects
Jordanian Building : Petra
Comments / photos for the Queen Alia International Airport Jordan page welcome