Carnegie Mellon University
November 01, 2012

Press Release: Carnegie Mellon Architecture Professors Create Web-based Application To Illustrate Doha's Expansion

Contact: Cora Wang / 412-209-5355 / kejiaw@andrew.cmu.edu
Pam Wigley / 412-268-1047 / pwigley@andrew.cmu.edu   

4dohaPITTSBURGH-For the past 60 years, architects from around the world have designed unique, contemporary buildings that reflect the local climate, culture and growth of Doha, Qatar. Today, their architectural feats can be explored publicly via a free Web-based application called 4dDoha: Buildings

Funded by Qatar Foundation and created by Carnegie Mellon University School of Architecture faculty members Kelly Hutzell and Rami el Samahy and their research team, 4dDoha: Buildings is part of an ongoing research project mapping the urban growth and transformation of Doha. Research team members are School of Architecture alumni Adam Himes (A'11), Spencer Gregson (A'10), and Kristina Ricco (A'09). The application they developed is one facet of a larger project called 4dDoha that examines Doha in three-dimensional space as well as time.

"4dDoha addresses these transformations by tracing the physical growth of the city across time through an interactive display that allows users to track a variety of changes through different eras," said Hutzell, an associate teaching professor.

The application allows users to view the city in four dimensions - length, width, height and time. It focuses on the city's architecture from the pre-oil period of 1947 to its independence in 1971, and through the current expansion facilitated by natural gas extraction.

Hutzell and el Samahy chose 50 of the most noteworthy buildings to be part of the application, which was designed for use with an iPad. The application includes graphic icons, detailed information and photos of the buildings collected by the researchers. App users can sort the collection by time, location, architecture language or style (vernacular, modern, postmodern or contemporary), and by current status, such as whether it is standing, has been demolished or renovated, or is unrealized.

As professors and architects, Hutzell and el Samahy said they are always trying to practice what they teach. In this case, they wanted to explore architectural elements that are unique to the place and time, and to generate discussion on what represents "Qatari" architecture.

"It is important for architects in this region [the Arabian Gulf] to understand the commonality in architectural elements, as well as the differences," said el Samahy, an assistant teaching professor and founding partner of the firm over, under.

In addition to being a free Web application, 4dDoha: Buildings was exhibited on the Carnegie Mellon Qatar campus in April. Visitors to the exhibit used the app as part of an interactive experience that helped them see the physical growth of the region.

Hutzell and el Samahy are planning on adding more categories to 4dDoha, including master plans, urban elements, and competitions that will round out the narrative of the city's development. They are currently in discussions with institutions in Qatar to exhibit the app in larger venues to wider audiences.

"We had hoped that 4dDoha would serve as a general education tool for the public to know more about the history and the future of Doha," Hutzell said. "We looked to the past to understand what was involved in designing a contemporary Arab city."

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