A press photographer has
captured the power of this immense
pyramid of cubes, covered in 99 glass
domes. This symbol of contemporary
architecture in the Balkans guards
an important literary heritage
with the iconic power of a mosque,
hamam or fort.
In terms of form, the
library was conceived
through a rigorously
geometric approach. It
is based on a squareshaped
plan and
develops upwards in
a regular succession
of cubes with a total
floor area of 16,500 m2.
According to some
scholars, the building,
with its 99 white domes,
recalls the historic
architecture of the
Hamam by Gazi Mehmed
Pa sha in Prizren or the
Patriarchate in Pec.
The solid structure in
reinforced concrete is
completely covered in
a large-meshed metal
grid that also acts as a
sunscren.
More can be seen on
Balkan architecture in
the itinerant exhibition
"Balkanology", showing
in Basel from 4 October
to 28 December 2008. It
has been organised by
the Schweizerisches
Archiekturmuseum in
Basel with the Vienna
Architekturzentrum,
directed by Francesca
Ferguson and curated
by Kai Vöckler. Catalogue
by Christoph Merian
Verlag and Sam , 2008
(www.sam-basel.org).
See also Kai Vöckler 's
book, with Archis Interventions, Prishtina Is
Everywhere. Turbo Realism:
the Aftermath of a
Crisis, Archis Publishers
(English edition), Parthas Verlag (German
edition), 2008.
National Library, Pristina
The building by Croatian architect Andrija Mutnjakoviç, inaugurated in 1982, projects a heroic image of itself in a Pristina devastated by years of war. Design Andrija Mutnjakoviç.
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- 27 November 2008