Pakistani architect
Habib Fida Ali
Born 1935 (1935 ) Died 7 January 2017(2017-01-07) (aged 81–82) Occupation Architect
Habib Fida Ali (1935 – 7 January 2017) (Urdu : حبیب فدا علی ) was one of Pakistan's most prominent architects,[ 1] [ 2] [ 3] working in the modernist tradition.[ 4]
Early life
Fida Ali was born to a Dawoodi Bohra family[ 5] in Karachi and attended St. Patrick's primary school there, before in 1952 becoming a boarder at Aitchison College , Lahore , to take his O and A levels examinations. He then became the first Pakistani student to be admitted to the Architectural Association School of Architecture in London , from where he graduated in 1962. He returned to Pakistan in 1963 to join William Perry's architectural practice in Karachi, and established his own practice in 1965.[ 6]
Career
Habib Fida Ali had worked on the following buildings and architectural projects.
Corporate projects
Hospitality projects
Midway House Hotel at Karachi Airport (completed in 1982)[ 9] (Phase I & 2003 -2006 PhaseII)
Memon Medical Institute (completed in 2010)
Infaq Medical Center (completed in 2006)
Bait-ul-Sukoon Cancer Hospital (completed in 2007)
Master Plan JS Hospital, Sehwan , Sindh , Pakistan (completed in 2012)
Police Hospital, Garden Road, Karachi (completed in 2012)
Educational projects
Honors and distinctions
Lifetime Achievement Award by the Institute of Architects, Pakistan [ 1]
Nominated for the Aga Khan Award for Architecture 1986[ 11]
Speaker at the forum 2001 at Sri Lankan Institute of Architects,[ 12] Colombo Sri Lanka to speak on his Fair Face Concrete Buildings.
Karachi conformance of Building & Material Exhibition My Architects – Our Architecture IAPEX 2004[ 13]
Designed Karachi American School along with William Perry in 1962
Professional affiliations
National Vice President of the Institute of Architects, Pakistan (IAP)[ 14]
Member, Master Jury, Aga Khan Award for Architecture, 1983[ 15]
Death
Habib Fida Ali died on 7 January 2017. The cause of death was reported to be brain hemorrhage.[ 1]
References
^ a b c d e f "Renowned architect Habib Fida Ali passes away" . The Express Tribune newspaper . Retrieved 10 February 2024 .
^ Haroon, Hameed ; Mariam Ali Baig (2004). Karachi under the Raj, 1843-1947, Volume 4 . Pakistan Herald Publications. p. 315. ISBN 978-969-8837-07-5 .
^ Khan, Hasan-Uddin (1995). Contemporary Asian architects, Volume 1 . Taschen . p. 34 . ISBN 978-3-8228-8670-0 .
^ Husain, Irfan (1997). Pakistan . Stacey International . p. 170. ISBN 978-1-900988-01-8 .
^ https://www.youlinmagazine.com/article/remembering-habib-fida-ali/NzQ1
^ "The concrete builder" . Dawn . Pakistan. 3 August 2002. Retrieved 12 July 2010 .
^ Goode, Patrick; Stanford Anderson; Colin St. John Wilson (2009). The Oxford companion to architecture, Volume 1 . Oxford University Press . p. 688. ISBN 978-0-19-860568-3 .
^ Siddiqui, Ahmed Husain (1996). Karachi, the pearl of Arabian Sea . Mohammad Husain Academy. OCLC 35990865 .
^ a b Mumtaz, Kamil Khan (1999). Modernity and tradition: contemporary architecture in Pakistan . Oxford University Press . p. xiii. ISBN 978-0-19-577853-3 .
^ Riaz, Bashir (2000). Blind justice . Lahore: Fiction House. p. 54. OCLC 45737791 .
^ Serageldin, Ismaïl (1989). Space for freedom: the search for architectural excellence in Muslim societies . Aga Khan Award for Architecture . p. 27. ISBN 978-0-408-50049-4 .
^ "Annual Sessions of Institute of Architects" . The Island . 12 February 2001. Retrieved 12 July 2010 .
^ "Architectural Forum at APEX-2004". Pakistan Press International . 15 December 2004.
^ Reading the contemporary African city . Concept Media for the Aga Khan Award for Architecture . 1982. p. vii. OCLC 18988608 .
^ Cantacuzino, Sherban (1985). Architecture in continuity: building in the Islamic world today : the Aga Khan Award for Architecture . Aperture. p. 79 . ISBN 978-0-89381-187-7 .
External links