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Before the late architect Zaha Hadid completed now-famous projects like the curved London Aquatics Centre or Rome’s imposing National Museum of the 21st Century Arts, her ideas about form and ...
The 2004 winner of the Pritzker Architecture Prize, Hadid designed the MAXXI Italian National Museum of 21st Century Arts in Rome, the London Aquatics Centre for the 2012 Olympics, and the ...
Dame Zaha Hadid has died at the age of 65. The world renowned architect was known as the "Queen of the curve" and was behind designs including the London Olympic Aquatic Centre.
New images from the London 2012 Olympic Delivery Authority (ODA) show the wave-shaped roof of the Zaha Hadid designed Aquatics Centre has reached the half way point. New images from the London 2012 ...
London Olympic Aquatic Centre (2011) Critics of Hadid have deemed a number of her designs unbuildable. Thanks to its sweeping, undulating wave roof, the London Aquatics Centre was one of them.
Later this area would become the London Aquatics Centre, designed by Zaha Hadid, at a junction on Carpenter's road in January 2006. Photographer: Brian Harris/Alamy Stock Photo ...
The last building of Zaha’s that really knocked my socks off was her Aquatics Centre for the 2012 London Olympics, which we attended together. We sat together and took it all in, form and function.
One of the most architecturally stunning features of the 2012 London Olympic buildings -- the sweeping, wave-shaped roof to the aquatics centre -- has been lowered into place.
The world’s most famous female architect Zaha Hadid, whose works include the aquatics centre used in the 2012 London Olympics, died on Thursday from a heart attack aged 65, her company said.
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