3695 x 5542 px | 31,3 x 46,9 cm | 12,3 x 18,5 inches | 300dpi
Aufnahmedatum:
26. Dezember 2011
Ort:
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Weitere Informationen:
The National Mosque of Malaysia is located in Kuala Lumpur. It has a capacity of 15, 000 people and is situated among 13 acres (53, 000 m2) of gardens. The original structure was designed by a three-person team from the Public Works Department - UK architect Howard Ashley, and Malaysians Hisham Albakri and Baharuddin Kassim. The mosque was built in 1965 on the site of a church, the Venning Road Brethren Gospel Hall which had stood there since 1922 but appropriated by the Malaysian government. The mosque is a bold and modern approach in reinforced concrete, symbolic of the aspirations of a then newly-independent Malaysia. Its key features are a 73-metre-high minaret and an 16-pointed star concrete main roof. The umbrella, synonymous with the tropics, is featured conspicuously - the main roof is reminiscent of an open umbrella, the minaret's cap a folded one. The folded plates of the concrete main roof is a creative solution to achieving the larger spans required in the main gathering hall. Reflecting pools and fountains spread throughout the compound.