Aug 03
Wednesday, August 01, 2007
LIZ ELLABY
News staff writer

Hoover residents left a meeting Tuesday evening content that members of an Ismaili Muslim congregation will be good neighbors if they build a worship center bordering neighborhoods on Sulphur Springs Road.

They said they remain more concerned about traffic congestion than religion.

“Hoover is horrible enough as it is, as far as traffic goes,” said Julia Copeland, who lives in the Birch Tree subdivision.

Ismaili members said issues including traffic counts and turn lanes will be discussed at an Aug. 13 public hearing before the Hoover Planning Commission.

Tuesday’s meeting at the Prince of Peace Catholic Church was to inform the public about their faith, a branch of the minority Shiite Muslims, and to assure residents they will be part of the fabric of the community.

The congregation’s proposed worship center, called a jamatkhana, is planned on a 4.7-acre wooded tract at the northeast corner of Al Seier and Sulphur Springs roads. The property is currently zoned for neighborhood business. Under their proposal, the property would be developed by Louis Passarella of Georgia, who would lease it to the Ismaili group.

A sketch showed a one-story brick structure like a professional building. University of Alabama at Birmingham oncologist Mansoor Saleh, a member and spokesman, said jamatkhanas worldwide are designed to fit local environments.

In a DVD presentation, he showed a center in Beijing that looked like a pagoda, and a sand tower design in Mali.

“We decided not to choose the pagoda version for Hoover,” he joked.

The Ismailis have allegiance to the Aga Khan, a “living guide” said to be the 49th imam and a direct descendent of the Prophet Mohammed.

Their worship centers include a lobby and a prayer room, facing east, but don’t have distinctive domes or minarets of a mosque, and there are no called prayers, Saleh said.

Prayer times are daily from 4 to 5:30 a.m. and from 7:30 to 9 p.m. Friday prayers may attract 300 people, but it is after peak traffic times, he said.

Residents opposing the center met in June to organize a petition, citing traffic concerns. A few residents Tuesday said they came to learn more about the religion.

Residents Angela and Scott George said reports that traffic concerns were just a way residents could mask religious bigotry were bogus.

“The Preserve hasn’t been built out yet and there are other developments going on,” Scott George said. “Everyone is worried about traffic.”

Source

Source: ismailimail

Aug 01
From July 14 to August 31, 2007 at The Ismaili Centre in London, England, the Islamic treasures that will be on display in the Aga Khan Museum that will be built in Toronto, Canada are showcased in an exhibit under the title of “Spirit & Life: Masterpieces of Islamic Art from the Aga Khan Museum Collection.”

Continuing a successful collaboration initiated on the Delegation of the Ismaili Imamat project due to open in Ottawa, Canada in 2008, Maki and Associates of Tokyo, Japan (Design Architect) and Moriyama and Teshima Architects (Architect of Record) are creating this world class museum. Also being built on the Wynford Drive site in Toronto is the Ismaili Centre, a collaboration between Charles Correa from India and Moriyama and Teshima Architects, with landscape design for the entire site by Vladimir Djurovic Landscape Architecture from Lebanon along with Moriyama and Teshima Planners.

Aga Khan Museum, Wynford Park

The opening of the Spirit & Life exhibit coincides with the start of the Aga Khan’s Golden Jubilee celebrations which will occur over the next year. Fifty years ago, at the age of 20, the Aga Khan succeeded his grandfather, Sir Sultan Mahomed Shah Aga Khan, as the 49th hereditary Imam (spiritual leader) of the Shia Ismaili Muslims.

“This exhibition of artistic masterpieces from the Islamic world underlines that the arts, particularly when they are spiritually inspired, can become a medium of discourse that transcends the barriers of our day-to-day experiences and preoccupations,” said His Highness the Aga Khan. “Many questions are currently being raised in the West about the Muslim world, with countless misconceptions and misunderstandings occurring between our contemporary societies. I hope that this exhibition will hold a special significance at a time which calls for enlightened encounters amongst faiths and cultures.”

Links:

+ 2007-07-11 A stunning debut for Toronto-bound Treasures of Islam - Globe and Mail
+ Aga Khan Development Network - Museums

http://www.mtarch.com/mtanews.html

Source: ismailimail

Jul 27

 
Aga Khan Award for Architecture
The Tenth Award Cycle, 2005 - 2007
The Aga Khan Award for Architecture, established in 1977 by His Highness the Aga Khan, recognises examples of architectural excellence that encompass contemporary design, social housing, community improvement and development, restoration, re-use, and area conservation, as well as landscaping and environmental issues. 
Introduction
Through its efforts, the Award seeks to identify and encourage building concepts that successfully address the needs and aspirations of societies in which Muslims have a significant presence.  The selection process emphasizes architecture that not only provides for people’s physical, social and economic needs, but that also stimulates and responds to their cultural and spiritual expectations. Particular attention is given to building schemes that use local resources and appropriate technology in an innovative way, and to projects likely to inspire similar efforts elsewhere.
The Award is organized on the basis of a three-year cycle and […]

Source: ismailimail