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Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal loves modern architecture. He comes from a family of builders who have built more than 20 projects in the last ten years near Delhi in India. He has recently started writing about the architectural projects that catch his imagination.

New Exhibition Center in Tehran, Iran by gmp Architekten von Gerkan, Marg und Partner

 
June 2nd, 2016 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: Architektur Media Management MA

With the opening of the 29th International Book Fair, the Iranian President Rohani and Tehran’s Mayor Ghalibaf marked the opening of the new exhibition center in Tehran, the Share Aftab, which is being built to a design by architects von Gerkan, Marg and Partners. The new exhibition grounds are located about ten kilometers to the south of the center of the Iranian capital, about half way to the international airport, and are connected to the city by an underground line which opened at the same time.

Image Courtesy © Marcus Bredt

Image Courtesy © Marcus Bredt

  • Architects: gmp Architekten von Gerkan, Marg und Partner
  • Project: New Exhibition Center
  • Location: Tehran, Iran
  • Photography: Marcus Bredt
  • Client: Tehran Municipality
  • Design: Volkwin Marg and Hubert Nienhoff with Markus Pfisterer
  • Team, competition: Alberto Flores, Swantje Grasmann, Martin Hakiel, Patrick Hoffmann, Susan Möllmann, Burkard Pick, Siamak Rashidi, Tobias Schaer
  • Project leader, implementation: Nima Ghahreman, Fariborz Rahimi-Nedjat
  • Team, implementation: Justin Allen, Alexander Buchhofer, Kasia Ciruk, Yana Espana, Nicole Jahn, Felix Kastner, Christian Klimaschka, Lars Laubenthal, Sebastian Lundelius, Silvia Schneider, Katya Vangelova
  • Collaboration: NJP- Naghsh-e-Jahan Pars
  • Construction: Company Cashalot
  • GFA: 257,300m²

Distribution hall and exhibition halls with lateral colonnades, Image Courtesy © Marcus Bredt

Distribution hall and exhibition halls with lateral colonnades, Image Courtesy © Marcus Bredt

There is not enough space in the buildings of the first phase for the world’s second-largest book fair, with its two million visitors, which is why the building of additional large exhibition halls has been planned in the very short term. The journey is the reward – in terms of construction as well as politics. Since the start of the competition twelve years ago and the award of the contract ten years ago, the German architects of gmp from Berlin, together with their Iranian colleagues from NJP of Tehran, have shown patience during the step by -step development of the project, and in the process have established friendly relationships.

Distribution hall and exhibition halls with colonnades, illuminated, Image Courtesy © Marcus Bredt

Distribution hall and exhibition halls with colonnades, illuminated, Image Courtesy © Marcus Bredt

View to the central distribution hall, Image Courtesy © Marcus Bredt

View to the central distribution hall, Image Courtesy © Marcus Bredt

In spite of all the financial difficulties, a 1,600 meter-long sunken landscape garden with a water course in its middle was created as a first step in midst the dusty and barren land, bordered on both sides by avenues and shade-giving colonnades in reminiscence of ancient Persian garden culture that goes back thousands of years. The center is taken up by a circular water basin with fountain, from which the exhibition grounds to the north of the axis are accessed. The first building phase includes the main hall and the largest exhibition hall, each with its own architectural character. While the tall central distribution hall has been designed with reference to the two-and-a-half thousand years of architectural history – such as the hundred-columned hall of the palace at Persepolis – the exhibition hall features three distinct sections with impressive rhombic vaulting. The shaded exhibition axis, which is protected from the wind and will connect all planned exhibition halls with each other, has also been laid out as a sunken, linear “Persian” garden, and is lined with colonnades. This sunken area allows circulation at two levels and therefore the separation of vehicular and pedestrian traffic. While the first section is now in use, construction on the remaining parts is making swift and visible progress – the infrastructure and foundations for the future arched halls are already in place. In its completed state, with 16 halls providing 120,000m² of exhibition area, as well as additional conference facilities, the new Tehran exhibition center with its magnificent urban landscape design will be a pilot project symbolizing the end of decades of isolation, similar to the Neue Messe exhibition center in Leipzig after German reunification.

Sunken area providing access on 2 levels, Image Courtesy © Marcus Bredt

Sunken area providing access on 2 levels, Image Courtesy © Marcus Bredt

Circular water basin at the center, Image Courtesy © Marcus Bredt

Circular water basin at the center, Image Courtesy © Marcus Bredt

Image Courtesy © Marcus Bredt

Image Courtesy © Marcus Bredt

Exhibition halls with rhombic vaulting, Image Courtesy © Marcus Bredt

Exhibition halls with rhombic vaulting, Image Courtesy © Marcus Bredt

Main hall, Image Courtesy © Marcus Bredt

Main hall, Image Courtesy © Marcus Bredt

Stairway and escalators, Image Courtesy © Marcus Bredt

Stairway and escalators, Image Courtesy © Marcus Bredt

Shade-providing colonnades, Image Courtesy © Marcus Bredt

Shade-providing colonnades, Image Courtesy © Marcus Bredt

Image Courtesy © Marcus Bredt

Image Courtesy © Marcus Bredt

Image Courtesy © Marcus Bredt

Image Courtesy © Marcus Bredt

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Category: Exhibition Center




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