With his distinctive aquiline nose and magnificent flowing beard, Albanias national hero, Skanderbeg, has long been a familiar presence in the countrys streets and squares. The 7ft warrior king known as the Dragon of Albania, slayer of the Ottoman Turks, is celebrated in numerous monuments and reliefs, his imposing stature and fiery eyes keeping watch over the territory he fought for in the 15th century.
Now his face will loom larger over the capital than ever before. Construction has begun on an 85-metre-high block of apartments, offices and shops in the centre of Tirana, designed in the shape of Skanderbegs head. Images of the project depict an amorphous white tower ringed with balconies that ripple in and out to form a lumpy approximation of the heros features, imprinting his profile permanently on the skyline in concrete and glass. Wealthy future residents will be able to look out from the warriors eyes, hang out on his ears or dine alfresco on the end of his nose from which greenery will dangle in an unfortunate snot-like drip.
The surreal vision is the work of Dutch architects MVRDV, who are no strangers to concocting buildings shaped like supersized novelty objects or figurative sculptural projects, as they prefer to call them. Their disastrous Marble Arch Mound in London, which arguably cost the Conservative council its leadership of the local borough, was merely the latest in a long line of cartoonish creations that seem to have been plucked from the depths of a joke shop bargain bin. The architects have designed a museum in the form of gigantic comic speech bubbles, an art storage depot in the shape of an Ikea salad bowl and an apartment complex that spells out the word HOME in the form of its blocks. But it seems they have saved their most banal metaphors for the Balkans, perhaps assuming that fewer of their clients and critics will ever see the buildings in person.
A short distance from where the giant Skanderbeg head is planned to rise, there already looms another tower designed by MVRDV, named Downtown One. Topping out last year, its 140-metre concrete frame makes it the tallest building in the city, and it continues the pop-nationalist theme. Rather than a face, this hefty slab of luxury flats and offices features a pixelated map of Albania protruding from its facade although the form is so indistinct, it looks more like the concrete formwork slipped on the way up, leaving a wonky mess in its wake. The dramatically carved volumes imagined by MVRDV appear to have been value-engineered into more shallow dimples, giving the impression that the building is prematurely eroding.
These days, cities around the world increasingly look like each other, says Winy Maas, founding partner of the Dutch architecture firm. I always encourage them to resist this, to find their individual character and emphasise it. Tirana has the opportunity of a blank canvas for high-density structures. It can be progressive in that sense and build up character and a sense of place.
But many local residents arent so sure about the sense of place being created by Maas, and the roster of other international architects who have been flown in to reshape the city. A handful of towers are rising around Tiranas central Skanderbeg Square, with four already complete and at least another six in the pipeline. There have been vocal protests against the destruction of Ottoman-era villas to make way for the slew of high-rise developments, with critics bemoaning the loss of heritage and rocketing property prices, and accusations that the projects are being used as money laundering schemes for organised crime.
Two historic villas were demolished to make way for the Skanderbeg tower in May 2020, when the city was in pandemic lockdown. At the same time, the citys cherished National Theatre, dating from the 1930s, was also bulldozed to make way for a project by Danish architect Bjarke Ingels, to widespread condemnation.
The future of Tirana will be full of ghost skyscrapers, says Vincent WJ van Gerven Oei, a Dutch writer who has lived in Tirana for the last 12 years and closely tracked the citys development. I love MVRDV the things they build in the Netherlands are among my favourite buildings but then they come to Albania and become lousy assholes. They think they can get away with crappy design, checking off all the stupid nationalist tropes you can think of.
In a 2018 lecture, when the two towers were in development, Maas addressed the overt nationalist symbolism of designing a building in the shape of the countrys map. I had a discussion with some of the European politicians about that, he said. Because, can you do that? Is nationalism good or bad? But Albania needs it, to show its sexy and that its actually quite cool.
Dashing back and forth on stage, speaking like a hyperactive child who had consumed too many E-numbers, Maas rhapsodised his love affair with Albania. He described it as a country with no money, that drinks only coffee, and where there is nothing to do the perfect blank slate for his outlandish ideas, like a mini-China with bountiful opportunities for architects. Developers are getting richer, he said excitedly, but made no mention of where the money might be coming from to build such heady visions, given the countrys impoverished economy.
A 2020 report by the Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime noted that the Albanian construction industry had become a popular hotspot for international criminal gangs to launder money, primarily from drug trafficking. It estimated that 1.6bn worth of dirty money had been laundered through the Albanian real estate sector in the previous three years, with 60% of project funding coming from illicit sources. Albanias own Office of the General Directorate for the Prevention of Money Laundering said that it observed considerable real estate investments with unknown source of funds, which it classified as suspicious.
Last year, anti-mafia prosecutors in Italy found that the Ndrangheta crime syndicate had identified Tiranas new high-rise developments as a prime opportunity for laundering their cash. In one wiretap, two of those arrested were heard discussing a building constructor in Albania who held three building permits for buildings worth 180m, but had only 10m to hand. The new skyscrapers are to be sold for 3,000-4,000 per square metre, one of the suspects says. And do you know how much it cost to build? 510. MVRDV says that, in accordance with Dutch law, it runs background checks on its clients using a third-party company that scans for criminal activity, among other things, and there is no suggestion of illegal funds. A spokesperson for the city of Tirana said: The duty of the municipality is to ensure that construction plans, aesthetics, architecture rules and mobility plans are respected. We understand we live in a toxic political environment in the Balkans and have repeatedly asked opposition leaders to point out: which one of these towers is suspect of such [criminal] activity? To date, we have no response and there has been no official claim with the Tirana prosecution.
The radical reshaping of the Albanian capital over the last two decades can primarily be credited to Edi Rama, who served as its mayor from 2000-2011 and has been the countrys prime minister since 2013. Rama was a professional basketball player and artist in the 1990s, and Maas says in his lecture: I know Edi from Paris, when he was a painter. Rama returned to Albania to become minister of culture in 1998, and embarked on a radical clean-up operation when he became mayor. He made headlines with his policies of painting grey soviet buildings in bright colours to liven up the city, planting trees, creating bike lanes and holding international architectural competitions reforms that landed him the inaugural World Mayor prize in 2004.
One of the first projects MVRDV scooped under Ramas reign was the Toptani shopping centre in 2005, which was conceived as a hollowed out pixelated mass covered in giant LCD advertising screens. Having won the competition, Maas heard nothing until a few years later, when he realised the building had in fact been built by other architects, and drastically watered down in the process. The digital facade was exchanged for standard grey cladding panels, while his vision for an open arcade became a generic closed-off mall.
Projects here are often realised in a totally different way to how the architects originally intended, says Van Gerven Oei. Theres the reality of the digital render, always beautiful, brilliant and groundbreaking, and then the reality of Albanian construction companies, who want to do the easiest, fastest thing at the lowest possible price.
Not to be dissuaded by the Frankenstein mall, MVRDV continued to seek work in Albania. Several unrealised projects followed, from a colossal pile of oblong apartment blocks planned for a lakeside site in 2008, dubbed Tirana Rocks, to a coastal resort for a Russian client designed as an artificial hillside that would glow eerily at night better than any James Bond movie, Maas promised. He explains how Downtown One began as a three-dimensional Albania-shaped building, but proved too expensive, so they decided to imprint the shape of the map on a simple rectangular tower instead. A further commission came in 2018 to transform the striking marble-clad Pyramid of Tirana built in the 1980s as a museum to celebrate the countrys former communist dictator which had become a popular place for the citys youth to scramble up and slide down. MVRDV were appointed, without a public competition, to transform it into a tech hub smothering the sloping sides with concrete steps in the process. Finally, when it comes to the Skanderbeg tower, the origins are as blunt as you might expect. As Maas recalls: Then Edi said: I want to do something with history. And so the giant head was born.
Local people have joked that, as Rama cultivates an elder-statesman look his 6ft 6in frame and growing beard giving him an increasingly Skanderbeg-esque appearance the head-shaped building may end up looking more like a lasting monument to the artist-politician who reshaped the capital, forever gazing out over his vision of empty towers.
See the article here:
What the Marble Arch Mound architects did next: a skyscraper shaped like Albanias national hero - The Guardian
- Studio Gang finishes mass timber addition for California College of the Arts in San Francisco - The Architect's Newspaper - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- Revealing the Europe 40under40 Best Young Architects & Designers of 2023-2024 - ArchDaily - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- Building a better future: The enterprise architects role in leading organizational transformation - CIO - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- Chatham Borough Council Set to Authorize DMR Architects to Draft Redevelopment Plan for River Road at Monday's Meeting - TAPinto.net - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- WashU to Host Panel on Celebrated Architect Fumihiko Maki | Washington University in St. Louis - Archinect - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- IT certifications for cloud architects, data security engineers, and ethical hackers yield the biggest pay boosts - Computerworld - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- Professor Brian Grieb's Firm Recognized on Forbes Top Residential Architects in America 2025 List - Morgan State University - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- Architects experiment with marble-like building material made from old cars: 'Waste plastic could be made to seem more valuable' - The Cool Down - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- In defence of well-run competitions and architects - Building Design - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- Day 2 of PinkPrint Conference Celebrates Visionary Women Architects and Fosters Global Exchange - Biz Industry - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- Designing for performance. Why AI is on-prem at architects SimpsonHaugh - Computing - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- Fentress Architects Celebrates the Opening of the Terminal D West Pier at the George Bush International Airport - GlobeNewswire - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- Former K18 and Olaplex brand architects acquire Matter of Fact skin care - Cosmetics Business - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- Architecture Sarasotas annual MOD Weekend to center designing for resiliency in the wake of disaster - The Architect's Newspaper - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- Victor Lundy, designer, artist, and Sarasota School of Architecture pioneer, dies at 101 - The Architect's Newspaper - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- 10 Tips for Kubernetes Architects on K8s 10th Birthday - The New Stack - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- The Insider: Architect Makes Sense of Awkward Space in Heights Triplex - Brownstoner - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- Remembering the Late Victor Lundy, the Architect Behind Some of Sarasotas Most Famous Buildings - Sarasota - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- Reading Room: The evolution and impact of three Australian architecture practices - Architecture AU - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- Mailen Design and Peter Bradford Architects embed home into countryside - Dezeen - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- Wendy Scatterday Reappointed to West Virginia Board of Architects - Wheeling Intelligencer - November 4th, 2024 [November 4th, 2024]
- The Frick Collection will reopen in April 2025 after long-awaited renovation by Selldorf Architects - The Architect's Newspaper - November 4th, 2024 [November 4th, 2024]
- Architects build revolutionary home using hemp-based concrete: 'Provides a distinctive, earthy look that complements the natural, organic feel' - MSN - November 4th, 2024 [November 4th, 2024]
- Project 2025s architects vision for education spills into Idaho poli... - Moscow-Pullman Daily News - November 4th, 2024 [November 4th, 2024]
- Architecture and the American House Now - Forbes - November 4th, 2024 [November 4th, 2024]
- How 3G Capital, Architects Of A $20 Billion Burger King Profit, Bagged Another Whopper - Forbes - November 4th, 2024 [November 4th, 2024]
- Facades+ Los Angeles returns on November 7 and 8 with two days of talks and workshops - The Architect's Newspaper - November 4th, 2024 [November 4th, 2024]
- vertical pink concrete bricks wrap atlas architects' rosa home in the netherlands - Designboom - November 4th, 2024 [November 4th, 2024]
- Weiss/Manfredi and Reed Hilderbrand find new solutions for old problems at Longwood Gardens West Conservatory - The Architect's Newspaper - November 4th, 2024 [November 4th, 2024]
- NBBJs experience design studio, ESI Design adds new interpretive displays in the White House - The Architect's Newspaper - November 4th, 2024 [November 4th, 2024]
- Architecture Now: From Island Resorts to STEM Educational Facilities, Discover the Recent Work of KPF, Zaha Hadid Architects, and Other Leading... - November 4th, 2024 [November 4th, 2024]
- Min Design cements a commitment to public space with The Garden Party in San Francisco - The Architect's Newspaper - November 4th, 2024 [November 4th, 2024]
- Meet the architects shortlisted for the 2024 Dorfman Prize - Euronews - November 4th, 2024 [November 4th, 2024]
- Permits Filed for 237 Cortland Avenue in Bernal Heights, San Francisco - San Francisco YIMBY - November 4th, 2024 [November 4th, 2024]
- Architect Ben Nutter Builds a Legacy on the North Shore - Northshore Magazine - November 4th, 2024 [November 4th, 2024]
- Open-air museum "preserves the memory" of 17th-century Turkish fortress - Dezeen - November 4th, 2024 [November 4th, 2024]
- Gallery of Architecture Now: From Island Resorts to STEM Educational Facilities, Discover the Recent Work of KPF, Zaha Hadid Architects, and Other... - November 4th, 2024 [November 4th, 2024]
- Behind the Doors: the series devoted to architects homes is back - Salone del Mobile - November 4th, 2024 [November 4th, 2024]
- A canyon in the city: One River North brings Colorado's landscape into urban Denver - STIRworld - November 4th, 2024 [November 4th, 2024]
- Architects develop cutting-edge, high performance homes for cleaner, simpler living in just over 250 square feet - The Cool Down - October 17th, 2024 [October 17th, 2024]
- ParkLife Apartment Building / Austin Maynard Architects - ArchDaily - October 17th, 2024 [October 17th, 2024]
- SGA's New Boston Office Is Bigger, and Designed for Collaboration - Banker & Tradesman - October 17th, 2024 [October 17th, 2024]
- Asha Sairam offers advice to aspiring designers and architects - ETRealty - October 17th, 2024 [October 17th, 2024]
- Diller Scofidio + Renfro shares renderings of the University of New Mexicos new building for the College of Fine Arts - The Architect's Newspaper - October 9th, 2024 [October 9th, 2024]
- Architects of Chicago police oversight commission applaud success in eliminating gang database, Shotspotter and more - The TRiiBE - October 9th, 2024 [October 9th, 2024]
- Architects Gather to Discuss Building Now at RECORDs 2024 Innovation Conference - Architectural Record - October 9th, 2024 [October 9th, 2024]
- Everything we saw as Architects brought the breakdowns to San Antonio's Aztec Theatre - San Antonio Current - October 9th, 2024 [October 9th, 2024]
- Architects work topic of exhibit - The Beverly Review - October 9th, 2024 [October 9th, 2024]
- Architect named for project converting old Lafayette hardware store into Louisiana Music Museum - The Advocate - October 9th, 2024 [October 9th, 2024]
- One last gift from 11 of golf's greatest architects - GolfPass - October 9th, 2024 [October 9th, 2024]
- Wold Architects leaving St. Pauls First National Bank building for downtown Minneapolis - Yahoo Finance - October 9th, 2024 [October 9th, 2024]
- Jeju Island Wedding Studio / Todot Architects and Partners - ArchDaily - October 9th, 2024 [October 9th, 2024]
- James Ijamess play directed by Saheem Ali asks: What color is gentrification? - The Architect's Newspaper - October 9th, 2024 [October 9th, 2024]
- heliotrope architects brings norwegian-inspired addition to historic seattle home - Designboom - October 9th, 2024 [October 9th, 2024]
- Permits Approved for 520 31st Street in Pill Hill, Oakland - San Francisco YIMBY - October 9th, 2024 [October 9th, 2024]
- Doing Good: Architects connect community to the industry - The Atlanta Journal Constitution - October 9th, 2024 [October 9th, 2024]
- Urban tree planting event will connect architects to the forest - Daily Reporter - October 9th, 2024 [October 9th, 2024]
- wind and light flow through organdie curtains of icai architects' street furniture in japan - Designboom - October 9th, 2024 [October 9th, 2024]
- Paul Rudolph 101 - A major exhibition on the brutalist architect, now at The Metropolitan Museum of Art - World-Architects - October 9th, 2024 [October 9th, 2024]
- 19th Global Award for Sustainable Architecture is Open for Entries - Archilovers.com - October 9th, 2024 [October 9th, 2024]
- Architects @ The Ogden Theatre, 10/2/24 - Prelude Press - October 9th, 2024 [October 9th, 2024]
- Wold Architects moving headquarters from St. Paul to downtown Minneapolis - The Business Journals - October 9th, 2024 [October 9th, 2024]
- When the architect leaves - Golf Course Industry Magazine - October 9th, 2024 [October 9th, 2024]
- Donald Judds Everlasting Influence - Curbed - September 20th, 2024 [September 20th, 2024]
- Architectural Billings See Continued Decline, Marking 19th Straight Month. - ARCHITECT Magazine - September 20th, 2024 [September 20th, 2024]
- Personal SpaceStep Inside the Homes of Eight Top Dallas Architects - D Magazine - September 20th, 2024 [September 20th, 2024]
- Architects tell board to make decisions - The Daily Standard - September 20th, 2024 [September 20th, 2024]
- Law Roach, the Architect of Zendayas Red-Carpet Style - The New Yorker - September 20th, 2024 [September 20th, 2024]
- What made this project the London Institute for Healthcare Engineering by HLM Architects - Building Design - September 20th, 2024 [September 20th, 2024]
- With Major New Awards, RKTB Spreads National Message of Attainable Housing for All in Era of Unmet Need - Archinect - September 20th, 2024 [September 20th, 2024]
- National Academy of Design names architects to its 2024 list of Academicians - The Architect's Newspaper - September 20th, 2024 [September 20th, 2024]
- Fox's chief political anchor interviewed the architect of Project 2025. Here are some of the details he failed to mention. - Media Matters for America - September 20th, 2024 [September 20th, 2024]
- Landscape Architects Rise to the Challenge of Coastal Flooding - ArchDaily - September 20th, 2024 [September 20th, 2024]
- Studio Gang unites five disciplines at the University of Kentuckys new Gray Design Building - The Architect's Newspaper - September 20th, 2024 [September 20th, 2024]
- The architect of the Bison football dynasty - INFORUM - September 20th, 2024 [September 20th, 2024]
- A star architect reflects on his visions for San Francisco that never got built - San Francisco Chronicle - September 20th, 2024 [September 20th, 2024]
- Architects build self-sufficient Smi community hub to withstand extreme conditions north of Arctic Circle here's how - The Cool Down - September 20th, 2024 [September 20th, 2024]
- An open letter to the board of the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation - The Architect's Newspaper - September 20th, 2024 [September 20th, 2024]
- Girlroom by Samiha Room elevates the spatial politics of girlhood - The Architect's Newspaper - September 20th, 2024 [September 20th, 2024]
- Gallery of Landscape Architects Rise to the Challenge of Coastal Flooding - 1 - ArchDaily - September 20th, 2024 [September 20th, 2024]