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The Architecture of Ramses Wissa Wassef

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The pioneering Egyptian architect and teacher Ramses Wissa Wassef (1911–74) is best known for his founding in 1951 of the Ramses Wissa Wassef Art Centre in Harraniya, a small village in Greater Cai...
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  • 09 March 2021
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With full color throughout and over 350 photographs, plans, and sketches, this is the first comprehensive volume on Egyptian architect Ramses Wissa Wassef's extensive and hugely influential body of work and its legacy in Egyptian heritage.

The pioneering Egyptian architect and teacher Ramses Wissa Wassef (1911–74) is best known for his founding in 1951 of the Ramses Wissa Wassef Art Centre in Harraniya, a small village near the Giza Pyramids in Greater Cairo. The center, internationally acclaimed for its tapestries and sculptures, began partly as an art school for young villagers, reflecting Wissa Wassef’s aim of reviving traditional Egyptian architecture and crafts, and his belief in the innate creative power and potential of children.

Less well known are Wissa Wassef’s prolific architectural output and his efforts and influence beyond the confines of the Harraniya center to promote artistic expression among Egyptian youth. This generously illustrated volume is the first comprehensive survey of Wissa Wassef’s architectural works, both extant and non-extant, shedding light on his legacy and significant engagement with vernacular and contemporary Egyptian architecture. Wissa Wassef renounced self-promotion and monetary reward in his work, placing human physical and psychological well-being at the center of his architectural philosophy. An astute observer and modest personality, he saw himself as part of the people and began experimenting with participatory design and people-centered architecture before they became popular.

The Architecture of Ramses Wissa Wassef reveals Wissa Wassef’s profuse architectural oeuvre, which spanned private villas and rural houses, as well as public buildings, such as churches, schools, and museums, highlighting his rich contribution to Egypt’s architectural heritage at a moment when that heritage is at risk of being lost.

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Price: £39.99
Pages: 272
Publisher: The American University in Cairo Press
Imprint: The American University in Cairo Press
Publication Date: 09 March 2021
Trim Size: 8.50 X 9.50 in
ISBN: 9789774169243
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

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"Visitors to Egypt may be aware of Ramses Wissa Wassef by having visited his Art Center near the Giza Pyramids. Founded in 1952 with the aim of reviving traditional Egyptian architecture and crafts, the center’s vaulted and domed mud-brick buildings set amidst palm trees leave an impression as indelible as the tapestries of village life for which the center is renowned. Less well-known are his other projects, including churches, homes, schools and museums, all of which engage with the architectural legacy of Egypt, drawing upon the vocabulary shared by Pharaonic, Coptic and Islamic periods. Recipient of the Aga Khan Award for Architecture, Wassef is remembered for his pioneering efforts in sustainable architecture, reviving the use of native materials such as adobe and stone to meet local climatic needs. This handsome and timely volume represents the first comprehensive catalog of Wassef’s works, much of which is nonextant—some projects were never built, while others have been demolished."—AramcoWorld

"The Architecture of Ramses Wissa Wassef will follow within this body of work and provide a foundational text both for general readers and students, architects and scholars within the extended and intersecting fields of art and architecture."—Traditional Dwellings and Settlements Review

Table of contents
Abbreviations
Acknowledgments
Preface
Part 1: Ramses Wissa Wassef
1.01 Introduction
1.02 Architect and Artist
1.03 Architectural Legacy
1.04 Professorship
Part 2: A descriptive catalogue
Extant
Ramses Wissa Wassef Arts Center
2.1 Village Art Studio and Gallery - Phase 1
2.2. Solar Kiln
2.3. Village Art Studio and Gallery - Phase 2
2.4. Habib Georgi Museum
2.5. Chicken Coops and Tool Shed
2.6. Silos
2.7. Çeres Wissa Wassef Villa
2.8. Seven Weavers’ Houses
2.9. Second Generation Weaving Workshops
2.10 Engineer Mounir Nosshi Villa
2.11. Temporary chapel
2.12 Post-mortem additions
Churches
2.13 St. George and St. Abraam Church in Heliopolis
2.14 Church of the Virgin Mary in Zamalek
2.15 Sanctuary of Archangel Michael Coptic Orthodox Church in Damanhur
2.16 Dominican Father’s Priory Chapel Renovation
2.17 Church of the Archangel Michael in Shubra - Consulting
2.18 Stained Glass Windows at Saint Mina Coptic Orthodox Church
Residential
2.19 Wissa Wassef Agouza Residence
2.20 Ina Makkar House
2.21 Mohie al-Din Hussein House and Studio
Educational and Cultural
2.22 Jardin D’Enfants at the Lycée Français du Caire
2.23 Lycée Franco-Égyptien d’Heliopolis
2.24 School in Old Cairo
2.25 Mahmoud Mokhtar Museum
Other
2.26 Al-Chark Insurance Company Building Renovation
2.27 Stained Glass Windows at the Social Building, Egyptian Shooting Club
2.28 Nematalla Louis Mausoleum
2.29 Al-Dar Restaurant
2.30 Lounge Ceiling at the Palestine Hotel
Nonextant
Churches
2.31 Evangelical Presbyterian Church
2.32 St. George the Martyr Coptic Orthodox Church, Giza Diocese
2.33 Two Martyrs Cyrus and John Coptic Orthodox Church
2.34 Saint Joseph Church
2.35 Saint George Monastery on the Nile Bank
2.36 Evangelical Church, Community Center & Offices
2.37 Coptic Catholic Patriarchate Church
2.38 Cathedral of St. Mark and Anba Ruways Compound
2.39 Heliopolis Church Theater and Club Extension
2.40 Iconostasis at the Coptic Catholic Church of Faggala
2.41 Unidentified Church Community Services Building
2.42 Unidentified Church 1
2.43 Unidentified Church 2
Residential
2.44 Villa Fikry Boutros
2.45 Villa al-Amira Naima Ibrahim
2.46 Augonie Abdel Sayed and Habib Georgi Beach House
2.47 Berlanty Youssef Beach House
2.48 Apartment Building on Sheikh Rehan Street
2.49 Apartment Building on Clot Bey Street
2.50 Building Number 34 & 36
2.51 Zeinab Badawi House
2.52 Adam Henein House and Atelier
2.53 Abu el-Enein Weekend House
2.54 Student Project: Villa
2.55 Unidentified Apartment Building 1
2.56 Unidentified Apartment Building 2
2.57 Unidentified Villa 1
2.58 Unidentified Villa 2
2.59 Unidentified Villa 3
2.60 Unidentified Villa 4
2.61 Unidentified Villa 5
Educational and Cultural
2.62 Graduation Project: Old Cairo Potters’ House
2.63 Small Renovation at College Français du Daher
2.64 Faruk I University Dormitory
2.65 School for Art and Handicrafts in Qubbah
2.66 Ismailia Secondary school
2.67 American Mission for Girls: Experimental Project for Farming
Other
2.68 Banque Misr Building and Hotel Competition
2.69 Garage and Atelier Magar
2.70 Interior Design and Stained-Glass Panels for the Grand Reception Hall at the Cairo Governorate Headquarters
Glossary
Bibliography