Vali-e-Asr Mosque
Vali-e-Asr Mosque | |
---|---|
(مسجد وليعصر (عج | |
Religion | |
Affiliation | Islam |
Branch/tradition | Shia Islam |
Location | |
Location | Tehran, Tehran Province, Iran |
Geographic coordinates | 35°43′57″N 51°29′56″E / 35.73245°N 51.49897°E |
Architecture | |
Architect(s) | Reza Daneshmir, Catherine Spiridonoff |
Type | Mosque |
Style | Iranian, postmodern |
Completed | 2018 |
Site area | 3,855 m2 (41,490 sq ft) |
The Vali-e-Asr Mosque or Valiasr Mosque (Persian: مسجد وليعصر (عج)) is located in Tehran, Iran. It takes its name, a reference to the Mahdi in Shi'ite tradition, from the nearby Valiasr Street.[1] The mosque was designed by the founders of the Iranian architectural and urban design firm Fluid Motion Architects, Reza Daneshmir and Catherine Spiridonoff.[2][3] It spans 3855 square meters and contains eight floors, four of which lie underground.[1] In addition to serving as a place of prayer, the mosque also functions as a cultural center, containing a library and several classrooms.[3] The mosque became a source of controversy in Iran due to its lack of domes and minarets. Consequently, its official religious operations were halted by the Iranian government in 2018.[4][5]
History
[edit]Construction
[edit]The space currently allocated to the mosque was originally bought by Suleiman Manavi and was inherited by his grandson, Davood Manavi, a Baha'i, who owned it at the time of the Iranian Revolution. After the revolution the government expropriated the land due to Manavi's religion, and continued to use it as a parking lot until the early 1980s, when the idea for a mosque in the space was introduced for the first time. A fundraiser was organized to sponsor its construction, but it was unsuccessful.[1] Two decades later, during Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's tenure as mayor of Tehran, the first proposals for the current mosque were made. He hoped a new mosque would assert religious influence in a relatively secular area that included Tehran University and several associated bookshops.[2][3] The mosque drew strong opposition from artists and intellectuals, who feared that the proposed 55-meter tall mosque would overshadow the adjacent City Theater of Tehran and threaten its structural integrity. Many critics preferred to expand the adjacent park due to the mosque's proximity to the theater. After the election of Mohammed Bagher Ghalibaf as mayor of Tehran in 2005 and a sit-in staged by opponents of the mosque, a different approach to its construction was taken. Consequently, Fluid Motion Architects was commissioned to design an alternative version of the mosque.[3] The firm altered the original plan for the mosque in an attempt to attain harmony with its surroundings. To achieve this goal, Fluid Motion's alterations primarily focused on reducing the mosque's height through the elimination of traditional features, such as domes and minarets. The mosque's unconventional design drew opposition from Iranian conservatives, leading to legal battles and limited funding, which resulted in construction delays.[3][4] In spite of these challenges, the mosque was completed in 2018.[6]
End of Religious Operations
[edit]During the later stages of its construction and the weeks following its completion, the mosque elicited criticism from many Iranian conservatives because of its lack of traditional features, particularly domes and minarets. They also heavily criticized it due to its relatively small size compared to the City Theater and other mosques. These critics argued that mosques must contain large, dominant features, including domes and minarets, in order to depict the greatness of God. They also believed its postmodern design was devoid of significant meaning.[4] Some critics also questioned the legitimacy of the mosque due to the religious background of Catherine Spiridonoff, whose grandfather was a Christian rather than a Muslim.[1] The debate over the mosque's design culminated in an intervention by the Iranian government. It resolved the controversy by halting religious operations in the mosque and the passing a law which banned the construction of mosques without domes or minarets.[5]
Architecture
[edit]The mosque was designed to attain harmony with its cultural surroundings, particularly the adjacent City Theater. Its architects also aimed to create a structure which eschewed extrinsic design elements, such as structural height, which they perceived as superficial requirements. Instead, they sought to emphasize intrinsic elements, such as the simplicity and modesty of Islam. The original form of the Quba Mosque, the first Islamic mosque, was used as a source of inspiration for the implementation of these elements.[5] The architects also desired to create a mosque that appealed to the local population, which primarily consisted of younger generations and intellectuals.[3] Consequently, the architects used the views and values of these demographics to inform certain aspects of the mosque's design, such as its modernity.[5] The mosque's unorthodox design philosophy has contributed to some criticisms of it.
Interior
[edit]The materials used to construct the mosque's interior, white plaster for its ceilings and walls, and cream marble for its floors, were likely chosen due to budget constraints.[3] The interior avoids decoration outside of its mihrab, which is covered in Persian blue tiles. The mihrab is also notable for spanning the full height of the qibla wall, unlike typical mihrabs, which generally do not reach the mosque's ceiling.[5]
Exterior
[edit]Washed concrete was used to construct the mosque's exterior due to its relatively low price and its previous use in the construction of the neighboring City Theater.[5] The exterior's most prominent exterior feature is its sloping roof. One section of the roof was intended to serve as a courtyard that connected the adjacent park and the City Theater to the mosque. However, the roof is inaccessible, preventing it from functioning as a courtyard in practice.[5] The height of the roof corresponds to the height of an adjacent park at one extreme and that of the City Theater's ceiling at the other.[5] The roof also contains openings which serve as skylights, allowing for the passage of both natural light and air to the mosque's lower levels. The design of these openings was inspired by the geometry of intersecting arches in Iranian domes known as karbandi, or squinch-nets.[3][5] The mosque also contains two entrances, a northern one and a western one. The northern entrance was designed to resemble a tent, and the western entrance contains a slight turn inspired by the entrance of the Sheikh Lotfollah Mosque.[5]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d "A Téhéran, la mosquée de la discorde". LExpress.fr (in French). 2018-04-19. Retrieved 2021-05-02.
- ^ a b "Fluid Motion Architects". Archello. Retrieved 2021-05-01.
- ^ a b c d e f g h "The Groundbreaking Modesty of Vali-e-Asr Mosque in Tehran". Yatzer. 2019-03-25. Retrieved 2021-05-01.
- ^ a b c "A modern mosque without minarets stirs controversy in Tehran". the Guardian. 2017-10-23. Retrieved 2021-05-01.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Ali, Hosam (January 30, 2021). "Contemporary Mosque Architecture in Egypt and Iran (a Comparative Analysis)". Retrieved 2021-05-01.
- ^ "IN PICTURES: Vali-e-Asr mosque's architecture is angering hard-liners in Iran". Al Arabiya English. 2018-02-25. Retrieved 2021-05-01.