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Iwan Baan/OMA
The 42,000-square meter Qatar National Library contains over one million books. Situated within academic campus Education City in the capital Doha, the library took five years to construct, completing in 2017. Look through the gallery to see more from OMA, the architecture firm co-founded by Rem Koolhaas.
Iwan Baan/OMA
The diamond-shaped library contains rare texts and manuscripts of Arab-Islamic scholarship, some of which are on display in a subterranean section clad in stone, giving the sense they are archaeological finds.
Philippe Ruault/OMA
OMA's CCTV Headquarters in Beijing, China, was completed in 2012 and marked a new architectural chapter for the city. Its silhouette was wholly different from the rectangular high-rises seen across Beijing; its playful use of negative space a statement that urban architecture is more than just high density living.
Philippe Ruault/OMA
The extreme 75-meter cantilever of the CCTV Headquarters stood out during its construction between 2004-2012 and remains a defining work of deconstructivist architecture today.
Delfino Sisto Legnani/Marco Cappelletti/OMA
The Qatar Foundation, a non-profit organization, has an OMA-designed headquarters in Doha. The large cube-shaped building is slashed towards its upper floors with a terrace, engineered so the floors above need no columns to support their weight.
Delfino Sisto Legnani/Marco Cappelletti/OMA
The interior of the Qatar Foundation headquarters is less uniform, although the strong reflective surfaces ensure the window pattern is repeated throughout.
Pragnesh Parikh/OMA/LMN Architects
OMA's Seattle Public Library, completed in 2004, arranged its floors like a hastily-stacked pile of books, then connected them with huge angled walls of latticed glass.
Philippe Ruault/OMA
The design flooded reading spaces with light, creating a temple of learning detached from the dim, stuffy atmosphere of libraries past.
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The Axel Springer Campus is the Berlin home of the publishing giant. Completed in 2020, it features cut outs in its monolithic exterior, exposing multiple open plan floors to sunlight and views of its surroundings.
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The nhow Amsterdam RAI Hotel seen from below, showing off another extreme cantilever design dreamt up by OMA. The 650-room hotel in Amsterdam was completed in 2020 and features three triangular stages elevated above a circular base -- a reference to an advertising column of a similar shape that occupies a nearby square.
Robin Vav Lonkhuijsen/AFP/Getty Images
De Rotterdam, a skyscraper bearing the name of the Dutch city in which it resides, was a project that began in 1997 but would only be completed in 2013. The three 150-meter towers comprise the largest building in the Netherlands, according to OMA, and feature irregular overhangs, appearing different from every angle and flying in the face of regular, uniform high-rises.
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The Netherlands Embassy in Berlin was completed in 2003. OMA says it was designed in line with planning guidelines established by the former West Berlin, which stipulated that new buildings in the neighborhood must occupy the entire block. Koolhaas plays with that rule, by designing a bold cubic embassy surrounded by a 27-meter high, semi-opaque wall at the block perimeter, a nod to the looser planning laws of the former East Berlin.
Qilai Shen/Bloomberg/Getty Images
The giant three-story cantilever toward the base of the Shenzhen Stock Exchange, in China, is often referred to as the “skirt” of this 254-meter skyscraper, completed in 2013. In OMA parlance those floors are “floating,” the physical embodiment of a stock market on the rise.
Jacopo Raule/Getty Images for Prada
Fondazione Prada on the industrial fringes of Milan, Italy, is located at a former gin distillery. OMA's overhaul of the site, completed in 2018, integrates exhibition space, cinema, an auditorium and activity spaces, which have been a launchpad for fashion and film events ever since.
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Finished in 2015, the Garage Museum of Contemporary Art in Moscow, Russia, saw OMA transform a derelict restaurant, turning it into an exhibition space with a sleek modern exterior, while preserving some of its period concrete features inside.
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Designed in 1999 and completed in 2005, OMA's Casa da Musica is a concert hall with a difference. Located in Porto, Portugal, its white concrete shape looks like a rough-cut gem, a world apart from the old buildings surrounding it. Inside, the auditorium seats 1,300 guests, while the concert hall forgoes traditional design elements like a large foyer.

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Rem Koolhaas is always looking for an exit. The Pritzker Prize-winning architect behind the CCTV Headquarters in Beijing, and De Rotterdam in his homeland of the Netherlands, is prone to claustrophobia, and won’t risk triggering it with one of his own buildings. This fear has reshaped skylines, pushing upwards and outwards, leaving behind open, unfussy spaces inside Koolhaas’ modern exteriors. “In all my buildings, you could say I’m trying to escape,” he told CNN.

Libraries and Koolhaas are not an obvious fit. The popular image of them — labyrinthine, stuffy, dimly lit ­— hardly aligns with his aesthetic sensibilities (“the typical illumination of libraries is deeply unpleasant,” he remarked). Yet his Seattle Public Library, completed in 2004, is one of his most famous works, and when he designed the Qatar National Library he tore up the rule book once again. Open, airy, you’d never know there were over a million books under its sloping roof, despite so many being so clearly displayed.

The building in Doha opened in 2018, and it’s here that CNN recently spoke with the renowned founding partner of international architects OMA.

Qatar, on the Arabian peninsula, is home to around three million people, the majority expats. Koolhaas has had multiple projects here, and says of all the places he’s worked, he has “maybe the longest-lasting relationship” with the country.

It could’ve started earlier. In the late 1990s, Japanese architect Arata Isozaki was working for a local person of importance and called Koolhaas. “He asked me, do you want to design a bungalow for a horse?” the Dutchman recalled. “I was so puritanical that (I said), ‘A bungalow for a horse? Never.’ Now that I’ve been here much more, I realize that it could have been a fantastic opportunity.”

03:14 - Source: CNN
Creating Qatar's million-book national library

Starchitect? “I hate it”

Unsurprisingly for a man who wrote “kill the skyscraper” in 2004, Koolhaas does not believe tall is the be all and end all of place-making. “I still think that skyscrapers are not necessarily the most interesting topology that you can think of,” he said. There are other ways to cement a destination: airports, museums, and, yes, libraries. OMA, which is led by eight partners, has played a part in the stories of nations moving into the global spotlight, and not just Qatar. China, Colombia, Saudi Arabia — the company has produced significant work in them all. But despite having a hand in these narratives, Koolhaas is happy to let go of projects once they’re done.

“Once (a building) exists independent of myself, I don’t consider that it was mine. I can almost forget that I was the one who played an important role in generating it,” he explained.

In his uniform black turtleneck and trousers (he has a longstanding relationship with Prada), he bristles at the mention of “starchitect,” a moniker which has dogged him for decades. “I hate it. I hate it because it’s a total caricature, and basically says you are an awful person who walks over people, who has no interest in clients, and who is a nightmare to deal with,” he bemoaned.

“It’s a form of laziness of the critical apparatus, because I think there’s so much more to say,” Koolhaas added. “The word ‘star architect’ is so superficial in terms of the total engagement that building something requires … ‘Okay, he’s parachuted in and then he does a little trick and disappears.’ Every single building is so much work. I’m not saying that as a victim, but it’s so much work.”

Courtesy OMA
Koolhaas outside the Qatar National Library. "Every single building is so much work," he said. "I’m not saying that as a victim, but it’s so much work.”

Koolhaas has thought extensively in recent years about use of space and resources. “Countryside: The Future,” a Koolhaas-led exhibition at the Guggenheim Museum in New York in 2020, posited the countryside had experienced radical change to make urbanization possible. That it had become a dumping ground for the structures a city needed to survive but could not handle — data storage and fulfilment centers and the like. As an architect commissioned to work at masterplan scale, it amounted to a period of reflection.

The city itself is in need of a rethink, he argued. “Ultimately if we are to take sustainability seriously, climate seriously, I think we will maybe enter a period where skylines of cities become less heterogenous,” Koolhaas said. That means fewer extremely tall buildings rubbing shoulders with extreme horizontals. “I can also imagine that there will be a more equal distribution through city and country. I predict — but it’s a very dangerous prediction — that there will be new ways of inhabiting the countryside, but in a more responsible way.”

Koolhaas has long been a philosopher king of architecture, both a standard bearer and a critical, contrarian presence. A former journalist, he still writes extensively, a “double life” he said, where he “can do and write what I want,” independent of his office.

“It’s been equally exciting to also remain a writer,” he expanded, “and to think about issues that have nothing to do with myself, but that are simply comments on the situation in the world or perceptions; how cultures are changing, or insights in human relations.”

Delfino Sisto Legnani/Marco Cappelletti/OMA
The Qatar Foundation headquarters in Doha. “This is the one place where ambition has constantly outworn my skepticism,” Koolhaas said of Qatar.

The industry has little room for ideologues however, demanding pragmatism and occasional deference to market forces.

Koolhaas says in the past, architects largely served a civic function, working for public bodies. The siren song of the private sector emerged around the time he entered the profession, during Ronald Reagan’s and Margaret Thatcher’s political ascendance in the late 1970s and 80s.

“The period of neoliberalism that they unleashed of course had a huge impact on architecture,” he said. “In a very subtle way, (it) eroded the plausibility of an architect, because we could no longer say ‘we are doing this for the public,’ or ‘we are doing this for your wellbeing.’ We typically started working for individuals that had their individual ambitions.”

Despite Qatar’s centralized power structure, led by an emir who signed off its National Vision 2030 project, Koolhaas names the country as a point of contrast, arguing there is a civic element to the work there. “Of course, they’re private plans, but the state of Qatar is very strong, and has these very defined ambitions, that as an architect you can work within and for,” he argued. “This is the one place where ambition has constantly outworn my skepticism,” he added.

The relationship rolls on, with OMA designing the upcoming Qatar Auto Museum. The 30,000 square meter museum, on the site of the 2011 Qatar Motor Show, does not yet have a completion date, but is a fitting symbol for a petrostate pivoting toward a knowledge economy. Expect the usual hallmarks: the clean lines, the playful irreverence, the nods to local shapes and forms.

Koolhaas might always be looking for an exit, but not from here.