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The architecture of Bangladesh has a long history and is rooted in Bangladesh's culture, religion and history. [2] It has evolved over centuries and assimilated influences from social, religious and exotic communities. The architecture of Bangladesh bears a remarkable impact on the lifestyle, tradition and cultural life of Bangladeshi people ...
Exhibition, "An Architecture of Independence: The Making of Modern South Asia," on the Works of Four Architects of the Indian Sub-Continent; New York, Philadelphia, 1997, Curated by Kazi Khaleed Ashraf and James Bellurado. Exhibition of Architecture in Bangladesh, “Pundranagar” to Sher-e-Bangla Nagar (350 B.C. to present time), 1997.
The architecture of Bengal, which comprises the modern country of Bangladesh and the Indian states of West Bengal, Tripura and Assam's Barak Valley, has a long and rich history, blending indigenous elements from the Indian subcontinent, with influences from different parts of the world.
Pundranagar to Sherebanglanagar: Architecture in Bangladesh (Chetana, Dhaka, 1997) National Capital of Bangladesh (GA Edita, Tokyo, 1994) Rafiq Azam. Born 29 December 1963, Dhaka, Bangladesh Bachelor of Architecture, Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology 1989; SHATOTTO - architecture for green living
Teacher-Student Centre (Bengali: ছাত্র-শিক্ষক কেন্দ্র, romanized: Chhatra-Sikkhok Kendra), also known as TSC of the University of Dhaka is a building on the Dhaka University campus in Shahbagh, Dhaka, Bangladesh. The centre was established in 1961 by the Dhaka University by the Division of Public Affairs.
Kazi Khaleed Ashraf is a Bangladeshi architect, urbanist and architectural historian. [1] [2] Writing from the intersection of architecture, landscape and the city, Ashraf has authored books and essays on architecture in India and Bangladesh, the work of Louis Kahn, and the city of Dhaka.
In the villages, residential architecture typically features clusters of houses based on extended family ties. The standard mosque architecture in Bangladesh includes a series of open and closed courts with permeable walls; the common layout of an open porch or court and a covered main space remains consistent throughout urban and rural mosque ...
The Curzon Hall, one of Dhaka's best architecture. The architecture of Dhaka is a confluence of many architectural styles. From the Sena temples built by Ballal Sen, to the Mughal architecture of the Mughals, to the Indo-Saracenic style (pioneered in Madras) of the colonial era, to 20th century steel and chrome of skyscrapers.