Hafeez Contractor

Hafeez Contractor
Born 1950 (age 6566)
Mumbai, Maharashtra, India
Nationality Indian
Alma mater University of Mumbai, Columbia University
Occupation Architect
Practice Zoroastrianism
Buildings 23 Marina-Dubai, Imperial Towers-Mumbai, Infosys GEC & SDB 4- Mysore, ICICI Headquarters, Hyderabad

Hafeez Contractor (born 1950) is an Indian architect.[1] He was member of the Bombay Heritage Committee and New Delhi Lutyens Bungalow Zone Review Committee.

He was awarded Padma Bhushan in January 2016 by the Government of India.

Early life

Hafeez Contractor was born in Mumbai in a Parsi family. He earned his graduate diploma in architecture from the University of Mumbai in 1975 and completed his graduation and MS in Architecture from Columbia University, New York City on a Tata scholarship.[2] He studied at the Academy of Architecture in Mumbai and then went on to pursue a post graduation degree from Columbia University in New York.

Career

Hafeez Contractor started working in 1968 as an apprentice with his uncle T. Khareghat even while working toward his architecture degree. In 1977, he became the associate partner in the firm. Between 1977 and 1980, he was a visiting faculty member at the Academy of Architecture, Mumbai.

Architect

He designed The Imperial I and II, the tallest buildings in India.[3]

Despite being one of India's most successful architects, he publicly stated that Western standards for "green" buildings are a joke arguing that the problems present in India require unique solutions and the country should not blindly follow the west,[4] although according to an article in the New York Times, one of his works were cited to look like the St. Peter’s Basilica in Vatican City.[5]

The Slumdog Millionaire Architect

In an interview with the New York Times,[6] he was profiled for his influence on modern architecture in India and as Bollywood's "Starchitect". According to the article, "Stylistically, Contractor’s buildings have no signature, save a penchant for glitz." Contractor said, "I always say... that you definitely like a woman with lipstick, rouge, eyelashes. So if you make your building more beautiful with some appliqués, there’s nothing wrong." Instead of a style, what most unifies Contractor’s projects is that they actually get built.

Architecture has long been described as the most political of the arts, and the key to Contractor’s success is as much his mastery of the policy levers of the world’s largest democracy as his talents as a designer. Combining the skills of an architect with those of a political operative, Contractor has had the ability to read new regulations and immediately find exploitable loopholes and work behind the scenes to shape legislation that serves his business. He is known to cultivate friends in high places, and he has learned to time his public statements judiciously. Most crucially, he has mastered the art of rhetoric, of phrasing his private interests in terms of the public interest.

Projects

  • Thapar House - Worli, Mumbai
  • Turbhe railway station - Navi Mumbai
  • Vidarbha Cricket Association Stadium - Jamtha, Nagpur

Gallery

References

External links

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