Instant Alert: The most memorable works from the 'Queen of the Curve,' who won architecture's biggest prize 13 years ago today

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The most memorable works from the 'Queen of the Curve,' who won architecture's biggest prize 13 years ago today

by Dennis Green on May 31, 2017, 10:34 AM

Zaha Hadid

The late architect Zaha Hadid — known as the "Queen of the Curve" for the modern, curving designs of her buildings —had a legendary career.

The Iraqi-born British architect became the first woman to win the Pritzker Architecture Prize (the Nobel Prize of her field) in 2004. She also received numerous other awards and honors, including being named a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire (DME) in 2012 and earning the Royal Institute of British Architects Gold Medal in 2015 — the first ever given to a woman.

Hadid designed everything from a metro station in Saudi Arabia, to the aquatics center for the 2012 London Olympics, to a city center in downtown Belgrade — all in her signature flowing style.

One of the last buildings she designed will be completed in New York City this summer. It's an 11-story condominium made of steel and glass, and it incorporates a unique curvy chevron pattern.

Hadid died in a Miami hospital in 2016 after suffering a heart attack. Google is honoring her Wednesday with a Google Doodle on its homepage and a retrospective of her work. 

Click through to see how her style evolved over time, and remember the artist through the body of work she left behind all over the world.

SEE ALSO: Eerie photos show a neighborhood of abandoned million-dollar McMansions

Completed in 2003, the Rosenthal Center for Contemporary Art in Cincinnati was Hadid's first project in the US. It was a huge critical success.

Source: The New York Times



After the success of the Rosenthal Center, Hadid was hired for several other projects. The BMW Central Building in Leipzig, Germany was among the first. It was completed in May 2005.

Source: The New York Times



And she designed the Phaeno Science Center in Wolfsburg, Germany, which was also completed in 2005. The New York Times called it "the kind of building that utterly transforms our vision of the future."

Source: The New York Times



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