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Qatar National Museum: A Look Indise Doha's Latest Mega Project That Opened To Public: Jean Nouvel

Duration: 07:06Views: 24.9KLikes: 282Date Created: Mar, 2019

Channel: enrigue8

Category: Entertainment

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Description: National Museum of Qatar: This $434 million Museum In Doha Is Designed By Jean Novel It took almost a decade to build, was finished three years late and cost £330million ($434 million) - but Qatar's vast national museum is finally open. It resembles a cluster of flying saucers, though its design was actually inspired by a desert rose. 'Architecture to give a voice to heritage whilst celebrating (the) future,' tweeted the museum's renowned French architect Jean Nouvel, also responsible for the Louvre Abu Dhabi. The pale, futuristic 52,000-square-metre (560,000 square feet) structure located on Doha's waterfront corniche will be the first notable building visitors to Qatar see as they make their way from the airport to the city centre. Even in a country which is being built, rebuilt and utterly transformed for the 2022 football World Cup, the national museum could be the single most eye-catching design of all Qatar's new buildings. The entrance includes 114 fountain sculptures in a 900-metre-long (2,950ft) lagoon and the museum's multi-curved roof is made up of 76,000 panels in 3,600 different shapes and sizes. Inside, there is more than 1,500 metres (4,920ft) of gallery space. Among the exhibits is a 19th-century carpet embroidered with 1.5million Gulf pearls and the oldest Koran yet discovered in Qatar, also dating back to the 1800s. 'This is a museum that narrates the story of the people of Qatar,' Sheikha Amna bint Abdulaziz bin Jassim al-Thani, the museum's director, has stated. The National Museum of Qatar also stands on the site of the former palace of Sheikh Abdullah bin Jassim al-Thani -- son of the founder of modern Qatar. The palace has been restored as part of the massive project. The museum, which officials say celebrates Qatar's Bedouin past and energy-rich present, also reflects the country's massive wealth and ambition. And as well as an architectural and cultural statement, the new museum is also a political one by the Qataris. It is among a growing list of spectacular buildings in Qatar, including the recently opened national library and Museum of Islamic Art further along the corniche. The national museum is also the latest in the cultural 'arms race' and soft power course among Gulf nations, which includes Nouvel's Louvre in Abu Dhabi, opened to huge fanfare in 2017, designed to show-off the progressive aspects of the various competing emirate states. And for Qatar, the museum's delayed opening - originally scheduled for 2016 - has given it a chance to reinforce its national identity from other Gulf states, say experts. Since June 2017, Qatar has been diplomatically and economically blockaded by neighbouring former allies, including Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, accused among other things of supporting terrorism. Qatar rejects all charges and says the blockade is an attack on its sovereignty. The bitter dispute has fractured long-standing Gulf alliances and the new museum will allow Qatar to reinforce its separateness from its rivals, says Sigurd Neubauer, a Middle East analyst based in Washington. 'On the basic level the museum represents Qatari identity, which has really accelerated in the post-blockade environment,' he said. At the same time as the reputation of Doha's rivals appear 'inward-looking and regressive', because of incidents like the murder of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, Qatar's standing is the 'opposite', adds Neubauer. 'It's really not about the building, Qatar is trying to create an environment and national identity that provides a space towards independent thinking. 'It is doubling down on its own progressive reforms.'

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