Kocatepe Mosque

Summary

The Kocatepe Mosque (Turkish: Kocatepe Camii) is the largest mosque in Ankara, Turkey. It was built between 1967 and 1987 in the Kocatepe quarter in Kızılay, and its size and prominent situation have made it a landmark that can be seen from almost anywhere in central Ankara.

Kocatepe Mosque
Kocatepe Camii ve Külliyesi
Religion
AffiliationIslam
LeadershipImam(s):
Mehmet Atıcı
Location
LocationAnkara, Turkey[1]
Kocatepe Mosque is located in Ankara
Kocatepe Mosque
Shown within Ankara
Kocatepe Mosque is located in Turkey
Kocatepe Mosque
Kocatepe Mosque (Turkey)
AdministrationTurkish government
Geographic coordinates39°55′00″N 32°51′39″E / 39.91667°N 32.86083°E / 39.91667; 32.86083
Architecture
TypeMosque
Date establishedIslamic era
Specifications
Capacity24,000 worshippers
Length67 m
Width64m
Minaret(s)4
Minaret height88 m (289 ft)
Website
www.ankara.bel.tr

History edit

The idea of building the Kocatepe Mosque dates back to the 1940s. On December 8, 1944, Ahmet Hamdi Akseki, the vice-president of Turkish Religious Affairs, along with seventy-two founding members, established a society known as the "Society to Build a Mosque in Yenişehir, Ankara." In 1947 this society called for projects to be drawn up by architects, but none of the submitted projects was accepted. In 1956, through the efforts of the late Adnan Menderes, Prime Minister of the time, land was allocated for the project to build a mosque in Ankara, and a request for projects was made once again in 1957. This time thirty-six projects were evaluated, with the joint project of Vedat Dalokay and Nejat Tekelioğlu being chosen as the one to be implemented.[2]

Architecture edit

 
Nighttime view of the mosque
 
Interior of the mosque

The accepted project was an innovative and modern design. The construction started, but due to heavy critique from conservatives for its modernist look, the construction was stopped at the foundation level. Vedat Dalokay later built a modified version of the Kocatepe Mosque after winning an international competition for the Shah Faisal Mosque in Islamabad, Pakistan in 1969. This mosque, which can accommodate 24,000 worshippers, is one of the largest mosques of the world, and accepted by many as the frontiers of modern Islamic architecture.

After a third architectural competition in 1967, a more conservative or nostalgic design by Hüsrev Tayla and M. Fatin Uluengin was chosen to be built. Completed in 1987, this project is built in a neo-classical Ottoman architecture style, and is an eclectic building inspired by the Selimiye Mosque in Edirne, and the Sehzade and Sultan Ahmet mosques in Istanbul, which in turn, were influenced by the Eastern Roman architecture of the Hagia Sophia.

References edit

  1. ^ "Location of Masjid al-Haram". Google Maps. Retrieved 2 February 2017.
  2. ^ "Brochure by the Turkish Ministry of Religious Affairs" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-05-28. Retrieved 2007-11-07.
  • As, Imdat, "Vedat Dalokay's Unbuilt Project: A Lost Opportunity," in "The Digital Mosque: A New Paradigm in Mosque Design" Journal of Architectural Education (JAE), Volume 60, Issue 1, 2006, pp.54-66[dead link]
  • As, Imdat "The Kocatepe Mosque Experience, " in Emergent Design: Rethinking Contemporary Mosque Architecture in Light of Digital Technology, S.M.Arch.S. Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, 2002. pp.24-46

External links edit

  • Images of the Kocatepe Mosque
  • 3D panoramic tour of the Kocatepe Mosque
  • Model photos of Vedat Dalokay's unbuilt mosque design for the Kocatepe Mosque
  • Animation of Vedat Dalokay's unbuilt mosque design for the Kocatepe Mosque[permanent dead link]
  • Dimensions of the Mosque can be found in the 11th paragraph of this acoustical study of the mosque