Name Yasmeen Lari | Role Architect | |
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Books The Dual City: Karachi During the Raj, Karachi: Illustrated City Guide |
Atlas battery sparkistan yasmeen lari
Yasmeen Lari (born c. 1941; Urdu: یاسمین لاری) is Pakistan's first female architect. She is best known for her involvement in the intersection of architecture and social justice. Since her official retirement from architectural practice in 2000, her UN-recognized NGO Heritage Foundation Pakistan has been taking on humanitarian relief work as well as historical conversation projects in rural villages all around Pakistan.
Contents
- Atlas battery sparkistan yasmeen lari
- Fukuoka prize for yasmeen lari pakistan exclusive interview
- Early life
- Career
- Completed projects
- Historical conservation and restoration projects incomplete
- Awards
- Personal life
- References

Fukuoka prize for yasmeen lari pakistan exclusive interview
Early life

Yasmeen Lari was born in the town of Dera Ghazi Khan and spent her early years in and around Lahore. Her father Zafarul Ahsan, an ICS officer, was working on major development projects in Lahore and other cities, through which Lari was exposed to architecture. Her sister is Pakistani politician Nasreen Jalil. When she was 15 years old, she first left Pakistan to go to London with her family. Initially there for a vacation, she and her siblings ended up enrolling in school in London. Upon her rejection from architecture school, Yasmeen Lari studied two years of arts in London before being accepted into the Oxford School of Architecture.
Career

After graduating from the Oxford School of Architecture in 1964, Lari returned to Pakistan at 23 with her husband, Suhail Zaheer Lari, and opened her architecture firm Lari Associates in Karachi, Sindh, Pakistan. She became the first female architect in Pakistan. Initially, she faced difficulties when workers at construction sites would challenge her authority or knowledge because of her gender.

In 1969, Lari became an elected Member of the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA).
Her later projects included housing, such as the Angoori Bagh Housing (ABH) (1978), and commercial buildings, such as the Taj Mahal Hotel (1981), the Finance and Trade Center (1989), and the Pakistan State Oil House (PSO Company headquarters) (1991) in Karachi.

Lari retired in 2000 from architectural practice. However, she remains active with her historical preservation by serving as the advisor of the UNESCO project, as the executive director of Heritage Foundation Pakistan, and as the chairperson of the Karavan Initiatives.

Since 2010, among other projects, Lari has built over 36,000 houses for those affected by Pakistan's floods and earthquakes as of 2014. Lari implements traditional building techniques and local materials in rebuilding the Sindh Valley region of Pakistan.
In 2013, she helped villagers in Awaran District who were hit by the 2013 Balochistan earthquake.
Completed projects
Historical conservation and restoration projects (incomplete)
Awards
In 2002, the Heritage Foundation received the U.N. Recognition Award from the United Nations for its efforts and results to promote cultural and historical conservation.
In 2006, Lari was awarded the Sitara-e-Imtiaz, one of the highest civil awards by the Government of Pakistan, in recognition of her services to the architectural profession and to heritage conservation of historical sites in Pakistan.
In 2011, she received the Pakistani "1st Wonder Women of the Year Award".
In 2016, she received the Fukuoka Prize for Arts & Culture.
Personal life
Yasmeen Lari lives in Karachi, Pakistan with her husband, Suhail Lari. She has three children and a grandchild.