An emerging architect with a wealth of accolades under her belt, Mariam Kamara heads Atelier Masōmī, a boutique architecture practice in Niamey, Niger. The architect gained global recognition in 2018 when she was chosen for the Rolex Mentor and Protégé scheme and mentored by Sir David Adjayeover the course of two years. She was also shortlisted for the prestigious 2019 Royal Academy Dorfman Award and has been announced a 2020 Honorary Fellow at The Royal Institute of Canada. She was also part of the 2019 Wallpaper* Architects Directory.

Her studio was set up in 2014 and has been going from strength to strength. Kamara considers collaboration a crucial part of her work. ‘With each collaboration we push the needle further but also learn so much from the people we collaborate with,’ she explains. ‘The Hikma Religious and Secular Complex allowed us to work with local masons to reinterpret traditional Hausa architecture.‘

‘The same is true for our Niamey 2000 housing project,’ she continues, ‘where our inspiration came from pre-colonial cities in the region such as Timbuktu in Mali, Kano in Nigeria, or Zinder in Niger. [With] the Dandaji Regional Market, we managed to achieve our goal to create a space that projects a sense of confidence and aspiration for the current and future users of the market.’

Kamara’s design for the Niamey Cultural Center is currently in construction, while also being exhibited at the 2021 Venice Architecture Biennale, where the architect is additionally showing an installation responding to the theme ‘How Will We Live Together?’, created in collaboration with the Tuareg Sculptors Collective in her home country.

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