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More than 1,200 mosques and Islamic
centers have existed in this country, according to a survey
conducted in the latter part of the 1990s, but fewer than
100 were actually designed as mosques. The survey revealed
that most Islamic congregations in the United States began
in buildings that had been constructed for other purposes -
fire stations, theaters, warehouses, and shops.
The situation changed, however, after 1965
when the first large-scale influx of Muslims from various
countries came to the United States. Mosques then began to
be built for the sole purpose of ministering to the Muslim
community as houses of worship and community centers. The
great variety of religious diversity and ethnicity among
American Muslims today is reflected in the variety of
building design and organization.
The photographer and chronicler of mosque architecture, Dr.
Omar Khalidi, a senior research scholar at the Aga Khan
Program in Islamic Architecture at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology in Cambridge, explains the three
types of mosque architecture that now flourish in the United
States.
"First, there are mosques that embody a traditional design
transplanted from one - or several - Islamic lands," Dr.
Khalidi points out. "Second, there are those that represent
a reinterpretation of tradition, sometimes combined with
elements of American architecture. Third are the designs
that are entirely innovative, like those of the Islamic
Society of North America's headquarters in Plainfield,
Indiana."
Most of the mosques in all three categories also function as
classrooms, libraries, conference centers, bookshops,
kitchens, and social halls, even as residential apartments.
Another important consideration in mosque architecture is
the space for women to worship. In America, women generally
are an integral part of mosque activities and play a very
active role in the Muslim community. In a typical American
Muslim family, the entire family turns out for worship,
necessitating separate space for women, usually at a
mezzanine level.
In many instances, mosque architecture in North America
reflects the prevailing building designs of the area. "Over
time a standard design will evolve which will be a happy
blend between nostalgia and innovation," Dr. Khalidi
predicts. "The new emerging mosques in the West are a far
cry from just domes and minarets."
Taken from the the site that is
produced and maintained by the U.S. Dept. of State's Office
of International Information Programs (usinfo.state.gov) |

Downtown New York City (©
Wolfgang Hoyt/Esto/Architect Skidmore, Owings, & Merrill)

In Tempe, Arizona, a more
traditional mosque with dome and minaret.

Islamic Cultural Center of Washington, D.C
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