The Architectural Gift: Kumasi, Islamabad, Detroit

Visual surveys of built sites in Ghana, Pakistan, and the U.S. exemplify the relations that emerge when one government or organization presents another with the opportunity to build.

For more on how gifted buildings — or offers to build — shape the social and political economies of cities, see The Architectural Gift, a conversation between Łukasz Stanek and Frances Richard.

Composite of three color images showing woman hawking food at roadside stall; grassy field of yellow flowers with small grassy mound in midground and wooden houses in background; white-paved mosque courtyard, with scattered visitors.
Clockwise from upper left: A market woman selling food outside Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (or KNUST), Kumasi, Ghana, 2023 [Eric Don-Arthur]; a grassy mound where a home has been demolished, Detroit, USA, 2015 [Akoaki]; courtyard of the Faisal Mosque, Islamabad, Pakistan, 2024 [Ozair Khan].

These case studies testify to the ways in which gift-giving dynamics impact the production and reproduction of buildings and spaces.

This trio of slideshows features three cities shaped by buildings or spaces that have been designed, constructed, delivered, and received without an explicit expectation of reciprocity, even if such reciprocity was assumed or anticipated by those involved. Straddling three continents, these case studies testify to the variety of ways in which gift-giving dynamics impact the production and reproduction of buildings and spaces, including decisions about program, layout, materiality, technology, labor, maintenance, and neglect.

Stemming from a collaboration between scholars and local photographers in Kumasi and Islamabad, and based on the author’s professional engagements in Detroit, the case studies convey multiple vantage points on the practices of assembling and maintaining gifted buildings and spaces.


Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, Kumasi

The College of Technology in Ghana’s Ashanti region was founded in Kumasi in 1951, in what was then the British colony of the Gold Coast. A few years after Ghana gained independence in 1957, the college was renamed the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (or KNUST).

Slideshow

Faisal Mosque, Islamabad

In Pakistan, King Faisal of Saudi Arabia (1906-1975) is a household name. Across the country, from the former colonial city of Lyallpur, which in 1979 was renamed Faisalabad, to countless housing societies, major roads in almost every town, and an extensive network of banks, many infrastructural features have been named by the Pakistani state after the late Saudi king, commemorating him as almost a foster father to the country. Perhaps the most important of these sites is the Faisal Mosque in Islamabad. Completed in 1986, it is Pakistan’s national mosque.

Slideshow

Philanthropic urbanism, Detroit

In the face of  Detroit’s postindustrial downturn, a surge in philanthropic efforts has sought to bridge the civic and social voids created by governmental retreat. This dynamic, accentuated by the city’s declaration of bankruptcy in 2013, offers a chronicle of urban evolution overshadowed by receding democratic influence.

Slideshow
Cite
Łukasz Stanek, Sarah K. Cheema, and Anya Sirota, “The Architectural Gift: Kumasi, Islamabad, Detroit,” Places Journal, April 2024. Accessed 12 Jun 2026. https://doi.org/10.22269/240410

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