Adil Lari


Adil Lari is an Austrian architect specializing in sustainable architecture, ecological engineering, renewable energies and energy policy consulting. He was one of the first persons in Europe in the nineties who engaged in this field. Earning both national and international acclaim through his continuous activities, he has been invited as an expert and lecturer to numerous workshops and conferences. In 1991 he won the Austrian National Award for Domestic architecture for his construction project Solar Housing Plabutsch.

Education

Adil Lari is an Austrian architect with roots in Iraq. He completed his Ph.D. in the field of solar architecture from the Technical University of Graz, in 1999, after finishing his Bachelor and Master´s degree in architecture from the Technical University of Vienna in 1989.

Projects

Sustainable architecture

With his apartment complex Solar Housing “Plabutsch” in Graz, Austria, Adil Lari created a building that achieved lowest possible energy needs without the use of expensive and complicated technology. Other projects created by Adil Lari include the Owainati Office Center in Amman, Jordan, the Hotel Holiday Inn in Amman, Jordan, the Hotel Intercontinental in Agaba, Jordan and the Mall in Gasometer A Vienna, Austria.

Research

Consecutive to his construction project Solar Housing Plabutsch, Lari conducted the survey "Investigation and Verification of the End-User Behavior for the Housing Complex Bergstraße in Graz". Lari studied the effects of behavior patterns of inhabitants on the energy performance of residential buildings and identified these as a crucial and approachable, yet often neglected, factor for reducing energy consumption. Lari was awarded the Austrian National Housing Design Award in 1991 for his study, being one of the first to investigate user behavior in low-energy and solar housing.
From 2003-2005 Adil Lari was responsible for developing feasibility studies and pilot projects, as well as for reviewing national policy and the drafting of action plans, in the course of the LOCOSOC-project aiming towards "Low Energy, Low Cost Social Housing for Enlarged Europe".
Adil Lari was engaged in the DEARSUN-project, which is part of the FP7 of the European Union. Starting in 2008, its goal was the development of a direct solar heating system, capable of covering a full year thermal load, using high temperature thermal storage.

Energy policy consulting

Adil Lari has been appointed for research projects and scholarships through the European Union and the Austrian Ministry of Economy in the fields of solar architecture, renewable energy and energy policy consulting. He has conducted studies in the area of low-cost and low-energy housing with a minimum of technical equipment and a maximum of energy reduction.
As an expert in the field of energy efficiency and ecology, Adil Lari was commissioned several times by the United Nations Development Programme as an evaluator for projects executed together with the Global Environment Facility. His evaluations contributed to achieve the optimum success and efficiency of projects in Armenia, Bulgaria, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, North Macedonia and, in the course of the 2014 Sochi Olympics, Russia.
From 2004-2008 Adil Lari was responsible for the Project Management, the development and installation of solar hot water heating systems in several cities and towns across Iran. Following a public tender by the IFCO, a subsidiary of the National Iranian Oil Company, the scope of the project was to replace inefficient boilers burning low-quality fuel oil with innovative and environmentally friendly solar heating systems.

Awards

1991: Austrian National Award for Domestic Architecture – 1st Place.
1992: Ecology Award of the city of Vienna – 3rd Place.
1998: Austrian National Award for Consulting – nominated.
2001: Austrian National Award for Consulting – nominated.
2007: Austrian National Award for Consulting – nominated.

Publications

In the course of his career, Adil Lari also has published literature at national and international level.

Books