← All Countries

Famous Buildings in Iran

Middle East

Persepolis
Persepolis — photo: Carole Raddato · CC BY-SA 2.0 · via Wikimedia Commons

Architecture in Iran

Iran is home to one of the oldest continuously inhabited urban civilisations on earth, and its architecture reflects 6,000 years of building tradition punctuated by empire, conquest, and renewal. Persepolis, the ceremonial capital of the Achaemenid Empire, demonstrates the ambition and organisational capacity of the world's first superpower. The Islamic conquest of 651 CE brought new forms — the iwan, the muqarnas vault, the minaret, geometric surface decoration — which Iranian craftsmen absorbed and transformed into some of the most sophisticated Islamic architecture in the world. Isfahan, rebuilt as the Safavid capital in the 16th and 17th centuries under Shah Abbas I, represents the high point of Iranian Islamic urbanism: a planned city centred on a vast public square (the Naqsh-e Jahan), surrounded by mosques, palaces, and a covered bazaar in perfect compositional balance.

Notable Buildings

Architectural Character

Iranian Islamic architecture is among the most refined in the world, distinguished by its mastery of surface and by its handling of the transition from wall to vault to dome. The muqarnas — a honeycomb of small niches that fills the transition zone and dissolves the boundary between wall and ceiling — was developed in Iran to a degree of complexity unmatched elsewhere. Geometric surface decoration (girih), tilework (kashi-kari), and carved plasterwork (gach-buri) cover every surface with a mathematical precision that carries theological meaning: the infinite patterning of geometric ornament represents the infinite nature of God, while the absence of figural representation (mandated by Islamic law) directed creative energy entirely into abstract pattern.

The Iranian city, from its bazaar spine and caravanserai nodes to its mosque and madrasa complexes, represents one of the most complete systems of urban planning in the premodern Islamic world.

Test your knowledge of Middle Eastern landmarks.

Play Building Guessr