Diplomatic Post

Mexican architect Frida Escobedo will transform Doha’s beloved General Post Office and its waterfront surrounds into a new home for Qatar’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs

A tranquil waterfront scene at sunset with boats on calm water, palm trees, and modern, Frida Escobedo-inspired geometric buildings on the shore, blending seamlessly with the natural surroundings under a soft sky.
The design for Doha’s new waterfront Ministry of Foreign Affairs encompasses the General Post Office building with its 'pigeonholes'. Photo: Courtesy of Frida Escobedo Studio
Few buildings in Doha hold a place in the public’s heart like the General Post Office (GPO), which was completed in 1985 and is defined by its graphic, modernist facade of repeated ‘pigeonholes’. So when Qatar announced plans to dedicate the GPO’s prominent waterfront site to a new headquarters for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MoFA) – and invited 40 international architecture practices to take part in a competition – the question of what would happen to the beloved building was at the heart of the conversation.

The project was awarded to Mexican architect Frida Escobedo, who is based between Mexico City and New York and is best known for her 2018 Serpentine Pavilion in the UK and the new Tang Wing for Modern and Contemporary Art at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. For the new MoFA headquarters, Escobedo will retain the GPO, reimagining its ground floor as a public exhibition space that opens on to a covered garden. A 70,000 sq m complex that embraces and responds to the existing built form of the GPO will then be constructed around it.

Escobedo’s vision for the new buildings surrounding the GPO centres on a series of green courtyards threaded through the complex, an approach that feels particularly at home in a region where courtyards have always been fundamental to how buildings manage heat, privacy and gathering. The new construction terraces gently northward, its rhythm of vertical pillars creating a play of shade and transparency that echoes the GPO’s own gridded facade.

“The stepping mass of MoFA asserts a subdued monumentality, while respecting the visibility of the GPO,” explains Escobedo. “Inspired by its neighbour, MoFA’s curving facade elements come alive through light and shadow. Within the protective exterior, workers, ministers and visitors discover lush patios.”

“Frida Escobedo’s design furthers our commitment to heritage preservation through sustainability and adaptive reuse while giving Qatar its next architectural masterpiece,” says Sheikha al-Mayassa, who led the competition through Qatar Blueprint.

The proposal for the new MoFA complex is also being celebrated as part of the Qatar-Mexico 2026 Year of Culture, a year-long programme of exchange across art, design, gastronomy and education. Qatar Museums’ Years of Culture initiative is designed to foster long-term cultural partnerships between Qatar and nations around the world – and a Mexican architect shaping one of Doha’s most significant public buildings is exactly the kind of cultural dialogue that the programme was made for.

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