From the plaza, a 360-degree stainless steel canopy hovers above the main entrance, its underside polished to a mirror finish. The structure operates as an urban periscope, drawing the city into its surface while casting shade across the terrazzo plane below.
The gesture establishes the metro station as both infrastructure and civic ground, a place of arrival and gathering in central Riyadh.
snøhetta drops a monumental mirror over a saudi metro station
The team at Snøhetta developed the competition-winning concept in 2012, imagining a transit space where orientation begins with reflection.
‘When you come off the train and look up, you see a 360-degree view of the city reflected on the underside of the canopy. So, you get an immediate picture of where you are in the city,’ Robert Greenwood, Partner and Project Lead, explains. ‘Likewise, if you’re coming from the city, you look up into the canopy, and it mirrors everything that happens below.’
The canopy’s outer skin is formed from 8 millimeter double-curved stainless steel panels, fully welded and polished to achieve a continuous surface. A lightweight steel spaceframe with adjustable tie rods supports the skin, allowing the form to extend beyond a massive concrete cone that houses the vertical circulation below. On its upper surface, photovoltaic panels contribute to on-site energy production.

a polished stainless steel overhang mirrors the city in a 360 degree surface | image © Iwan Baan
glass-enclosed platforms view an underground garden
Below ground, the two lines traverse the atrium within glazed tubes that project into the open void. Each platform is encapsulated in glass, creating a clear visual connection between moving trains and the broader interior. For passengers waiting inside the atrium, the trains appear suspended within transparent volumes; for those passing through, the station reads as a luminous landmark embedded in the historic fabric of Riyadh.
The sloping interior walls are finished with rendered surfaces inspired by local architectural traditions, lending texture to the expansive volume carved beneath the plaza. Light filtered from above washes these surfaces, guiding movement toward escalators and transfer levels. The visual continuity between levels reinforces legibility across the large subterranean space.
At the base of the atrium, around 35 meters below city level, a garden offers a shaded retreat for travelers, with plantings and seating at the heart of the infrastructure. Even during peak summer heat, the depth of the station maintains a stable environment. Water collected from the plaza and canopy is even reused for irrigation. More
By https://www.designboom.com/
project info:
name: Qasr AlHokm Metro Station
architect: Snøhetta | @snohetta
location: Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
completion: 2025
photography: © Iwan Baan | @iwanbaan
client: Royal Commission Riyadh City (RCRC)
executing consortium: ArRiyadh New Mobility (ANM)
collaborators: Cremonesi Workshop (Crew), One Works
structure: Akt
services: Hilson Moran
lighting consultants: dpa lighting

