The city of Al-Ghat is the birthplace of His Excellency Prince Abdul Rahman al-Sudairi, his upbringing and his family's past connected him with it, and despite the long time the founder spent away from Al-Ghat, but this did not distract him from it, and based on his desire, his sons and daughters established in 1424 Ah (2003), a cultural center in Al-Ghat governorate, called (Dar Al-RahmaniyahIt is a branch of the Abdulrahman al-Sudairi Charitable Foundation, which has an independent endowment, and its goals emanate from the basic goals of the Abdulrahman Al-Sudairi Cultural Center. Dar Al-Rahmaniya is located in the middle of the araniya Orchard; the farm that the founder stopped on 3/6/1407 ah for his parents – God forgive them – and the proceeds are poured into financing Dar Al-Rahmaniya. Its design took into account the surrounding rural environment in Al-Ghat; it appeared with a nejdi character, manifested by Clay buildings and nejdi arches, and the mosque with an open Chapel on the courtyard. Perhaps the most prominent feature of Dar Al-Rahmaniya building is the use of natural materials in construction; most of them are from the local environment, such as: straw cubes (bales of local hay) as the basic unit in the construction of walls and ventilation towers, with clay cover, palm and wood strips in the ceilings, and gas stone in the building's geotextiles and adjacent areas, in addition to the use of The ceiling of the lecture hall. This style of architecture – in addition to the aesthetic element and its distinctive Najd character – raised the thermal insulation properties of the building, and reduced the costs of electrical energy used for cooling, which strengthened its relationship with the originality of traditional construction in heritage Ghat buildings. It really sums up the core message of the center.
Dar Al-Rahmaniya is located in the middle of the araniya Orchard; the farm that the founder stopped on 3/6/1407 ah for his parents – God forgive them – and the proceeds are poured into financing Dar Al-Rahmaniya.
Its design took into account the surrounding rural environment in Al-Ghat; it appeared with a nejdi character, manifested by Clay buildings and nejdi arches, and the mosque with an open Chapel on the courtyard.
Perhaps the most prominent feature of Dar Al-Rahmaniya building is the use of natural materials in construction; most of them are from the local environment, such as: straw cubes (bales of local hay) as the basic unit in the construction of walls and ventilation towers, with clay cover, palm and wood strips in the ceilings, and gas stone in the building's geotextiles and adjacent areas, in addition to the use of The ceiling of the lecture hall.
This style of architecture – in addition to the aesthetic element and its distinctive Najdi character – raised the thermal insulation properties of the building, and reduced the costs of electrical energy used for cooling, which strengthened its relationship with the originality of traditional construction in heritage Ghat buildings. It really sums up the core message of the center.