Zaha Hadid revolutionized architecture by merging mathematics with organic aesthetics, winning the 2004 Pritzker Prize as the first female recipient and establishing her practice as a global design powerhouse. Her Miami contribution, One Thousand Museum, exemplifies her signature approach—a downtown residential tower featuring a helical exoskeleton and sculptural geometry that became an architectural landmark. After her death in 2016, Zaha Hadid Architects expanded her vision across diverse scales: the Centre of Mediterranean Culture in Italy now under construction, the Oystra mixed-use development in the UAE, and the Cityzen Tower in Tbilisi set for 2028 completion. The firm currently prioritizes sustainability certifications, with recent projects achieving LEED Platinum and carbon-neutral operations. Her design methodology—combining computational research with cultural context—continues influencing emerging architects worldwide through exhibitions like the 2026 retrospective at Shenzhen's Museum of Contemporary Art and Urban Planning.