While A.R. Hye was in the UK, when
Pakistan gained
independence in 1947. Hye moved to
East Pakistan after his return, where his education and background gave him the opportunity to use his skills to influence the architectural landscape of his country at a very early stage. A.R. Hye is considered the father of Institutional Architecture in Pakistan. His first major assignment in East Pakistan was to design and build the infrastructure of the new country. Thus in the 1950s, early in his career, Hye became the Chief
Town planner of the port city of
Chittagong. In this capacity, he was responsible for working on the master plan of Chittagong Township and
Cox's Bazar. He also worked as Architect Planner in
Dhaka. In 1958 he moved to
West Pakistan, and joined the Government in 1959 to become the first Chief Architect of the Government of West Pakistan. He was responsible for the architectural design of all government buildings in the cities and towns of West Pakistan, including
Karachi,
Lahore,
Rawalpindi,
Peshawar,
Quetta,
Multan,
Jhelum,
Bahawalpur,
Sialkot,
Gujrat,
Mardan,
Faisalabad,
Sahiwal,
Hyderabad,
Mianwali, and
Kalabagh. He remained in this position until West Pakistan was broken into four
provinces, after the resignation of President
Ayub Khan. Thereafter, he was asked to become the Chief Architect of the Government of
Punjab, the largest of the four provinces. In 1967 till 1971, Hye acted as the "chief architect" for the Generals Combatant Headquarter (GHQ), designing the entire GHQ buildings and associated areas for the military's staff services. Based in Lahore, he remained in that position until his retirement from government service in 1981. Many of his designs were built in the early 80's after his retirement. As Chief Architect of West Pakistan and Punjab, his designs included colleges, schools, polytechnic institutions -
Dhaka Polytechnic Institute, hospitals, housing schemes and townships. During this period, he designed more buildings than any other architect of his era in Pakistan.The best known of his projects is the Bahawalpur Medical College, now renamed
Quaid-e-Azam Medical College, in
Bahawalpur. His projects also included many
Tehsil Hospitals. Upon his retirement from service in 1981, A.R. Hye spent a few years travelling and living in the USA. After 1995 he lived a retired life in
Islamabad in a house designed by himself, dying on 18 September 2008. ] ==Selected projects==