
"Beit Hawa, is a residential project in Uptown Cairo shaped by the ethos of morphosis, where the interior architecture functions as an adaptive system rather than a static arrangement. The design moves away from rigid modernist typologies, employing fluid spatial sequences that negotiate transitions between private and public zones. Surfaces and volumes are defined through layered materiality, integrating light, texture, and structural clarity into a coherent spatial syntax. Circulation operates as a generative element, creating smooth shifts that dissolve conventional boundaries between functions."
"Circulation operates as a generative element, creating smooth shifts that dissolve conventional boundaries between functions."
Beit Hawa is a residential project in Uptown Cairo shaped by the ethos of morphosis, where interior architecture operates as an adaptive system rather than a static arrangement. The design rejects rigid modernist typologies and adopts fluid spatial sequences to negotiate transitions between private and public zones. Surfaces and volumes are articulated through layered materiality that integrates light, texture, and structural clarity into a coherent spatial syntax. Circulation is prioritized as a generative device, producing smooth spatial shifts that blur conventional boundaries and enable flexible relationships between functions.
Read at www.archdaily.com
Unable to calculate read time
Collection
[
|
...
]