Newsletter 13. June 2026

As part of the conference “Habiter, raconter, partager les Méditerranées” in Marseille last week (24,25 June), I presented my paper “Drawing from Documentation to Urban Heritage Exploratory: The Description of Alexandria”. I reflected on how drawing can function not only as a documentation technique but also as a qualitative research method for understanding urban heritage. Using the Description of Alexandria initiative as a case study, I explored how collaborative drawing, documentation, and public engagement can create qualitative archives that capture both the physical fabric of the city and the everyday practices, memories, and meanings that shape it. Rather than producing static records, drawing becomes a slow, investigative process that reveals layers of urban transformation, social use, and collective memory.

It was particularly rewarding to discuss how these approaches contribute to broader conversations on Mediterranean cities, where heritage is continuously negotiated through the interactions between people, place, and lived experience.

Many thanks to the organisers and participants for the engaging discussions and thoughtful exchanges.

The conference is part of la Saison Méditerranée 2026 and organised by EHESS – École des hautes études en sciences sociales in partnership with l’ensa•marseille — École Nationale Supérieure d’Architecture de Marseille at l’IMVT – Institut méditerranéen de la ville et des territoires in Marseille.

More info: https://www.ehess.fr/jcms/186929_JEvent/fr/habiter-raconter-partager-les-mediterranees-le-programme


Newsletter 12. May 2026

The RCN is a transdisciplinary network to promote ecologically and socially inclusive revitalisation of rivers and the landscapes/riverscapes, cities and neighbourhoods that co-exist with them. https://www.rivercities.world/

Thanks to Paul Rabé, Satya Maia Patchineelam, Nancy Abdel-Moneim, Erik Aschenbrand, Mohammed Maher, Sherif Ezzeldin, International Institute for Asian Studies (IIAS), and everyone behind this stunning event.

As part of the Institut français’s flagship programme: Saison Méditerranée 2026, my exhibition Mediterranean Reflections from Alexandria and Marseille was inaugurated on the 15th of February at the Institut français d’Alexandrie, in the presence of the Ambassador and the Consul of France in Egypt.

This exhibition presents a visual dialogue between the two Mediterranean port cities, moving beyond their postcard pre-structured images. The work delves into the ordinary urban fabric, the thresholds, shopfronts, and everyday informal practices that shape their unique heritage and cultural identities. Drawing on the concept of the “Third Place,” the photographs and drawings on display read the Mediterranean street as a shared living room, a space where domestic life and collective memory extend into the public sphere. By de-emphasising monumentality in favour of the “ordinary,” this practice-based research offers a counter-narrative to mainstream heritage discourse, proposing the Mediterranean as a shared sensory environment that transcends political borders. The research explores how societies are influenced and shaped by urban identity, cultural heritage, and collective memory. Additionally, it examines how similarities and/or differences may represent different expressions of a shared Mediterranean vocabulary, reflected in architecture, urban planning, and social practices.


Newsletter 11. November 2025

I extend my heartfelt thanks to everyone who helped make this project a reality, especially Mohamed Mehaina and Mohamed El-Awwad.

Photo credit: Dr Rawda M. Abd-Elhady

Newsletter 10. May 2025


Newsletter 09. January 2025


Newsletter 08. November 2024


Newsletter 07. May 2024










Newsletter 03. January 2022


Newsletter 02. July 2021


Newsletter 01. November 2020

Addis Ababa, Djibouti the capital

Working with the young team in Nubia

The call for stories is still open till February 2020

Photo credit: Shelter