Ainna Sabri
student
National University of Malaysia(UKM), Faculty of Engineering & Built Environment, Department of Architecture, Bangi, Selangor
Malaysia
Architecture
INTERCONNECT - Connection of Old and New Spaces Connecting Paths, Connecting Programs, Connecting People Interconnect is a building consisting of Thai Kwong… more
Stefan Stanković
advisor
GAF - University of Niš - Faculty of Civil Engineering and Architecture
Serbian
To create sustainable space for a future generation more
This project demonstrates an impressive integration of architectural storytelling, heritage sensitivity, and urban regeneration. It tackles the challenge of reviving a forgotten or underutilized urban site by introducing a strong linear axis that reconnects fragmented areas into a cohesive cultural narrative. The use of red as a visual anchor is bold and effective—it creates a rhythm through the site and adds a contemporary signature to an otherwise quiet urban texture.
The programmatic clarity is commendable. Spaces such as the gallery, theatre, market kiosk, and outdoor plaza are logically distributed and clearly support public engagement. The sectional drawings beautifully illustrate how architecture mediates between built form and nature—especially in the way pavilions are elevated or embedded in the landscape. The perspectives also communicate a very human-centric experience, full of light, movement, and layered transparency.
This is a mature and layered urban proposal, grounded in a deep understanding of place and people. It succeeds in reactivating the site not just spatially, but culturally and symbolically, blending memory and modernity. With a few refinements in hierarchy and detail expression, this has the potential to serve as a strong benchmark for public space regeneration in historical urban cores.
Exceptional work—rooted, articulate, and socially conscious.
While the visual documentation is rich, certain panels feel overly dense. Consolidating the number of small-scale reference photos and process notes into more legible blocks might help highlight the core ideas more effectively.
A few components, particularly in the facades, show slight inconsistencies in material articulation. Clarifying how the red volumes interact with glazing, shading devices, and contextual vegetation would elevate the design cohesion.
Since this is a public-oriented project, you could strengthen it with more zoomed-in visuals of tactile urban elements—seating, paving transitions, lighting, signage, water runoff—anything that communicates care for everyday user experience.
Introducing a phasing diagram or future adaptability plan would address how the project evolves over time and with the community. Does the cultural axis become a framework for future infill or temporary events?