Céline Ziadé
student
USEK - Holy spirit University of Kaslik
Lebanon
Architecture
As humans, can we still handle urban density? Can we breathe in increasingly saturated cities? And above all, what is our role as architects in this context?… more
Aleen SABA
advisor
USEK - Holy spirit University of Kaslik
Lebanese
When establishing a design, every architect will consider what exactly they want to communicate by… more
As someone who is both from Lebanon and a proud USEK graduate and instructor, I want to say how truly proud I am to see projects like yours. It’s inspiring to witness such thoughtful architectural proposals that go beyond form, engaging with our urban realities, cultural gaps, and the emotional weight of place.
Your project tackles a powerful theme with clarity and sensitivity—rethinking how we inhabit dense, fragmented cities like Jounieh and Maameltein. I especially appreciate how you frame the sea as a mediating, healing force and how your intervention avoids imposition, instead fostering reconnection and well-being.
I would have been even more grateful if the plans in the attached PDF were clearer. Given the complexity and richness of your narrative, clear plans would have helped convey how these concepts translate spatially and functionally.
Dear Aleen SABA,
I truly appreciate your kind and encouraging feedback. As someone who also shares a strong bond with both Lebanon and USEK, your feedback holds special meaning for me.
It’s incredibly fulfilling to know that the core ideas I hoped to convey—especially the reconnection to the sea and the careful engagement with the fractured urban fabric—resonated with you. I’ve been deeply engaged with an approach to architecture that goes beyond forms—one that acts as a social and emotional mediator—and your reflection reinforces that intention.
Warm regards,
Céline Ziadé