Talk
|
Virtual

Athar Lina Initiative: Heritage as a Community Resource

Date
Tue
,
May 2
Time
12:00 pm
-
1:30 pm
Location
Get tickets
Megawra – Built Environment Collective | Al-Khalifa Park, Cairo, Egypt, ongoing. Image courtesy Megawra – Built Environment Collective

The 2022–23 Current Work series examines projects and firms enacting new modes of architectural practice, collaboration, and community engagement.

Cairo’s Al-Khalifa neighborhood houses an extraordinary density of historic sites, from mosques and cemeteries to museums and public space. Since 2012, Megawra, an Egyptian nonprofit architectural office, has partnered with the Built Environment Collective (BEC), a local cultural and urban development organization, to conserve and revitalize this district.

Named the Athar Lina Initiative (“the monument is ours”), this place-based project envisions historic sites as a resource, not a burden. Under the leadership of architect May al-Ibrashy, Megawra – BEC has implemented a wide range of programs oriented not only toward research and architectural conservation, but also toward citizen participation, community education, and the revival of traditional crafts.

Alongside this work, the practice produces Megawra Papers, a series of publications documenting Megawra – BEC’s applied research and its wider implications for the fields of historic conservation and urban revitalization.

Recent projects include:

Al-Imam al-Shafi’i Mausoleum Conservation Project and Visitors’ Centre, the structural and aesthetic conservation of a historic mausoleum and the addition of an onsite visitors’ center

Al-Khalifa Park, a public park whose irrigation system reuses groundwater from two local thirteenth-century domes

Al-Hattaba Development Project, a community-driven master plan for a historic neighborhood previously slated for demolition.

May al-Ibrashy is chair of the Built Environment Collective (BEC) and principal of Megawra. She holds a bachelor’s in architectural engineering from Ain Shams University in Cairo, a master’s in the history of Islamic art and architecture from the University of London (UoL), and a PhD in archaeology, also from UoL. She is an honorary professor of practice at the UoL’s School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) and received a 2022 Prince Claus Impact Award.

This program will be moderated by Randall Mason. Mason is a professor at the University of Pennsylvania’s Weitzman School of Design and the founding director of the school’s Center for the Preservation of Civil Rights Sites. He formerly served as the executive director of PennPraxis and chair of Penn’s Graduate Program in Historic Preservation.

1.5 New York State and AIA CEUs are offered for this lecture.