The House, The Urban Fabric: Reclaiming Aleppo Through Urban Reconstruction ArchitectureThe House, The Urban Fabric: Reclaiming Aleppo Through Urban Reconstruction Architecture

The House, The Urban Fabric: Reclaiming Aleppo Through Urban Reconstruction Architecture

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UNI Editorial published Results under Research, Landscape Design on Nov 30, 2025

In the heart of Aleppo—a city shaped by centuries of cultural exchange, craftsmanship, and collective memory—the scars of recent conflict remain deeply inscribed upon its urban landscape. The House, The Urban Fabric is an architectural proposal that confronts these layers of history and destruction with a restorative vision rooted in urban reconstruction architecture. Created by Tatiana P, fabian3412, and Arkiworks, the project seeks to rebuild not merely structures, but the very essence of Syrian urban life: its traditions, its circulation patterns, and the communal spirit embedded within its historic neighborhoods.

Through a careful reading of Aleppo’s past and the lived routines of its residents, the project builds upon what existed, acknowledges what was lost, and imagines how the city can reunify in the future. Its design philosophy is grounded in preserving the cultural diary of Syrians—understanding their homes, their souks, their courtyards, and the intricate web of alleyways that once stitched together a thriving community.

A visual transition from traditional Aleppo to its war-torn phase and toward a reimagined, unified future city.
A visual transition from traditional Aleppo to its war-torn phase and toward a reimagined, unified future city.
A warm, illuminated public space shaped by patterned textile canopies and sculptural pillars.
A warm, illuminated public space shaped by patterned textile canopies and sculptural pillars.

From Traditional City to Gathered City

The project positions Aleppo within three overlapping temporal frames:

  • Traditional City – The historic, thriving Aleppo with its courtyards, stone façades, shaded markets, and layered public life.
  • Destroyed City – A fractured, wounded urban fabric left in the wake of conflict.
  • Gathered City – A hopeful future forged through collective regeneration and renewed spatial identity.

The architects map these phases not as separate chapters but as a continuum. The goal is to guide Aleppo from its current state toward a cohesive urban future where public spaces heal, protect, and celebrate community resilience.

The Urban Fabric as Foundation

At the heart of the proposal lies a deep study of Syrian courtyard architecture and the social rituals it sustains. By examining how people move through their neighborhoods—how they pass from alleys into iwans, into courtyards, into communal spaces—the design reconstructs the city from its most intimate scale.

Key Components of the Urban Fabric

  • The Cell (The House): Each home becomes a building block of memory and identity.
  • The Courtyard: A climatic and social core that organizes everyday life.
  • The Alleyway: A connective rhythm where neighbors meet, children play, and communities interact.
  • Public Facilities: Spaces designed for gathering, worship, exchange, and debate.

By re-establishing these foundational elements, the project rethreads the textures of Aleppo’s historical fabric—one courtyard, one alley, one gathering space at a time.

Restoring Aleppo’s Essential Public Places

The project prioritizes spaces where Syrians become a community again—locations where memory can be restored, where cultural identity is reclaimed, and where the city begins to recognize itself.

This involves a phased architectural and landscape strategy:

1. Consolidation

  • Stabilizing ruins through minimal intervention.
  • Protecting water sources and reintroducing jasmine and native plants.
  • Honoring fragments of heritage without erasing the marks of war.

2. Rehabilitation

  • Restoring old structures and extending them with lightweight, adaptable spatial systems.
  • Reimagining historic markets and public nodes as flexible civic spaces.

3. Landscaping

  • Using rehabilitated, medium-height, and flowering vegetation to soften damaged urban areas.
  • Rebuilding ecological continuity around the Aleppo Citadel.

4. New Building System

A new architectural language emerges, characterized by:

  • Clear roofs allowing filtered sunlight.
  • Interior and exterior textiles inspired by Syrian geometric patterns.
  • Pillars supporting a translucent canopy that frames monumental views.

This hybrid architecture—both contemporary and deeply rooted in tradition—becomes a symbol of renewal.

A contemporary reinterpretation of Aleppo’s historic market streets, layered with vibrant textiles and commerce.
A contemporary reinterpretation of Aleppo’s historic market streets, layered with vibrant textiles and commerce.
A flexible textile structure embedded within a lush courtyard, reconnecting people with nature and heritage.
A flexible textile structure embedded within a lush courtyard, reconnecting people with nature and heritage.

Textile Architecture: A Cultural and Climatic Strategy

One of the most distinctive elements of the proposal is its use of textile-based structures, a direct reference to Syria’s heritage of weaving, pattern-making, and craftsmanship.

Functions of the Textile System

  • Environmental Control: Creates shade, controls wind, and reduces heat during summer months.
  • Spatial Flexibility: Textiles can be expanded, overlapped, or condensed depending on the scale of events.
  • Cultural Identity: Patterns echo Aleppo’s visual heritage, restoring familiarity and belonging.
  • Lightness and Transparency: Allows public gatherings to feel open, breathable, and inclusive.

These airy structures mediate between interior and exterior, between old and new, between memory and transformation.

A Space for Debate, Identity, and Reconstruction

The central public building is envisioned as a hub of civic life—a place where respectful public debate can occur and where Syrians can reconnect with one another and with their city. The architecture recognizes the equality of all people, offering neutral ground for discussion, celebration, and shared experience.

Its flexibility supports:

  • Massive public events
  • Hybrid indoor-outdoor gatherings
  • Souk-inspired small spaces
  • Cultural performances, markets, and festivals

As Aleppo moves into a new era, this space becomes a catalyst for social cohesion. By enabling citizens to express themselves, remember their past, and shape their own future, the project invests in long-term community empowerment.

Rebuilding Public Life Through Everyday Spaces

The project extends beyond large-scale architecture. It focuses on the elasticity of spaces that define Syrian domestic and civic life—from small courtyards to expansive event plazas.

By restoring these spaces, the project aims to:

  • Rebuild routines disrupted by war.
  • Strengthen connections between private homes and public squares.
  • Allow neighborhoods to regain a sense of place.
  • Reinforce memories tied to landscapes, smells, colors, and textures.

The design revives the multisensory qualities of Aleppo—not only its structures but also its atmosphere.

Light, Climate, and Biodynamic Qualities

Textile canopies and flexible shading systems enhance environmental comfort:

  • Filtering sunlight naturally.
  • Creating gradations of shade.
  • Reducing heat radiation during peak summer.
  • Allowing breezes to circulate.

The result is a breathable architectural environment deeply suited to Aleppo’s climate and cultural patterns of outdoor living.

 Toward a Gathered, Resilient, Reunified Aleppo

The House, The Urban Fabric is more than a reconstruction project—it is a vision for healing. By grounding the future of Aleppo in its traditional spatial intelligence, the proposal merges memory with innovation, honoring the footprints of the past while opening pathways toward a resilient, unified future.

Through urban reconstruction architecture, Tatiana P, fabian3412, and Arkiworks offer a roadmap where architecture becomes a tool of reconciliation—where rebuilt streets, markets, and courtyards become places of gathering, identity, and hope once again.

A monumental yet lightweight canopy near the Citadel, designed to host collective events and public life.
A monumental yet lightweight canopy near the Citadel, designed to host collective events and public life.
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