Yuseph's Portfolio

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Yuseph Sakr

I am a developing master of architecture student. I fell in love with architecture in front of the Khanqah of Shaykhu in downtown Cairo and will be continuing my studies in the University of Arizona, Tucson.

To me, design is an infinite cycle of playful trials of mediating between modernity and tradition, rather than a finite linear path with definite start and finish. These trials are mostly in the form of rough physical models. The models are not made only for the basis of presenting but to visualize materiality, Structural integrity, Spatial connections and form potential in a design process.

My brief internships with Sahel Al Hiyari and other prominent Jordanian architects, introduced the important principles of architectural design in the Levant region. I understood further the courtyard house when I was part of a team that designed the 2021 Biennale exhibition installation “Petrichor”.

I developed a profound passion for answering the question: How will we live in the future? Where I explore the answer through mediums ranging from simple construction techniques for the arid climate to site specific centralized structures.

A Less Bureaucratic Structure

Re-Framing Assembly

A City Within The Plume
Hidden Underneath

Excavation, a lot of Towers & 2 Parks

M.Arch Year 2

Instructor: Craig Nealy

Program: Town Center

Location: Phoenix, Arizona

In the unforgiving environment of Phoenix, where surface temperatures reach 140 °F a community town center is asked to be designed. Located off the I7 Highway, the site sits in the middle of an East to West residential urban sprawl. The project’s program had one major flow. How can you ask for a community to gather in such a climate?

The community town center decides to take refuge underground. The result of this excavation,is an opportunity to create a synthetic ground plane. This plane interacts with the underground in the form of protruding masses and highlighted openings. The outcome of this playful interaction is 2 parks. One under the ground plane to be used in the summer while the other highlighted by mysterious brick clad towers at the street level.

The towers give a glimpse of the town center program surrounding the park underneath. They allow for verticality to occur in this structure. The vertical movement of air, light and the user. The project asks the question: How do we design for communal structures in harsh environments?

Excavation

Program

The green roof is at street level, it creates a synthetic ground plane the building visually with the surrounding desert. The seamless landscape highlights the absence of greenery in the form of Towers and openings

Structure
+00.00
+00.00 -12.00

A Less Bureaucratic Structure

2025 Community Design Award

2024 AIA Design Excellence Winner

M.Arch Year 1

Collaboration w/ Francisco Fernandez

Instructor: Laura Carr

Program: Governmental

Location: Tuba City, Arizona

This community based project is located within the Navajo nation in Tuba city .The site is part of a 3 plot masterplan project to develop a portion of Tuba City for the Navajo tribe. It sits between a Juvenile center to the east and the civic plot to the west. It’s beautiful slope is made of shifty red sand. 3 Sacred cottonwood trees ask for the project to be built around them.

The project aims to challenge the common thresholds of governmental buildings. The program is split into 2 structures based on privacy and security of functions. The structures consist of 25ftx25ft CLT modules within a column and beam glulam framing system. The CLT modules join forming independent configurations. This allows the building to adapt and grow to future program changes. A pylon foundation raises the building allowing a sense of lightness to it’s stance.

The structures are roofed by standing seam metal sheets. Protrusions allow for the site to grow within the structures.

Underneath the standing seam roof, an unconditioned space is created. This communal spine contradicts with typical governmental building hallways.

Re-Framing Assembly

CAPLA Ideas Competition Winner

Collaboration w/ Montse Estrany & Greg Veitch Program: Re-envisioning the CAPLA student and alumni center

Location: Tucson, Arizona

The first floor of CAPLA’s West Building is primarily used as a circulation corridor, The Sundt Gallery, rarely programmed outside of large student reviews or events, often sits empty as the CAPLA community walks across it. The Student and Alumni Center (SAC) space is underutilized. The SAC feels cut off from the Sundt and from the larger CAPLA community.

The project creates informal moments within the SAC, the Sundt Gallery, and at the exterior entrances to CAPLA West. In this proposal a framework of prefabricated Ringlock scaffolding, readily sourced from construction sites are assembled in ways that carve out spaces from exhibition, for meeting, for sitting, for reviewing, for displaying.As program and spatial requirements change within the SAC and the first floor of CAPLA West, the intervention adapts to frame new configurations of space. The scaffolding is easily assembled and disassembled by the CAPLA community, and infill panels that reuse existing steel display boards and add off-the-shelf roll cork and textiles can be fabricated in the CAPLA shop.

Exposed HVAC

Torn Posters

Empty Cubicles

Model Graveyard

Sundt Gallery

Limited Visibility to SAC

Loud, Hard Surfaces

Empty Sundt

Existing Steel Display Boards

Non-Modular

Rust

No Model Space

Cork Panels

Sound Deafening Fabric

Re-purposed Steel Panels

2 Scaffolding is assembled into a structural grid.

3 Existing steel display boards are disassembled and re-purposed as infill panels.

4 Infill panels are configurable and interchangeable within the scaffolding framework

5 As program changes, the structure and infill panels are changeable

1 Scaffolding arrives reused from job sites.

7 Scaffolding and infill panels are easily disassembled and reused within CAPLA or re-purposed off site

6 Potential to create unlimited configurations of spaces

Plan for Everyday Use

Hang out at West entrance, a

created interesting opportunities of interaction between the existing and the temporal structures

Exhibition Maze

Removable and re-programmable vertical infill panels in a 3.25’ grid

Plan for Special Use

Registration at the West entrance, job fair sponsors in the Sundt, interviews in the SAC

Inhabitable Wall

Vertical and horizontal panels visually and audibly separate the conference room

Shear Wall Library

Cross-braced scaffolding walls 1’ apart stabilize the projecting inhabitable wall and exhibition maze

Exhibition Maze

Inhabitable Wall

Shear Wall Library

relationship between plane (panels) and Wskeleton (scaffolding) create unlimited possibilities of interaction for the user.

A City Within the Plume

2024 AIA Design Excellence Nominee

M.Arch Year 1

Individual Project

Instructor: Charlotte Algie

Program: Urban Study

Location: South Tucson, Arizona

During the 1950’s and 60’s a series of maintenance and cleaning drills were conducted at the south Tucson military base. The toxic chemicals used seeped into the subsurface groundwater. This created a 6 mile long toxic plume spanning from the south Tucson airport to Nogales Highway. Rendering the whole area as a Superfund site.

Th project deals with a city that has been fragmented by the contamination. This fragmentation inspired a new alternative to the modern way of living. A city that uses simple construction methods to be built by the people. A city the rises above the contamination. A city that roams freely within a rigid structural grid. Inspiring an incremental way of living. Weaving its way through the existing city. In times stitching the fragmented, in other times it creates new functions. In some scenarios, using the same grid, it goes under ground following the direction of the contamination. A city within the plume asks the question: How will our cities be shaped after destruction? Through the medium of physical modeling the project explores this question, deducing scenarios of structure, form and urban behavior.

Section through South Tucson exploring the subsurface nature of the contamination and how it’s mirrored on the city above
Top to bottom: 1- City 2- Ground topography 3- Contaminated groundwater 4- Clay topsoil 5- Bedrock 1000ft 100 500

Hidden Underneath

B.Arch 5th year

Individual Project

Instructor: Mohammed Khaled & Naif Haddad

Program: Health Facility

Location: Amman, Jordan

When Covid-19 hit Jordan in March 2020 it highlighted an existing flaw in the design of existing health facilities. The patient’s mental health was not seen as pivotal in their recovery. This project proposes a centralized typology of future pandemic health facilities. It utilizes a program that revolves around the patient and health worker psychological wellbeing.

The unique site shapes the project. The site can be explained as an opening in the forest that is oriented towards the dead sea view in the east. Thus the 136bed facility is designed to be underneath the ground. Providing the minimum visual footprint on the site. Sloped openings cladded with Ajlouni limestone create an outdoor patio for the patients. Brown brick wind towers and chimneys, that imitate the pine tree trunks, ventilate the underground spaces through the prevailing southern winds.

Research and previous iterations were published as a paper in 2021: 175 - 196

www.pandemicstudies.org/_files/ugd/d0a9b7_2363948f45324388b1ea95fbebfd6efd.pdf

Proximity to Urban Cluster

Prevailing southern Winds

Proximity to Teritary roads

Surrounding Forest

Existing Tpoography

Dead Sea View

The user goes through a journey of light and shade before reaching the other end of the forest.

thank you.

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