Sergio Zgheib - Peter Aoun, Lea Lahoud - Rita Abi Zeid , Julien Mikhael, Nour Kreidy, Thea Bechara
student
Lebanese University - Faculty of Fine Arts and Architecture
Lebanon
Architecture
The aim of "Beirut Port: An Urban Life Generator" is to convert Beirut Port from an industrial barrier to an urban connector. more
Cagil Yurdakul Toker
advisor
https://www.itu.edu.tr/en
turkish
Currently, I am working as a senior lecturer in the Interior Design Department at Raffles College… more
You’re thinking at a large scale and aiming to turn the port into more than just an industrial area, which is great. One of the strongest parts of your project is how you reconnect the port to the surrounding areas. The main axis, tunnels, and softer connections show a good understanding of how to stitch the city back together. The way you organise the port into industrial, transit, and public zones works well and helps manage the complexity. Turning the silos into a memorial adds emotional meaning and connects well to Beirut’s context.
You’ve clearly taken advantage of the open brief, which is good, but right now it feels like there are too many ideas at once without clear priorities. There are many functions, but it’s not always clear what is most important or how they relate to each other. Because of this, the project feels more like a collection of ideas than a clear, focused proposal. Another area to improve is the human experience. The masterplan is clear, but we don’t really get a sense of what it feels like to move through the spaces.
Think more about how people experience key areas such as the waterfront, urban balconies, and cultural zones. Decide what the main focus of your project is, not everything can be equally important. Choose 2–3 important spaces and develop them further to show human interaction. The industrial zone is well planned, but it feels quite separate from the public areas. It would be stronger if you explored how these two could connect or interact more.
19.03.2026