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Momen El-Husseiny
American University in Cairo
Occupation
Assistant Professor
Contact
ABOUT
PhD Candidate in Architecture from UC Berkeley since 2010, with designated emphasis in Global Metropolitan Studies and Anthropology. My research is about the dialectical relationship between politics and the production of enclaves, with the attempt of historicizing the immediate present of “gated communities” in metropolitan Cairo from 1952 to the present. The rise of the military caste together with the housing question had led to what I theorize as “security capitalism” as a framework to understand the growth of the city. Graduated from Cairo University in 2003 with MSc in Architectural Theory and Criticism and BSc in Architecture. Worked as a GSI in classes of architectural history, theory, design, and urbanization in developing countries at UC Berkeley, Cairo University, and the American University in Cairo. Invited as a guest speaker at UC Berkeley & Stanford University. Worked in the design of several architectural projects across the Middle East and Paris; designed the Performance & Visual Arts Building at the American University in Cairo (AUC) –new campus, designed schools in Cairo, Egyptian embassy in Tashkent, Housing projects, Mother and Child Hospital in Fort de France - Le Martinique, and other international competition entries. Volunteered in a set of non-governmental organizations in community development projects for housing and enhancing public spaces in the informal quarters. Published work at several conferences & journals like the Journal of Architectural Education, IASTE, AAG, and Jadaliyya.
Discipline
Architecture & Urban Planning
Sub Areas
Urban Studies
Development
Globalization
History Of Architecture
Identity/Representation
Middle East/Near East Studies
Modernization
Geographic Areas of Interest
Egypt
Specialties
Politics Of Space, Modernity, Splintering Urbanism, Gated Communities, New Cities
Languages
Arabic (native)
English (fluent)
French (elementary)
Education
PhD | 2015 | Architecture | University of California, Berkeley
MS | 2007 | Architecture | Cairo University
Abstracts
The De-/Re- Walling of Tahrir: Space, Agency, and Regimes of Power An Architecture of the In-Between: Modernizing Egyptian Peasant Space, 1940-1952 Private Security and the Perception of Upper-Middle Class in Cairo’s Gated Communities Once Upon a Time, a Modernist Building on the Nile Mega-Peripheries and Cairo’s New Administrative Capital: Contradictions of Squatting and Unsettled Livelihoods around the New Urban Future