Mona El Khatib
Reclaiming the City: Strategies for Inclusive Urban Development in Beirut's Central District.
Rel. Mario Artuso, Daniela Ciaffi. Politecnico di Torino, Master of science program in Architecture For The Sustainability Design, 2025
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Abstract
Reclaiming the City: Strategies for Inclusive Urban Development in Beirut's Central District Beirut’s Central District, specifically Martyr’s Square, has always been a physical and symbolic center for the city of Beirut, representing the city’s historical and socio-political changes. During the Ottoman era, it became a place to remember the martyred Lebanese nationalists of 1916. Since then, it has served as a public space for the city’s gatherings, a transportation hub, and a place for citizens to protest. However, during the Lebanese Civil War (1975 - 1990), Beirut was physically split in two: East and West Beirut. This left Martyr’s Square in the middle of the divide.
After the war, a private company set out to rebuild the Central District, adopting a modernist approach
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