The Bawab who Hosted the Street From Collective Space to Urban Commons
How can informal social roles, like that of the bawab, be re-understood not as relics of hierarchy, but as agents of care and community mediation in Cairo’s increasingly segregated urban landscape? In a city where public life is fragmented by class and access, the project asks how spatial configurations shaped by everyday domestic labor might be mobilized to produce intentional public spaces grounded in equity and hospitality. The project observes how the bawab’s domesticity, constrained by limited private space, often spills into the public realm. Sidewalks become informal extensions of daily life: spaces shaped by necessity rather than design. These spontaneous acts form a persistent urban language, shaping the identity of Cairo’s street furniture and spatial culture. By engaging with the invisible networks created by bawabin, the project repositions them as social connectors who facilitate collective participation in shared urban rituals. It explores how informal care and spatial improvisation can act as urban commons in the production of shared space beyond formal planning. The project proposes a series of multifunctional, non-commercial public interventions in Zamalek in the format of urban devices. Rooted in everyday rituals of hospitality and care, these spaces reclaim overlooked moments of encounter, offering grounded, adaptable tools for coexistence in the city. This work challenges the boundaries between private and public life, asking how the codes of domesticity might be extended into the street. It addresses spatial inequality by positioning the bawab not only as a symbolic figure, but as an active agent of shared agency.
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