Catch your idea and run with it,
until you ask us to stop.
A method, four readings
Looking back at the four projects together, what they share is not a style but a method.
In each case, we refused to start with form. The form arrived last, after a question had been asked and named: Skydive Dubai's question was about the suspended state of a body slowed in air; Ecodrive's was about a curriculum that is, by structure, a continuous loop; RP Tower's was about a contested urban field acted on by named pulls; the Iconic Mosque's was about a gesture older than any building. The form was the answer, not the prompt.
This is concept-first emergent design. The form derives analytically from the brief, the site, or the user's body, and traces back through the diagrams that produced it. The four conceptual generators look unrelated on the surface (urban force vectors, Klein bottle topology, suspended-state metaphor, prayer gesture), but they are the same operation performed on different briefs. Identify what the project really is. Find a precedent or topology that already encodes that idea. Resolve it into a plan.
The method is Cairo-trained. The lineage runs through Egyptian architectural teaching that puts method ahead of style and emergence ahead of imitation; it is named in full on the studio's about page. What matters here is that the methodology in these four projects is not a stylistic preference. It is the foundation the work was built on in 2013, and the foundation it returns to in 2026.