-My journey didn’t start at a desk, it started in the water. I have been a professional swimmer since I was two years and nine months old.A life spent in a lane line where there is no room for excuses, only rhythm and endurance. This life long discipline taught me that anything worth building requires a steady pulse and the grit to push through the "wall." I don’t just approach projects with a creative eye, I approach them with the stamina of an athlete who knows that the final lap is where the race is won.
I chose Architecture because I wanted my solutions to have weight. While graphic design allowed me to change how people think, architecture allows me to change how they live. I didn't want to just stay on the surface; I wanted to solve the "residential mayhem" and traffic rhythms that define our daily lives. I moved into this field to ensure things are done the right way—blending the technical "bones" of a building with the human experience that happens inside them.
"I am a hybrid of three worlds: the discipline of a lifelong swimmer, the precision of a veteran designer, and the soul of an architect. I’ve spent my life finding the logic in Cairo’s 'creative mayhem,' using my professional background to turn urban chaos into a functional legacy. I’m not just building a career; I’m here to leave a print on the city I love."
I’ve always been the guy who sees what everyone else misses. Whether it’s the "hidden gems" in a dusty Cairo alleyway or the accidental art of a neighbor’s balcony, my perspective is a hybrid of three worlds: the focus of a swimmer, the precision of a designer, and the empathy of an architect. I don’t believe in "normal" jobs or standard approaches. I believe in adding a specific taste and a cinematic dignity to everything I touch, proving that even our most chaotic spaces have a hidden logic.



