A passionate designer and an artist with a thinking hand, I seek knowledge in every new experience and always looking for something new to explore. Art and architecture are the fields in which I found my passion, every project is an opportunity to learn and communicate new ideas and express this passion as the source of it lays within the rhythm of geometry and the beautiful touch of colours.
Between the notion of representing a country and hosting a country, the embassy is the structure that embodies this notion. In this project I looked into materialism in representing Australia and the hosting country for the embassy, Jordan. The concept started from studying the morphology of the site in the urban scale and reflect the findings in the embassy scale. The evident finding from the site is that there is a green flow going across the street that impacts the buildings. I took this flow and turned it into a social spine with seating areas and tiling pattern inspired by this flow and the indigenous art and symbolism. The building is divided by the site slope into public and private facilities of the embassy, and the spine connects the spaces within each section. All the functions are enclosed within walls made of local Jordanian stone to represent the local architecture there and within these walls lays the copper perforated mesh that represent the mineral wealth of Australia. The holes of the mesh represent the indigenous dot art and they vary is size to provide rich spatial experience in the interior spaces with the shades and shadows. Materialism in the stone and the copper mesh is used to represent the two countries and emphasise on the notion of a country hosting another, the integration between the countries is reflected in integration between these two materials.