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ALL PROJECTS


The Front Yard
Transforming Tel Aviv's Back Yard into a Front Door.
The project reimagines one of Tel Aviv’s busiest transportation and employment zones, long perceived as the city’s “back yard,” into a welcoming and vibrant urban gateway. It introduces a continuous network of pedestrian and soft-mobility routes that stitch together fragmented edges and create new public spaces for movement, encounter, and leisure. Drawing inspiration from the historic Geddes Plan, the design adapts Tel Aviv’s urban grid into a contemporary green infrastructure, softening the harsh boundaries of highways and transforming them into a humane and accessible urban landscape.
This project was developed in collaboration with architect Dafna Galeen.
The project reimagines one of Tel Aviv’s busiest transportation and employment zones, long perceived as the city’s “back yard,” into a welcoming and vibrant urban gateway. It introduces a continuous network of pedestrian and soft-mobility routes that stitch together fragmented edges and create new public spaces for movement, encounter, and leisure. Drawing inspiration from the historic Geddes Plan, the design adapts Tel Aviv’s urban grid into a contemporary green infrastructure, softening the harsh boundaries of highways and transforming them into a humane and accessible urban landscape.
This project was developed in collaboration with architect Dafna Galeen.


House of Democracy
From Fortress to Forum.
This project reinterprets Jerusalem’s National quarter, home to Israel’s main government institutions, as an open, civic landscape rather than a fortified seat of power. Through strategies of openness, integration, and movement, the design introduces housing, public promenades, and democratic meeting spaces into the heart of the governmental complex.
The project challenges the separation between citizen and state, transforming a ceremonial, hierarchical environment into an accessible and participatory public realm.
By connecting Sacher Park and the Rose Garden through a renewed landscape axis, it proposes a physical and symbolic framework for a new democratic urban order, one that belongs to the people.
This project reinterprets Jerusalem’s National quarter, home to Israel’s main government institutions, as an open, civic landscape rather than a fortified seat of power. Through strategies of openness, integration, and movement, the design introduces housing, public promenades, and democratic meeting spaces into the heart of the governmental complex.
The project challenges the separation between citizen and state, transforming a ceremonial, hierarchical environment into an accessible and participatory public realm.
By connecting Sacher Park and the Rose Garden through a renewed landscape axis, it proposes a physical and symbolic framework for a new democratic urban order, one that belongs to the people.


The Green Core
What If Train Stations Could Feed Cities?
Tel Aviv Sovidor Station is the second-largest train station in Israel today with 13.5 million passengers annually. It houses six platforms and almost all of the Israeli train lines pass through it.
This project aims to reimagine the circulation in the existing station, using hydroponic vertical farming as a guiding element in space. It does so with the minimal possible intervention in the existing train station structure.
The project creates a situation of “consumption on the way” for the passengers to purchase while passing through the station.
This project was developed in collaboration with architect Yuval Ehud.
Tel Aviv Sovidor Station is the second-largest train station in Israel today with 13.5 million passengers annually. It houses six platforms and almost all of the Israeli train lines pass through it.
This project aims to reimagine the circulation in the existing station, using hydroponic vertical farming as a guiding element in space. It does so with the minimal possible intervention in the existing train station structure.
The project creates a situation of “consumption on the way” for the passengers to purchase while passing through the station.
This project was developed in collaboration with architect Yuval Ehud.


Desert Flow
The First Indoor Desert Hike.
This project explores architecture as a journey of movement, transforming the act of hiking into a spatial experience. Embedded within the Negev cliffs, the building is revealed gradually, like a hidden trail. Visitors move through interconnected paths, terraces, and lookout points that frame the desert landscape at carefully curated moments.
A sequence of stairs, ramps, and viewpoints creates an immersive route between a café, art workshop, and shaded “refreshing stop,” encouraging exploration rather than direct circulation. Precise openings capture shifting light, views, and atmosphere throughout the day.
Located in a small Negev town, the project responds to the region’s environmental and social conditions, including climate, topography, and community needs. Developed as part of a construction technologies course, it includes detailed structural and material solutions rooted in the realities of desert architecture.
This project was developed in collaboration with architect Dafna Galeen.
This project explores architecture as a journey of movement, transforming the act of hiking into a spatial experience. Embedded within the Negev cliffs, the building is revealed gradually, like a hidden trail. Visitors move through interconnected paths, terraces, and lookout points that frame the desert landscape at carefully curated moments.
A sequence of stairs, ramps, and viewpoints creates an immersive route between a café, art workshop, and shaded “refreshing stop,” encouraging exploration rather than direct circulation. Precise openings capture shifting light, views, and atmosphere throughout the day.
Located in a small Negev town, the project responds to the region’s environmental and social conditions, including climate, topography, and community needs. Developed as part of a construction technologies course, it includes detailed structural and material solutions rooted in the realities of desert architecture.
This project was developed in collaboration with architect Dafna Galeen.


AEROPOINT
Creating Space in Space.
Located in the historic 1930s International Style building by architect Yohanan Ratner, within the Technion’s Faculty of Aerospace Engineering, the project transforms a preserved structure into a contemporary student hub.
The design celebrates the original column grid, a symbol of structure and aspiration, and translates it into a spatial system that shapes diverse social zones through partitions, color, and light. Balancing acoustic performance and warmth, the space creates a dynamic and inviting environment for student life within the faculty.
This project was developed in collaboration with architect Dafna Galeen.
Located in the historic 1930s International Style building by architect Yohanan Ratner, within the Technion’s Faculty of Aerospace Engineering, the project transforms a preserved structure into a contemporary student hub.
The design celebrates the original column grid, a symbol of structure and aspiration, and translates it into a spatial system that shapes diverse social zones through partitions, color, and light. Balancing acoustic performance and warmth, the space creates a dynamic and inviting environment for student life within the faculty.
This project was developed in collaboration with architect Dafna Galeen.


The Greenhouse Pavilion
Where Discarded Materials Become Space, Community, and Meaning.
A pavilion built almost entirely from recycled construction materials collected around the Technion campus.
Inspired by the form of an agricultural greenhouse, it combines sustainable design with a flexible interior space for gathering and display.
Reusing wood, metal, and concrete elements, the project highlights the hidden potential of on-site waste while creating a light, inviting, and energy-efficient structure.
This project was developed in collaboration with architect Noy Shaer.
A pavilion built almost entirely from recycled construction materials collected around the Technion campus.
Inspired by the form of an agricultural greenhouse, it combines sustainable design with a flexible interior space for gathering and display.
Reusing wood, metal, and concrete elements, the project highlights the hidden potential of on-site waste while creating a light, inviting, and energy-efficient structure.
This project was developed in collaboration with architect Noy Shaer.
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