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Al-Tahrir Square, Cairo during 2011, from Undefined Space to Interactive Place

Khaled I. Nabil (Zagazig University, Egypt)

Re-Imagining Spaces and Places

ISBN: 978-1-80071-738-1, eISBN: 978-1-80071-737-4

Publication date: 29 March 2022

Abstract

Al-Tahrir Square (Liberation Square, in Arabic) is one of the main public spaces in Cairo, Egypt, and was the focal point for the Egyptian Revolution of January 2011. Although Tahrir Square is traditionally a noisy disliked crowded traffic zone, people gathering and demonstrating during 2011 transformed the a space into a livable interactive civic place (Bricoleurbanism, 2019). The study integrates three main subjects affecting each other: first; Tahrir history and its architectural description, second; activities and events of 2011 revolution at Tahrir and thirdly; theories and concepts of place/space transformations. Many space and place transformation cycles of the Al-Tahrir square have been studied for over a century. It shows that transformation happens when a “meaning” is added and “memories” turn into “behavior” and belonging (Pallasmaa, 2014). This chapter discusses how both the functions and the mental image of Al-Tahrir Square changed with the events along with the behavior of its occupants during 2011.

The square was analyzed to discover the mechanisms, motives, and reasons that caused such change. Furthermore, a comparison between Tahrir Square's status before and after 2011 was offered, according to “New Urbanism's successful places criteria” (PPS, 2009). Recently, physical and moral evacuation of the square deliberately enforced to replace its iconographic status as a place of revolution, with ancient Egyptian elements. This study elaborates on these results demonstrating how Cairo's Tahrir Square is a remarkable example of the dynamic nature of public spaces turning into places, and then into spaces again, due to actions of authority or the will of people.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Acknowledgments

To those who died and got injured in all Tahrir squares of Egypt, who dreamed of freedom, justice, dignity, and a democratic Egypt.

Citation

Nabil, K.I. (2022), "Al-Tahrir Square, Cairo during 2011, from Undefined Space to Interactive Place", Rozzoni, S., Boonstra, B. and Cutler-Broyles, T. (Ed.) Re-Imagining Spaces and Places (Emerald Interdisciplinary Connexions), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 27-44. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-80071-737-420221003

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022 Khaled I. Nabil. Published under exclusive licence by Emerald Publishing Limited