Comparative Analysis of Postmodern Architectural Expression in Egyptian University Campuses: Functional, Environmental, and Symbolic Dimensions | ||
| JES. Journal of Engineering Sciences | ||
| Article 11, Volume 54, Issue 4, July and August 2026 | ||
| Document Type: Research Paper | ||
| DOI: 10.21608/jesaun.2025.416286.1702 | ||
| Authors | ||
| Hanaa Elsabbagh* 1; Samar Alsayed Ahmed2 | ||
| 1Lecturer of Architecture in Architectural department, Faculty of Engineering, Giza Engineering Institute, Giza Egypt | ||
| 2lecturer of architecture at Architectural department, International Academy for Engineering & Media Science (IAEMS), Media production city | ||
| Abstract | ||
| Postmodern design in Egyptian university campuses blends symbolism and eclectic form, yet often neglects environmental and functional performance. This study provides a novel, performance-based comparative analysis of two postmodern campuses in Greater Cairo: the American University in Cairo (AUC) and the October University for Modern Sciences and Arts (MSA). Using a mixed-method approach that integrates environmental simulation, user surveys, expert interviews, and spatial mapping, the research evaluates postmodern tactics along three analytical axes—functional, environmental, and symbolic. Quantitative and qualitative data were analyzed to determine how each campus performs in relation to spatial hierarchy, climatic responsiveness, and cultural expression. Results reveal that while both campuses express rich symbolic vocabularies, AUC demonstrates greater coherence between design intent and user experience, reflecting higher thermal comfort and spatial clarity. MSA, in contrast, emphasizes stylistic eclecticism over environmental adaptation and legibility. The study contributes to understanding postmodernism beyond its aesthetic discourse by connecting architectural meaning to measurable spatial and environmental performance, thereby proposing an integrated framework for climate-conscious, culturally grounded campus design suited to arid regional contexts. | ||
| Keywords | ||
| postmodern architecture; university campus; spatial configuration; thermal comfort; symbolic expression | ||
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