Nezar AlSayyad


Nezar Al Sayyad is an architect, city planner, urban designer, urban historian, and professor emeritus at the University of California Berkeley in the College of Environmental Design, where he received the Distinguished Teaching Award. Educated as an architect, planner, and urban historian, AlSayyad is principally an urbanist whose specialty is the study of cities, their urban forms and spaces, and their impact on their social and cultural realities. As a scholar, AlSayyad has written and edited several books on colonialism, identity, Islamic architecture, tourism, tradition, urbanism, urban design, urban history, urban informality, and virtuality.

Career

In 1988, AlSayyad co-founded the International Association for the Study of Traditional Environments, a scholarly association concerned with the study of indigenous vernacular and popular built environments around the world. In the same year he founded the area of Environmental Design and Urbanism in Developing Countries, an interdisciplinary area of research that connects history, theory, social processes, and design at both the undergraduate and graduate levels in the College of Environmental Design at the University of California, Berkeley. As an academic advisor, AlSayyad has worked with more than 50 PhD students in both architecture and planning in addition to supervising more than a hundred M.Arch, MCP and MUD theses during his 33-year career at Berkeley.
AlSayyad has also produced and co-directed two public television video documentaries: Virtual Cairo and At Home with Mother Earth. He has received grants from the U.S. Department of Education, NEA—Design Arts Program, Getty Grant Program, the Graham Foundation, the SSRC, and a Guggenheim fellowship. His awards include the Beit Al-Quran Medal from Bahrain, the Pioneer American Society Book Award, and the American Institute of Architects Education Honors. AlSayyad maintains a small architecture and urban design practice XXA- The Office of Xross-Xultural Architecture which provides design and consulting work to various clients in the US and several developing countries. AlSayyad has been invited as a visiting professor and as a lecturer in more than 40 countries.
AlSayyad is the president of the International Association for the Study of Traditional Environments, and faculty director of the Center for Arab Societies and Environments Studies. He is a member of the Urban Design Graduate Group and the Global Studies Graduate Group. For almost two decades AlSayyad also chaired the Center for Middle Eastern Studies at Berkeley.

Areas of study

Nezar AlSayyad was born in Cairo, Egypt, to a family of educators. His father was a well-known geographer, poet and an intellectual in Egypt. As a child AlSayyad enjoyed reading and learning. His other interest was in building with his hands, creating designs and analyzing architectural and city forms. Having spent a year in Norman, Oklahoma as a child, AlSayyad decided to return and make his life in the US. Following his graduation from high school, AlSayyad joined Cairo University where he excelled as both an undergraduate and graduate student obtaining his Bachelor of Architectural Engineering in 1977 and his Higher Diploma - Town Planning in 1979.
In 1981, AlSayyad finished his M.S. in Architecture at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He then went on to work for Yamasaki & Associates, architects of the World Trade Center, before accepting his first professorial position at the King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia. After publishing his first book, AlSayyad was invited by the architectural historian Spiro Kostof to join Berkeley to pursue a PhD in architectural and urban history. AlSayyad worked as a lecturer in the Department of City and Regional Planning in the same college. By the time of his PhD completion in 1988, AlSayyad had established the International Association for the Study of Traditional Environments where he served and still serves as the president and chief editor of the Association's peer-reviewed journal Traditional Dwellings and Settlements Review.

Books