Life Inside Dirt; Soil as A Living Archive: Restoring Communities and Spaces on “Nailor’s Row”

dc.contributor.advisorWiszniewski, Dorian
dc.contributor.advisorPattinson, Paul
dc.contributor.advisorHilley, Mark
dc.contributor.advisorCunning, Neil
dc.contributor.advisorXian, Leo
dc.contributor.advisorDochartaigh, Killian O’
dc.contributor.authorAlharbi, Saud
dc.date.accessioned2025-11-08T20:36:26Z
dc.date.issued2025
dc.descriptionLife Inside Dirt: Soil as a Living Archive — Restoring Communities and Spaces on “Nailor’s Row” explores how soil in Derry/Londonderry functions as a dynamic archive of memory, ecology, and community identity. Framing the ground as both material and metaphor, the study proposes an architectural and urban design methodology that reads soil as record, medium, and collaborator in the co-creation of new spaces. Through the design of seven proposed colleges for the University of Derry, the research develops a “soil-informed” design practice grounded in four paradigms—colonial, donkey, ecological, and dialectical urbanisms. Excavation, stratigraphy, and micromorphological analysis become generative design gestures that uncover the layered histories of Derry’s contested landscape. Each architectural intervention is envisioned as a living palimpsest—revealing and rewriting temporal and cultural strata through built form, community participation, and ecological restoration. The project demonstrates that architecture can act as both archive and agent of transformation, translating the living narratives of soil into spaces of education, remembrance, and regeneration.
dc.description.abstractLife Inside Dirt: Soil as a Living Archive reimagines the ground beneath Derry as a living storyteller — a layered memory of struggle, growth, and renewal. Each grain of soil holds traces of the city’s past: from siege rubble and industrial ash to the roots of new life. This project transforms excavation into design, turning trenches into classrooms and clay into architecture. Through seven imagined colleges along “Nailor’s Row,” soil becomes both muse and material — revealing forgotten histories while cultivating new communities. Architecture here does not sit upon the land; it grows from it, teaching resilience, continuity, and the quiet power of earth itself.
dc.format.extent27
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14154/76887
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherSaudi Digital Library
dc.subjectSoil as archive
dc.subjectpalimpsest
dc.subjectDerry/Londonderry
dc.subjectNailor’s Row
dc.subjectecological urbanism
dc.subjectdecolonial architecture
dc.subjectstratigraphy
dc.subjectcommunity restoration
dc.subjectliving archive
dc.subjectarchitecture and archaeology
dc.subjectlandscape memory
dc.subjecturban design
dc.subjectmultispecies justice
dc.subjectcircular soil economies
dc.titleLife Inside Dirt; Soil as A Living Archive: Restoring Communities and Spaces on “Nailor’s Row”
dc.typeThesis
sdl.degree.departmentSchool of Architecture and Landscape Architecture, ECA
sdl.degree.disciplineArchitectural and Urban Design
sdl.degree.grantorUniversity of Edinburgh
sdl.degree.nameMSc in Architectural and Urban Design

Files

Original bundle

Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
No Thumbnail Available
Name:
SACM-Dissertation.pdf
Size:
180.92 MB
Format:
Adobe Portable Document Format

License bundle

Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
No Thumbnail Available
Name:
license.txt
Size:
1.61 KB
Format:
Item-specific license agreed to upon submission
Description:

Copyright owned by the Saudi Digital Library (SDL) © 2026