TED Talks Daily - Reimagining traditional architecture for modern needs | Riyad Joucka
Episode Date: April 30, 2026Architect Riyad Joucka believes your home should be a mirror of who you are. Using 3D printing and ancient architectural wisdom, he's designing efficient, personal homes that respond to context, clima...te and culture without sacrificing character. He makes the case that we should start designing for people, not the market.Learn more about our flagship conference happening this April at attend.ted.com/podcast Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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You're listening to TED Talks Daily where we bring you new ideas to spark your curiosity every day.
I'm your host, Elise Hume.
Think about the neighborhood you grew up in.
Could you tell the buildings and houses apart?
Or did they all kind of look the same?
Truth is, most homes today are designed by developers for the market and not for the people that will live in them.
Modularity became a tool for urgent rebuilding, and it worked fast, but often at the cost of character.
That's architect and researcher Riyadh Juka.
He grew up in a home designed by his architect father,
a house rooted in regional tradition, natural materials, and family story.
In his talk, he shares how his experience shaped a career spent asking,
what if we could build homes that are both efficient and deeply personal?
He shares how 3D printing and local craftsmanship could change what our homes look and feel like
and how they can help us reconnect with our cultures.
That's coming up right after a short break.
And now our TED Talk of the day.
What if the places we lived in could truly reflect who we are,
and not just what fastest or cheapest to build?
This isn't about everyone designing their own house.
It's about rethinking how homes are created in the first place.
We've all seen rows of homes so alike,
you can only tell them apart by the color of the car parked outside.
It's designed for efficiency, not identity.
Truth is, most homes,
are designed by developers for the market,
and not for the people that will live in them.
These stem-plate-driven systems leave little room
to innovate or think about form or function.
But this reliance on standardization isn't new.
Historically, modular systems were not designed to maximize profit.
After World War II, when entire cities across Europe were flattened,
there were a way to get people back under roofs quickly.
Prefabs, kits of parts,
temporary housing. Across the world, modularity became a tool for urgent rebuilding, and it worked
fast, but often at the cost of character. Sadly today, once again, architecture and heritage
are being erased. In places like Gaza, in Sudan, in Ukraine, what disappears isn't just people
and buildings. It's memory, belonging, culture. I'm not here with a simple fix. What I'm saying
is we must rebuild, but we need to rebuild with identity in mind. My name is Real Jouka. I'm an architect
based in Dubai where we're on a practice called MIM, the Middle East Architecture Network. What
excites me is finding ways to fuse novel technologies with local stories, and sometimes that
means experimenting with 3D printing and robotics. At other times, it's about rereading a tradition
and giving it a contemporary form. Across different scales from a single object to cultural
building, our projects look at ways at how local materials and craftsmanship could be given a
new life through technology.
We've worked in different places across the Middle East, Europe and the US, but the constant
is this.
Every project tries to be forward-looking while remaining ground in its place.
And that's what excites me the most about housing.
It's where technology and belonging meet most directly.
Because our homes aren't just shelters.
They should be mirrors of who we are.
And to further introduce myself, this is the house that I grew up in, designed by my father.
You see, both of my parents are architects.
Both of my grandparents were notable artists.
So I grew up in a household surrounded by conversations around art, culture, and space.
And that's how I see design today, not as a template, but as something truly rooted in family, stories, and place.
The house truly reflects the traditions of the region, the scan from Albinat Magazine,
1994, wrote about the house.
I pulled these from my father's archives.
You can see natural light being drawn through skylights,
natural stone facade covering the exterior,
very typical of houses of the region.
A meddhist cast in concrete in the walls themselves.
My father describes it as post-traditional architecture
because postmodernism never really fit our context.
One of the few things him and I agree on when it comes to work.
No, but the house really is a reflection of our traditions,
but in the contemporary form.
but in a contemporary form.
And I keep returning to this traditional wisdom.
The Majdh for Gathering,
Duans for hosting, spaces that extend beyond their functionality
to bring people together.
Courtyards that cool in shade.
Spaces that make the outdoors livable.
Bergeals or wind catchers that breathe air through a home.
Passive design, centuries before we use the word sustainability.
Screens that filter light and create privacy.
Meshrabeias, designed that shapes atmosphere as much as structure.
And we use a similar vocabulary for our house at mean.
For House Zero Zero, the first house we designed,
we designed the house around a courtyard
with a water body cooling the exterior.
The house is wrapped with this corrugated stone facade,
echoing the language of the topography of the mountains surrounding it.
The house sits atop Jebel Jais,
and to me, it's a real interpretation of traditional form,
but in a contemporary home.
Cosmos House, we collaborated with artist Julia Ebini
to design these mesharvias.
We used algorithms in fractal geometry
to filter light into speckled shadows.
The house is designed to be 3D-printed
using sand from the surrounding environment.
The ancient wisdom of desert architecture
reinterpreted using digital tools.
Beyond practice, I also lead
the Adaptive Majelis Research Project at Zayde University.
We're looking at ways of how 3D-printed modular systems
could help us reinterpret these traditions today.
The Majlis, a unique typology of the region,
is being rethought through the lens of modern technology,
local craftsmanship, and contemporary lifestyles.
That same thinking helped shape permutable assemblies,
a modular system we developed that means for housing.
We asked ourselves,
we need to produce a modular system with a certain goal,
And that goal is to design for a modular system that is personal, local, and expressive.
And we asked ourselves, instead of erasing character,
what if modular systems helped showcase it and express it,
responding to context, climate, and culture, without any added cost.
Genene's Great Mosque in Mali is the world's largest Adobe building.
But what's remarkable isn't just the architecture.
It's the people.
Every year, the community gathers to repair its walls,
and replaster them, turning maintenance into a festival.
The building survives because of the community that maintains it,
and that sense of shared responsibility
is something that we've lost in many modern cities.
Here's how our system works.
A builder, developer, or simply any user,
enters parameters around their spatial needs, context, climate,
into a digital platform.
It then generates layouts composed of modules shaped by that context.
These parts are then prefabricated offsite,
using local low-carbon materials,
produced with precision and little waste.
The parts are assembled, piece by piece,
almost like a modern kit of parts or a set of Legos, if you may,
into a home.
The process is fast and efficient,
but unlike traditional prefab, it does not force sameness.
See, traditional modular systems rely on repeated templates.
With 3D printing, we can break that mold.
we can break that mold, designing for efficiency as well as belonging.
The system scales up, from house to neighborhood,
where every home shares a logic, but no two are alike.
It's modularity with character, turning repetition into rhythm.
3D printing makes curves, textures and ornament, practical at scale.
Screens inspired by local patterns, walls that read like the desert,
Details, prefab usually cuts out.
You see, modularity doesn't have to mean sameness.
It can mean variation, intention, and agency.
Design shouldn't come from a catalog.
It should grow with you, respond to you, and reflect you.
And that's what architecture should be.
Not imposed, not distant, but deeply rooted.
We shouldn't keep repeating the same formulas.
We can build differently.
We can invite people and community,
to shape the spaces we call home.
Because design, real design, belongs to everyone.
Thank you.
That was Riyadh Juka at TED at BCG in 2025.
If you're curious about TED's curation, find out more at TED.com
slash curation guidelines.
And that's it for today.
Ted Talks Daily is part of the TED Audio Collective.
This talk was fact-checked by the TED Research Team
and produced and edited by our team,
Martha Estefanos, Oliver Friedman,
Brian Green, Lucy Little, and Tonica, Sungmar Nivong.
This episode was mixed by Christopher Faisi Bogan.
Additional support from Emma Tobner and Daniela Balezzo.
I'm Elise Hu. I'll be back tomorrow with a fresh idea for your feed.
Thanks for listening.
