
URBAN LAYERS
MAPPING MEMORY IN A CITY THAT FORGOT ITSELF
Memory Beyond
Monuments
Urban
memory does not reside in monuments.
It hides
in pathways, alignments, and the unwritten logic of everyday space.
In Kabul,
this memory lies buried—beneath asphalt, displacement, and fractured plans.
Kabul is
a city built on the sediment of stories—some remembered, most erased. To walk
its streets today is to sense the presence of what’s no longer visible: a
layered cityscape of ruptures and continuities, resistance and reinvention. My
research over the past two decades has focused on making these urban layers
legible—not only through maps and models, but by tracing the lived memory
embedded in Kabul’s historical fabric.
A Daughter of the
City
As an architect, urban
planner, and daughter of the city, I’ve seen Kabul as a modern city that lived
between the regulatory framework of the GRIDS and the lived experience of the
GROUND, then shape-shifted to a fragmented postwar landscape then to a rapidly
expanding informal metropolis struggling to retain its soul.
What happens when a city forgets itself? And more
urgently: how can we help it remember—not nostalgically, but productively?
Mapping Layers of
Time
The project Urban Layers was born from these
questions. Based on a series of analytical maps developed for my doctoral
research and refined through fieldwork, oral history, and archival
reconstruction, this work visualizes Kabul’s historical evolution across
centuries. It distinguishes key phases.
This post is part of an ongoing series exploring how
cities remember, forget, and regenerate through their spatial DNA. Kabul is not
the exception—it is a lens.
Each map is more than a static image—it is a
diagnostic tool, a memory device, a call to action.
From Maps to
Method
These cartographies now form a conceptual backbone
for URBAN STEPS, our international research and training initiative on
urban transformation in contexts of fragility. By connecting historical
mapping with community-based practice, academic
research with field training, and local
knowledge with digital tools, we aim to pioneer a methodology that is
responsive, interdisciplinary, and resilient.
Memory as a
Resource
But this is not just about Kabul. Cities in crisis—be
it due to war, displacement, climate collapse, or authoritarian erasure—face a
double loss: of material infrastructure and cultural memory. The latter is
harder to quantify, yet essential for any sustainable future. We believe urban
memory is not a luxury. It is a resource.
Towards
Regeneration
The blog series Urban Layers will
unfold along thematic lines—each entry exploring one pair of guiding actions
from the URBAN STEPS method:
- Uncover / Studies
- Revitalize / Training
- Activate / Planning
- Bridge / Evolving
- Navigate / Strategy
Together, they form a dynamic approach to cities as
evolving ecosystems—where tradition does not obstruct innovation, but anchors
it.
In Kabul’s case, memory is both fragile and defiant.
Our maps show traces of a city that refuses to be flattened—by bombs or
bureaucracy, ideology or indifference.
In reclaiming these urban layers, we do not simply
look back. We build forward.
What Comes Next
This post lays the foundation for future essays in the
URBAN STEPS series:
- Memory of the city
- Ground Meets Grid
- Forgotten Order: Why Self-Organization Is Not Informal Chaos
→ Learn more in our Glossary of Critical UrbanTerms
→ Explore how URBAN STEPS
distinguishes issues and responds to them
Join
the dialogue. Shape the strategy. Walk the ground.