I HAVE NOTHING TO BUILD,
AND I AM BUILDING IT.
A Manifesto
GRAD 7090, DESIGN THESIS
FALL 2025 & WINTER 2026




What I remember from a building is different from 
what the plans say; But which one is real?


  • Theoretical Ground

Timothy Morton's Ecology Without Nature argues that our conventional concept of 'Nature' — capital N Nature, something separate from us, something out there — is actually an obstacle to genuine ecological thinking. 
Morton proposes we abandon the idea of nature as background, as environment, as something framing human activity. Instead,we should recognize what he calls the mesh — an interconnected field where nothing exists independently, where everything is entangled, where boundaries between inside and outside, nature and culture, dissolve.
Gaston Bachelard's The Poetics of Space explores how we intimately experience architectural space, particularly through what he calls the dialectics of inside and outside.


Bachelard argues that this division —this certainty about what's inside and what's outside — is phenomenologically false. The house is not a container separating us from the world but a nest of relationships between shelter and exposure, enclosure and openness. 

John Cage's Empty Words (1973–74) applies chance operations to Thoreau's Journal across four progressive parts — sentences, then phrases, then words, then finally only syllables and letters. 

Language is reduced to pure phonetic material.What begins as written observations of nature progressively dissolves back into the acoustic environment Thoreau was documenting. 
In Lecture on Nothing (1949–50), Cage structures emptiness through mathematical precision. 

Pauses function as active material. Silence is measured, rhythmic, deliberate. Time becomes visible through spatial arrangement.



  • Kraft Paper Drawing



Conventional architectural drawing (the plan, the section, the axonometric) positions us outside the work, looking in from a detached, impossible vantage point. 

“Ecological awareness is
a practice of paying attention to the between, to what connects rather than what separates.”

We believe we know exactly where we end and the space begins; but this certainty does not survive genuine attention to experience. 

Architectural space isn’t about clear boundaries, but about thresholds, corners, intimate recesses.



  • White Paper Drawing



This project is not about CAST as a building. 
It is about
the relationship between a subject and a space, (specifically about what happens to that relationship when the subject undergoes a fundamental metamorphosis.) 
The building became a measuring instrument for a transformation I could not yet name. What I needed to draw was not the walls or the columns or the structural grid.

I needed to draw the event itself, 
the gap between the self that had left 
and the self that returned,
the in-between,the Third Space, the charged interval where two worlds, two selves, two political realities meet and cannot be reconciled.

What if the thing you need to draw is precisely what the line cannot contain? 

I worked on a pre-darkened surface and removed rather than added. The image was uncovered rather than constructed, revealed rather than built up from nothing.
Subtraction turned out to be a more honest method for a project about loss and transformation, about a self that had something taken from it, a familiar world that had been partially erased by what it witnessed. 

The erased drawing holds the ghost of what was there.
The act of erasing is not destruction; It is a form of listening, a way of asking what remains when the habitual mark is taken away,when the architectural convention is stripped back, when the line that always wants to decide is finally interrupted.




  • Silhouettes



I set up long exposures in CAST and moved through the space. My body multiplied, smeared, accumulated, and dissolved back into the room until in some frames I was barely distinguishable from the light coming through the glass. In others I had left entirely, and the room held only the charged atmosphere of my recent presence, the space as memory of an event that was already over.
The photographs show the dissolution. The drawings show the attempt to hold on. Together they make the whole argument: that the boundary between subject and space is not fixed, that it shifts with duration and attention, that if you stay long enough the room begins to speak in your frequency and you begin to speak in its. At a certain point you can no longer tell where the body ends and the room begins.



  • (Mis)using Technology

Architecture systematically excludes two things from its representations: the subject and time. 

We remove people from plans. We remove duration from sections. We draw a building as if it exists in a moment of perfect, uninhabited stillness.

The 3D laser scanner operates under the same assumption. Its conventional use requires that the subject leaves — stands aside, maintains the detachment that allows clean measurement. Everything must be frozen. No movement. No body.
 
The scanner, like the plan, requires the observer to be separate from the observed.
I went against this. I carried the scanner through CAST while it was scanning. 

I participated in the event rather than evacuating it — and in doing so I became the event.

What the scanner produced was not a clean point cloud of an empty room. 

It produced a record of entanglement — the data of the space and the data of my body moving through it, inseparable, the tool's foundational assumption structurally violated.


First Scan:

The scanner,designed to separate inside from outside, dissolved the boundary between them entirely.
Looking through glass, it treated reflections as real objects — it could not distinguish between the interior of CAST and its reflection in the window.

The inside and outside collapsed into a single point cloud. The tool that was supposed to produce clarity produced entanglement.

Morton's mesh, made visible by a machine that was trying to do the opposite.



Missalignment of the Points:

And then something else became apparent. 

The scans removed the materiality of the space.
A brick wall, a glass surface, the air between them, my own body — in the point cloud they are all the same. They are all just points. They carry no weight, no texture, no temperature, no specific material identity. The scan does not know the difference between glass and flesh, between concrete and atmosphere. 

Everything is reduced to the same fundamental condition — matter in space.



Subject Being Present in the Scan:

This is where the investigation arrived at something I had not anticipated but which brought everything into focus. 

The boundary between me and the building is not a boundary between two different kinds of thing. It is a boundary between two expressions of the same matter.



Walking with the LiDAR 3D Scanner, While It Was Scanning the Space:

The scanner, by removing the specific material identity of everything it measured, accidentally revealed what the mesh actually is — not a beautiful entanglement of different things, but the more radical truth that there are no categorically different things. 

There is only matter, and the boundaries we draw between its expressions are conventions, not facts.

The scan is the most honest drawing I have made in this investigation — and I made it by misusing the tool.



  • The Cyanotype — The Subject in the Print



Instead of sending the point cloud images to a printer, I chose the slow, physical, and contingent process of making cyanotype prints by hand — coating paper with light-sensitive emulsion, placing the negative, exposing to UV light, washing in water. 
The reason for this choice follows directly from what the scanner investigation revealed. To send the scans to a printer would have been to repeat the same structural problem at the level of presentation — removing the subject from the process of making the image. 
The machine would have produced the output. My relationship with the space would have been documented by a tool that maintains its own detachment.
By making the cyanotype prints myself I remained inside the event of representation. 

I, the subject, participated in making the image — the same way I participated in the scan by walking through it.




  • The Installation

the installation elements, all together
cyanotype prints are placed in the space not as documentation but as drawings in a different register — the same investigation conducted through a different body, a different duration, a different set of hands.
The curtain is made of four layers of transparent fabric. The projection passes through all four layers simultaneously, each layer receiving and scattering the light differently, so that the image is not flat but has depth and atmosphere — the point cloud suspended in the space rather than printed on a surface. 
kraft paper and white paper roll drawings + layered drawings
One of the scans is projected onto the glass from inside. When you stand outside CAST and look at the window, you see three things simultaneously: the projection of the scan — the building's own point cloud, the record of its inability to maintain its boundary. 
The interior of CAST through the glass — the actual space, the building as it is. And your own reflection — yourself, the subject, the event. All three on the same surface. The window that was supposed to separate inside from outside is now holding all three registers at once. Nobody is erased. The boundary has not disappeared. It has become the site where everything meets.


1. NON-ROOM REFUGE




The Fulsomeness of Living with Others: ARCH 7060 STUDIO 6
FALL 2024 & WINTER 2025



This project began with a simple question: What is a room? However, it quickly evolved from a conventional exploration of architecture into a more profound investigation of memory, absence, and presence. It centers on how we carry spaces with us, how we recollect rooms long after we’ve departed from them, and how these spaces continue to shape our sense of self.


[More..]



2. BEM.WE.WE.BI.NE.SI
Sound of a Flying Bird EVAR 4010 ARCH STUDIO 4
WINTER 2024



To escape the darkness, I got into a car, with people I had   never met before. It was cold, and dark, anonymous, but familiar. Dusty windows overlooked nowhere, but a familiar “nowhere”. Then Its was luminous, resembling a dream, my dream.


[More..]


3. VESSELS OF THE PRAIRIES

An Exhibition EVDS 3710 EXHIBITORY CONTEXT
SUMMER 2025



This exhibition draws its curatorial inspiration from Ursula   K. Le Guin’s “The Carrier Bag Theory of Fiction,” which reimagines human culture not as a saga of conquest but as a practice of gathering, holding, and sustaining.



[More..]



4. SOMETHING FROM HOME
A Recollection ARCH 7000 MINERAL MODES: CONCRETE + COLOR
FALL 2024



This window frame is located in Moniriye sq, Tehran, Iran. It was probably built around 1970s, amid the arrival of modernity in Iran.


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5. A SHOE STORE

INTERIOR DESIGNUNDERGRAD STUDIO 6
WINTER 2021



The main concept of this project is clarity vs. ambiguity. This idea is not confined to the form, but it exist between the customers and their relationship with the objects. Regarding customers relationship with each other, how much they can see, which part of their body is visible and from which height and material they are witnessing each-other through is the matter.


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6. A HOME STUDIOHOUSING DESIGNUNDERGRAD STUDIO 5
FALL 2021



Raha’s Home studio is a flexible multi-functional space for a female write called Raha, who needs a peaceful space to work as well as an area to spend time with friends. Accordingly, two opposite spaces in terms of peace and function are needed in order to meet the writers needs.


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7. THE PASSAGE Landscape Design UNDERGRAD STUDIO 4
WINTER 2020



This project is an integration of open, semi-open and closed spaces in an outdoor area. The site of this project is an empty land on one the campuses of Tehran University of Art in Karaj city. The aim of this project is to add some variety to the campus alongside creating new experiences for both students and faculty members. Since art students spend a great deal of their time outdoor sketching, playing instruments, chatting, and performing, I decide to make a a versatile passage for them to not only walk in there but do the aforementioned activities.


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DESIGN THESIS + ONGOING INDEPENDENT STUDY
DESIGN STUDIO
RESUME

RAHA ALIS
alihoser@myumanitoba.ca
raha.alihoseini@gmail.com
+1 514 581 9124



Education




Master of Architecture 
University of Manitoba


Bachelor of Arts in 
Interior Architecture
Tehran University of Art




[2023-2026]



 [2017-2021]




Experience

 
TEACHING ASSISTANT
























STUDENT TECHNICIAN







CURATORIAL















CO-ORDINATION







VOLUNTEER













DESIGN RESEARCH PROGRAM












1680 Environmental Technology 
University of Manitoba
School of Architecture 


4.1 Interior Design Studio
University of Manitoba
School of Architecture


3.1 Interior Design Studio University of Manitoba
School of Architecture


1660 Environmental History University of Manitoba
School of Architecture






Center for Architecture Structures and Technology
University of Manitoba
School of Architecture




Exhibition Coordinator Mineral Modes Exhibition by Rodney Latourelle
University of Manitoba
School of Architecture


Exhibition Coordinator Vessels of The Prairies
University of Manitoba
School of Architecture





Design & Marketing Lab Coordinator
Pooya Industrial Group




President of UMAAS University of Manitoba Association of Architecture Students


Vice President of UMAAS University of Manitoba Association of Architecture Students





Directed Research In The Dark Side of Inigo Jones’s Covent Garden
University of Manitoba 
School of Architecture


Directed Research In Creative Resistance & Critical Spatial Performance
University of Manitoba
School of Architecture








[2024-2026]





[2025]




[2024-2025]




[2024]








[2024-2025]







[2025]






[2025]








[2021-2023]






[2025-present]




[2024-2025]








[2024]






[2025]

Award

Bill Allen Research Scholarship in Architecture
University of Manitoba 


Maxwell Starkman Scholarship in Architecture
University of Manitoba 


Keith B. and Edith Jean Davison Bursary
University of Manitoba 


MSBI Bursary Fund University of Manitoba 


International Graduate Student Scholarship
University of Manitoba 


Shanski Bursary in Architecture
University of Manitoba 


International Graduate Student Entrance Scholarship
University of Manitoba 




[2026]




[2026]



[2024 
& 2025]



[2025]



[2024 
& 2025]



[2024]




[2023]



Exhibition


Mineral Modes Group Exhibition
University of Manitoba
School of Architecture


Year-end exhibition University of Manitoba
School of Architecture


Archigraph Group Exhibition Arj Innovation School


Archigraph Group Exhibition Aban Art Gallery


Mashq-e-Honar Group Exhibition
Tehran University of Art School of Architecture & Urban Planning





[2025]




[2024-2025-2026]



[2020]



[2020]



[2019 
& 2020]


Skill

DIGITAL






ANALOG




AutoCad, Revit, Enscape, Corona Renderer,
3Ds Max, V-Ray, Sketchup, Photoshop, Indesign, Illustrator, Premier, Microsoft Office




Model Making, Wood Working, Hand Drafting, Sketching, Digital & Analog Photography




Last Updated 26.05.11