Bethnal Green Within Bethnal Green by Bareera Borhan is a mixed use architecture thesis about intensifying an existing London context rather than treating the site as a blank slate.
The original page was very short, but the useful project idea is clear: a new mixed-use scheme that celebrates Bethnal Green by reading and building from what is already there.
Project overview
Bareera is a Part I Architectural Assistant and graduated with a 2:1 from University of the Arts London, Central Saint Martins. The original profile also notes internship experience with London practices.
The thesis was modelled in Rhino, Revit and SketchUp, then visualised with Photoshop and Illustrator. That mix of tools matters because a mixed-use project needs both spatial coordination and a clear visual story.
What the thesis is testing
- How a mixed-use scheme can intensify an existing urban context.
- How a project can add activity without ignoring the character of Bethnal Green.
- How residential, public, commercial or shared uses might support each other.
- How early-career portfolios can explain both concept and technical production.
Why the hero image is enough
The page already uses the project image as the visible lead. Repeating the same image inside the article would weaken the layout, so this version uses the body to explain the project, tools and portfolio lesson instead.
That is a useful decision for student showcases generally. If there is only one strong visual, let it do its job and make the written project story work harder.
Showcase a mixed-use thesis project
Architecture Social can feature student projects that explore mixed-use design, local context, urban intensification or London neighbourhoods.
- Explain the site and why the project belongs there.
- Show how the different uses support each other.
- Name the tools and drawings that prove the idea.
- Use the project story to help other students learn from the work.
Connect with Bareera Borhan
Architecture Social view
Stephen’s recruiter view is that early-career project pages should not rely on a name and image alone. A few clear lines on brief, site, use, tools and judgement can make the work much easier for a practice to understand.
Next step
Explore more Architecture Social projects, read the portfolio guide, or submit your own student project.



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