
Why Morocco 028 – Aziza Chaouni on architectural restoration projects in Morocco
12/04/19 • 35 min
To support Why Morocco, please consider buying me a coffee nouss nouss.
For this week’s episode,I chatted with architect Aziza Chaouni in her Toronto office by telephone. I first learned about Aziza and her work when she was featured in Brownbook magazine, a publication I used to write for. I knew immediately that I needed to meet her given that we have swapped home countries. Aziza lives between Toronto, Canada where she works as an architect but is also a tenured professor at the university of Toronto and Fez, Morocco where her architecture firm is located.
But it was after a recent feature in the New York Times about the Sidi Harazem thermal baths restoration project that I finally reached out to Aziza. The thermal baths, near Fez, not only have healing properties, but the complex that Jean-Francois Zevaco designed in 1960 is done in brutalism style. Her credits also include transforming a slaughterhouse in Casablanca in to a cultural space, working on the restoration of the oldest existing university in the world – al-Qarawiyyin University in Fez and more. In fact, in the interview she shares details about a project she’s wrapping up in southern Morocco this month.
Listen in as Aziza talks about post-independence architecture, her past and on-going projects, the role of the architect and the state of architecture in Morocco.
Find out more about Aziza Chaouni Project: http://www.azizachaouniprojects.com/.
To support Why Morocco, please consider buying me a coffee nouss nouss.
For more Morocco ideas and advise, follow me on Instagram at @ms.mandy.sinclair
My other projects include:
- Travel and public relations consulting at Mandy Sinclair PR
- Freelance writing for print and digital mandyinmorocco.com/freelance-writing/
- Tasting Marrakech food and cultural tours in Marrakech tasting-marrakech.com
To support Why Morocco, please consider buying me a coffee nouss nouss.
For this week’s episode,I chatted with architect Aziza Chaouni in her Toronto office by telephone. I first learned about Aziza and her work when she was featured in Brownbook magazine, a publication I used to write for. I knew immediately that I needed to meet her given that we have swapped home countries. Aziza lives between Toronto, Canada where she works as an architect but is also a tenured professor at the university of Toronto and Fez, Morocco where her architecture firm is located.
But it was after a recent feature in the New York Times about the Sidi Harazem thermal baths restoration project that I finally reached out to Aziza. The thermal baths, near Fez, not only have healing properties, but the complex that Jean-Francois Zevaco designed in 1960 is done in brutalism style. Her credits also include transforming a slaughterhouse in Casablanca in to a cultural space, working on the restoration of the oldest existing university in the world – al-Qarawiyyin University in Fez and more. In fact, in the interview she shares details about a project she’s wrapping up in southern Morocco this month.
Listen in as Aziza talks about post-independence architecture, her past and on-going projects, the role of the architect and the state of architecture in Morocco.
Find out more about Aziza Chaouni Project: http://www.azizachaouniprojects.com/.
To support Why Morocco, please consider buying me a coffee nouss nouss.
For more Morocco ideas and advise, follow me on Instagram at @ms.mandy.sinclair
My other projects include:
- Travel and public relations consulting at Mandy Sinclair PR
- Freelance writing for print and digital mandyinmorocco.com/freelance-writing/
- Tasting Marrakech food and cultural tours in Marrakech tasting-marrakech.com
Previous Episode

Why Morocco 026 – Imad Dahmani on modernist architecture in Casablanca
To support Why Morocco, please consider buying me a coffee nouss nouss.
For this week’s episode I met with architect Imad Dahmani in Casablanca for an architecture tour of some of the modernist buildings throughout the city. Imad works in Casablanca and also the president of the MAMMA Group, an organization that aims to protect modern architecture in Morocco. You may remember that I interviewed Lahbib El Moumni, also from the MAMMA Group, on episode seven of Why Morocco about brutalist architecture. Well now, the organization is gearing up to launch the Modern Casablanca Map with fifty residential, commercial, government spaces throughout the city included. Each Modern Casablanca Map comes with a little booklet with more details about the building, some of which are open to the public and others that can be viewed only from the exterior. The map will be available throughout Casablanca following the launch on the 8 November 2019 for self-guided architecture tours of Casablanca.
Listen in as Imad talks about exploring beyond the art deco downtown to find the modernist gems throughout the Casablanca.
Find out more about MAMMA Group at: https://mammagroup.org/.
To support Why Morocco, please consider buying me a coffee nouss nouss.
For more Morocco ideas and advise, follow me on Instagram at @ms.mandy.sinclair
My other projects include:
- Travel and public relations consulting at Mandy Sinclair PR
- Freelance writing for print and digital mandyinmorocco.com/freelance-writing/
- Tasting Marrakech food and cultural tours in Marrakech tasting-marrakech.com
Next Episode

Why Morocco 029 – Meryam Demnati on Amazigh culture in Morocco
To support Why Morocco, please consider buying me a coffee nouss nouss.
With a new year and a new decade upon us, I sat down with Meryam Demnati, an Amazigh activitist, to chat about a little-known New Year celebrated in here in Morocco – Yennayer – the Amazigh New Year for the latest episode of Why Morocco. Celebrated on 12 January by the native peoples of North Africa, Yennayer marks the shift from extreme cold and milder temperatures and is celebrated by Amazigh (sometimes referred to as Berbers) communities not only in Morocco, but throughout North Africa. Interestingly though, January 1 and the Islamic New Year are observed here in Morocco with official bank holidays, but Yennayer is not.
As an activist, Meryam also talks about the status of the Amazigh language and Tifinagh alphabet in Morocco, recognition of the Amazigh culture, and the causes the Amazigh movement has and continues to work on since post-independence in Morocco.
To support Why Morocco, please consider buying me a coffee nouss nouss.
For more Morocco ideas and advise, follow me on Instagram at @ms.mandy.sinclair
My other projects include:
- Travel and public relations consulting at Mandy Sinclair PR
- Freelance writing for print and digital mandyinmorocco.com/freelance-writing/
- Tasting Marrakech food and cultural tours in Marrakech tasting-marrakech.com
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