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The Philosophy of Selling Community: Developer Narratives and Resident Experiences of Privacy and Community in Gated Communities in Cairo

Gated communities have become a global urban form with diverse impacts on their inhabitants. In recent years, Cairo has been expanding to the edges, and land that has always been a desert is now rapidly transforming into new cities that people are leaving their homes in the center of the city to mov...

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Main Author: Raghib, Yosr Samir
Format: Thesis
Published: AUC Knowledge Fountain 2026
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access_status_str Open Access
author Raghib, Yosr Samir
author_browse Raghib, Yosr Samir
author_facet Raghib, Yosr Samir
author_sort Raghib, Yosr Samir
collection Thesis
description Gated communities have become a global urban form with diverse impacts on their inhabitants. In recent years, Cairo has been expanding to the edges, and land that has always been a desert is now rapidly transforming into new cities that people are leaving their homes in the center of the city to move to seeking seclusion, security, privacy, and sense of community. Despite the tension proven between privacy and community, developers attempted to sell both concepts to coexist in gated communities in different manners to express their unique brand. Both concepts are defined differently by each developer, resulting in different approaches in their marketing strategies and design implementations. Therefore, this research attempts to study the nuanced applications of developers and ways that they express the two concepts and study how residents perceive these spatial configuration and elements. This leads to the overarching questions of this study “How do developers in Cairo's gated communities market and design for privacy and community to coexist, and how are these strategies perceived and experienced by residents?” with the underlying hypothesis being by marketing privacy and community, developers set the physical stage, but residents’ adaptations show that placemaking emerges through negotiation rather than fixed design. A comparative analysis is done to the design guideline keywords and their design applications used by four of the top developers in Cairo. This analysis allowed a nuanced lens for understanding the implementation of the two most important parameters sold in gated communities. Residential evaluation of the application tools is further studied through their feedback in surveys and interviews. The analysis of marketing narratives, spatial layouts, and resident feedback revealed two central themes: control and ownership. While developers employ tools such as gates, green buffers, and fences to market privacy and community, residents reinterpret these features in ways that often blur boundaries between inclusion and exclusion. This highlights that placemaking in gated communities is not predetermined by design but negotiated through everyday practices. The findings suggest that developers should integrate flexibility and feedback loops into design and management processes, ensuring closer alignment between promises and lived experiences. Future research can build on this by examining how resident practices and external forces reshape the meaning and use of these privatized spaces.
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id oai:fount.aucegypt.edu:etds-3677
institution American University in Cairo (Egypt)
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:35:59.828Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from AUC Knowledge Fountain — bepress
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spelling oai:fount.aucegypt.edu:etds-3677 The Philosophy of Selling Community: Developer Narratives and Resident Experiences of Privacy and Community in Gated Communities in Cairo Raghib, Yosr Samir Gated communities have become a global urban form with diverse impacts on their inhabitants. In recent years, Cairo has been expanding to the edges, and land that has always been a desert is now rapidly transforming into new cities that people are leaving their homes in the center of the city to move to seeking seclusion, security, privacy, and sense of community. Despite the tension proven between privacy and community, developers attempted to sell both concepts to coexist in gated communities in different manners to express their unique brand. Both concepts are defined differently by each developer, resulting in different approaches in their marketing strategies and design implementations. Therefore, this research attempts to study the nuanced applications of developers and ways that they express the two concepts and study how residents perceive these spatial configuration and elements. This leads to the overarching questions of this study “How do developers in Cairo's gated communities market and design for privacy and community to coexist, and how are these strategies perceived and experienced by residents?” with the underlying hypothesis being by marketing privacy and community, developers set the physical stage, but residents’ adaptations show that placemaking emerges through negotiation rather than fixed design. A comparative analysis is done to the design guideline keywords and their design applications used by four of the top developers in Cairo. This analysis allowed a nuanced lens for understanding the implementation of the two most important parameters sold in gated communities. Residential evaluation of the application tools is further studied through their feedback in surveys and interviews. The analysis of marketing narratives, spatial layouts, and resident feedback revealed two central themes: control and ownership. While developers employ tools such as gates, green buffers, and fences to market privacy and community, residents reinterpret these features in ways that often blur boundaries between inclusion and exclusion. This highlights that placemaking in gated communities is not predetermined by design but negotiated through everyday practices. The findings suggest that developers should integrate flexibility and feedback loops into design and management processes, ensuring closer alignment between promises and lived experiences. Future research can build on this by examining how resident practices and external forces reshape the meaning and use of these privatized spaces. 2026-01-31T08:00:00Z thesis application/pdf https://fount.aucegypt.edu/etds/2621 https://fount.aucegypt.edu/context/etds/article/3677/viewcontent/yosr_samir_raghib_thesis.pdf Theses and Dissertations AUC Knowledge Fountain Gated Communities Privacy Sense of Community Developers Cairo Resident's experience Architectural Engineering Landscape Architecture Urban, Community and Regional Planning Urban Studies and Planning
spellingShingle Gated Communities Privacy Sense of Community Developers Cairo Resident's experience
Architectural Engineering
Landscape Architecture
Urban, Community and Regional Planning
Urban Studies and Planning
Raghib, Yosr Samir
The Philosophy of Selling Community: Developer Narratives and Resident Experiences of Privacy and Community in Gated Communities in Cairo
title The Philosophy of Selling Community: Developer Narratives and Resident Experiences of Privacy and Community in Gated Communities in Cairo
title_full The Philosophy of Selling Community: Developer Narratives and Resident Experiences of Privacy and Community in Gated Communities in Cairo
title_fullStr The Philosophy of Selling Community: Developer Narratives and Resident Experiences of Privacy and Community in Gated Communities in Cairo
title_full_unstemmed The Philosophy of Selling Community: Developer Narratives and Resident Experiences of Privacy and Community in Gated Communities in Cairo
title_short The Philosophy of Selling Community: Developer Narratives and Resident Experiences of Privacy and Community in Gated Communities in Cairo
title_sort philosophy of selling community developer narratives and resident experiences of privacy and community in gated communities in cairo
topic Gated Communities Privacy Sense of Community Developers Cairo Resident's experience
Architectural Engineering
Landscape Architecture
Urban, Community and Regional Planning
Urban Studies and Planning
url https://fount.aucegypt.edu/etds/2621
https://fount.aucegypt.edu/context/etds/article/3677/viewcontent/yosr_samir_raghib_thesis.pdf
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