The Ferdows Residential Building, located in the Shahgoli district of Tabriz, is designed in 2025 on a 460 m² site with a total floor area of 2,710 m². The project benefits from dual access on its southern and western sides and rises in eight levels—including a basement, ground floor, and six residential floors—based on a reinforced concrete structure. The basement is dedicated to a sports hall, where a garden pit introduces natural light and the freshness of greenery into the depth of the building, establishing a vivid connection with the courtyard. Positioned strategically, this garden pit also creates an inviting sense of arrival, encouraging use of the adjacent swimming pool. The ground floor accommodates parking for nine vehicles alongside a dedicated lobby, ensuring a separation between pedestrian and vehicular circulation, thereby evoking spatial clarity and a calm sense of entry.
Each of the six upper floors is designed as a single 340 m² unit, featuring three bedrooms, generous open spaces, and expansive balconies that provide residents with unobstructed views of Shahgoli mansion as well as direct access to fresh air. The rooftop, accessible directly by elevator, is envisioned as a roof green. Beyond offering a place for rest and social interaction, it enhances the environmental and climatic performance of the building.
Ferdows Apartment embodies a synthesis of functionality, spatial quality, and human-centered detail. In the form of a contemporary urban volume, it achieves a balanced relationship between private living and the public realm. The façade design draws inspiration from the interplay of light and shadow within traditional brick textures and Fakhromuddin patterns, animating the building throughout the day. Expansive balconies, enriched with trees, not only bring residents closer to open air and living nature, but also create shade, visual diversity, and a calming atmosphere that elevates the quality of life. Through their mutual visibility, these balconies foster a visual dialogue among residents—a dialogue in which trees, as storytellers of nature, weave connections between the individual, the community, and the environment. Interspersed within these volumes, arched forms act as distinctive architectural elements, lending rhythm and character to the façade and forging a bridge between tradition and modernity.