As a university lecturer and researcher in Architecture, I work at the vibrant intersection of spatial geometry, urban heritage, and digital analysis. My academic journey is driven by a fascination with how historic environments can be read and decoded as living systems that continue to inform our contemporary urban landscape. My research explores the morphological and digital dimensions of historic urban fabrics, moving beyond static preservation to understand the dynamic relationship between architectural structures and socio-spatial behaviors. By bridging the technical rigor of stratigraphic surveys with the precision of spatial mapping, I seek to uncover the "invisible" layers of heritage identity—from the microscopic detail of a building’s evolution to the macroscopic scale of the city. With a PhD (2023) centered on the historic architectural complexes of Algeria, my goal is to contribute to a deeper, more human-centric understanding of heritage. I am dedicated to exploring how hybrid methodologies can reveal the resilience of traditional urban forms, ensuring they remain a sustainable and meaningful foundation for future transformations.