What We Are Reading Today: A City Is Not a Computer

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Updated 04 December 2023
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What We Are Reading Today: A City Is Not a Computer

Author: Shannon Mattern

Computational models of urbanism—smart cities that use data-driven planning and algorithmic administration —promise to deliver new urban efficiencies and conveniences. Yet these models limit our understanding of what we can know about a city.

“A City Is Not a Computer” reveals how cities encompass myriad forms of local and indigenous intelligences and knowledge institutions, arguing that these resources are a vital supplement and corrective to increasingly prevalent algorithmic models.


‘Maghras’ carries Al-Ahsa’s experimental farm from oasis to page

Updated 19 February 2026
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‘Maghras’ carries Al-Ahsa’s experimental farm from oasis to page

AL-AHSA: Beneath a full moon and swaying palm trees, “Maghras: A Farm for Experimentation” was launched this month in Al-Ahsa, drawing a full crowd to Al-Sbakh Farm — the very landscape that inspired it.

Al-Ahsa, in Saudi Arabia’s Eastern Province, is home to 2.5 million date palms and is officially the largest palm oasis in the world, according to the Guinness Book of Records.

That agricultural abundance forms the foundation of Maghras, a project founded in 2024 by longtime friends Lulu Almana and Sara Al-Omran, who both grew up in the Eastern Province. Conceived as a space for experimentation, research and dialogue, Maghras centers on Al-Ahsa’s agricultural and cultural heritage.

The farm that hosts the project, Al-Sbakh, was established by the late Noura Al-Mousa, who worked alongside farmers and craftspeople for decades. Today, it is managed by her son’s Abdulmohsen Al-Rashed Humanitarian Foundation, alongside Dar Noura Al-Mousa for Culture and Arts, housed in her former home.

Earlier this year, Maghras traveled beyond the oasis. Curated by Almana and Al-Omran with US-based creative director Alejandro Stein, the project was presented at the Triennale di Milano from May 13 to Nov. 9, 2025 — marking the Kingdom’s inaugural participation. Commissioned by the Architecture and Design Commission under the Ministry of Culture, the pavilion took the form of a transplanted maghras, a traditional land unit defined by four palm trees.

The newly launched book, edited by Almana and Al-Omran alongside longtime collaborator Latifa Al-Khayat, extends that journey. Divided into five chapters — Water, Land, Infrastructure, Proximities and Lineages — it weaves imagery and text to document the farm’s evolving agro-ecosystems and seasonal harvest.

Featuring illustrations by Nada Al-Mulla and maps by Hayes Buchanan, and printed by Grafiche Mariano, Italy, and published by Kaph Books, the bilingual volume can be read in English or Arabic with identical wording.

Prince Nawaf bin Ayyaf, CEO of the Architecture and Design Commission, delivered opening remarks at the launch and is featured throughout the publication and the project’s journey.

The book is not a catalogue of the Milan activation. Instead, it captures the spirit of the experimental farm, including commissioned works by Leen Ajlan, Sawtasura (Tara Al-Dughaither), and Mohammad Al-Faraj. Developed through research and workshops circling the central maghras, the publication brings together insights, origin stories and first-person essays.

With attendees crossing from neighboring Bahrain and generations of Hasawi elders and emerging voices gathered under the palms, the launch underscored Maghras’s central premise: rooted in Al-Ahsa, yet reaching far beyond it.