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Article

From Mašrabiya to Ṣaḥn: Managing Indoor Environmental Quality in Cairo’s Islamic Architectural Heritage Under Climatic Pressures

by
Thowayeb H. Hassan
1,*,
Mahmoud I. Saleh
2,
Amany E. Salem
1,
Luminita Anca Deac
3,
Jermien Hussein Abd El Kafy
1 and
Ahmed Tawhid Eissa
4
1
Social Studies Department, College of Arts, King Faisal University, Al-Ahsa 400, Saudi Arabia
2
Tourism Studies Department, Faculty of Tourism and Hotel Management, Capital University (Formerly Helwan University), Cairo 12612, Egypt
3
Department of Geography, Tourism and Territorial Planning, Faculty of Geography, Tourism and Sport, University of Oradea, 410041 Oradea, Romania
4
Tourism Guidance Department, Faculty of Tourism and Hotels Management, Capital University (Formerly Helwan University), Cairo 12612, Egypt
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Heritage 2026, 9(5), 195; https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage9050195
Submission received: 2 April 2026 / Revised: 9 May 2026 / Accepted: 11 May 2026 / Published: 18 May 2026
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Managing Indoor Conditions in Historic Buildings)

Abstract

Cairo’s Islamic architectural heritage represents one of the world’s most significant concentrations of pre-industrial environmental ingenuity. For over a millennium, an integrated suite of passive climate-control systems—the Mašrabiya latticework screen, the open courtyard (Ṣaḥn), the wind-scoop (Malqaf), and stalactite vaulting (Muqarnas)—has moderated temperature, humidity, and airflow with remarkable effectiveness. Today, these inherited solutions are under unprecedented stress from urban densification, chronic particulate pollution, climate-driven temperature rise, and growing visitor footfall. This study investigates indoor environmental quality (IEQ) in six Fatimid- and Mamlūk-era buildings in Historic Cairo through the integrated IQAD-IAH framework, combining IoT field monitoring (January–December 2023) of temperature, relative humidity, CO2, and PM2.5 with CNN-based deterioration image analysis and Random Forest predictive modeling. Results document critical summer thermal buffering failures reaching 28% of occupied hours above the ASHRAE 55 adaptive comfort limit; hygrothermal stress cycles exceeding the EN 15757 ±10% RH safe threshold for up to 38% of annual hours; and PM2.5 courtyard concentrations of 40–61 µg/m3 under normal conditions, surging to 180–320 µg/m3 during Ḫamāsῑn-seasonal wind events. Machine-learning projections indicate all three principal passive elements will cross the critical deterioration threshold of 70/100 under RCP 8.5 before 2050. A precautionary intervention window is identified between 2025 and 2032. Evidence-based management recommendations compatible with UNESCO World Heritage obligations are presented.
Keywords: indoor environmental quality; Islamic heritage; Cairo; passive cooling; climate adaptation; preventive conservation indoor environmental quality; Islamic heritage; Cairo; passive cooling; climate adaptation; preventive conservation

Share and Cite

MDPI and ACS Style

Hassan, T.H.; Saleh, M.I.; Salem, A.E.; Deac, L.A.; Abd El Kafy, J.H.; Eissa, A.T. From Mašrabiya to Ṣaḥn: Managing Indoor Environmental Quality in Cairo’s Islamic Architectural Heritage Under Climatic Pressures. Heritage 2026, 9, 195. https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage9050195

AMA Style

Hassan TH, Saleh MI, Salem AE, Deac LA, Abd El Kafy JH, Eissa AT. From Mašrabiya to Ṣaḥn: Managing Indoor Environmental Quality in Cairo’s Islamic Architectural Heritage Under Climatic Pressures. Heritage. 2026; 9(5):195. https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage9050195

Chicago/Turabian Style

Hassan, Thowayeb H., Mahmoud I. Saleh, Amany E. Salem, Luminita Anca Deac, Jermien Hussein Abd El Kafy, and Ahmed Tawhid Eissa. 2026. "From Mašrabiya to Ṣaḥn: Managing Indoor Environmental Quality in Cairo’s Islamic Architectural Heritage Under Climatic Pressures" Heritage 9, no. 5: 195. https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage9050195

APA Style

Hassan, T. H., Saleh, M. I., Salem, A. E., Deac, L. A., Abd El Kafy, J. H., & Eissa, A. T. (2026). From Mašrabiya to Ṣaḥn: Managing Indoor Environmental Quality in Cairo’s Islamic Architectural Heritage Under Climatic Pressures. Heritage, 9(5), 195. https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage9050195

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