“ . . . what kind of optimism is architecture entitled to adopt? [This] book revisits the concept of optimism in architecture—not as a moral slogan, but as a professional and intellectual problem worthy of critical inquiry.”“Its core claim: optimism in architecture does not arise from iconic projects or complex technologies, but from persistent work within constraints.”“The book clearly criticizes spectacle-driven architecture. These buildings claim progress but deepen the rupture between buildings and their contexts.”“The book proposes [ . . . ] a re-examination of the ethical foundations of architectural practice.”Mohammad Adham Alsayed, Annahar Newspaper (published in Lebanon and the UAE), 23 March 2026. (The article is originally written and published in Arabic - the author has provided this English translation.)