Situated between Beirut's historic central district and the former civil war-era "green line," the Beirut Digital District (BDD) master plan by Paralx proposes a new urban framework for the city's digital and creative industries. Designed to accommodate startups and small to medium enterprises, the plan reclaims a fragmented urban fabric by merging heritage structures with new vertical development. Historic buildings on the site serve as anchors for the master plan, with virtual lines projected from their façades to shape adjacent public space. This approach not only preserves architectural memory, but also organizes circulation and defines the spatial logic of the new district. The result is a series of volumes that fill in around these heritage focal points while responding to the grain of the existing city. The plan is unified by three interconnected green piazzas that vary in scale and typology. These open spaces are central to a broader ambition: to transform a site once marked by division into one of convergence. Verticality is used strategically to free the ground plane for public life and greenery, supporting a pedestrian friendly environment in a city often short on open space. The towers, conceived as "slab and glass," use transparency to symbolically blur the historic divide. Rooftop gardens extend the public realm upward, offering semi-public gathering spaces with views of the city, sea, and mountains-creating district that reflects both the past and aspirations for Beirut.