Résumé:
Throughout history, humanity has been neglecting the social effects of globalisation on their culture
and identity. Humans have a sense of belongingness to space with which they are interacting. The
intangible assets and movable elements weave with the space and those occupying it a strong bond.
Though these spaces are valued by being occupied, their regeneration/re-appropriation is a hidden
face of urban resilience. For a long time, experts have been debating the issue of saving the world’s
heritage, which is always subject to the challenge of mutations. Consequently, a concept borrowed
from Botany is frequently used in all disciplines: hybridisation. Hybridisation refers to a new way of
thinking, acting, and perceiving the cities by considering their resilient side. This study aims to
analyse the effects of adopting this notion of ''hybridity'' in the appropriation of inhabited space in
terms of urban well-being in the historical centre of Constantine.