Digital Legacy
2013 Rolling Stone Magazine Website & App
Revamping the Rolling Stone Magazine Middle East website was less a redesign than an act of digital preservation. The platform carried years of editorial history—articles, reviews, cultural moments—that could not simply be replaced or re-entered without erasing continuity. The challenge was to respect that archive while reshaping the system to support what the publication needed to become next.
Client
HGW Media
Rolling Stone Magazine
Services
UI/UX (Information Design)
Front-end Design
Content Creation

Rather than treating the site as a blank slate, the work focused on migrating and re-structuring existing content in a way that made it accessible, discoverable, and adaptable. Legacy articles had to live comfortably alongside new editorial formats, while allowing meaningful connections between content, authors, media types, and brand activations. This required untangling a partially hard-coded Joomla system and translating it into a more flexible, modular architecture without breaking the editorial spine of the publication


The result was a dynamic front-end built around modular grids, capable of handling text, photography, video, and audio with equal clarity, while giving editors and writers a far more intuitive and efficient backend. The system was designed not just for publishing, but for longevity—supporting growth, experimentation, and cross-platform reuse.




The website was conceived as part of a broader digital ecosystem. Its launch aligned with native iPhone and iPad applications and the transformation of the print edition into a digital format via Adobe DPS and InDesign. Together, these efforts marked a shift from a single website to a scalable, multi-channel publishing platform—one that carried Rolling Stone’s editorial legacy forward into a new digital era.




Related work
1996 Cyber Pub – Virtual Museum of Advertising
September 14, 1996
1997 Le Violon Interactive Encyclopaedia
September 14, 1997
2003-2005 Octurn – Band Flash Website
January 20, 2011


