George Washington University

11/06/2025 | News release | Distributed by Public on 11/07/2025 08:40

M.B.A. Student Architects a Story of Ambition and Resilience

M.B.A. Student Architects a Story of Ambition and Resilience

After narrowly escaping tragedy, Terry Bitar rebuilt her life in D.C., founding a thriving design firm and returning to GW to finish the degree she started.
November 6, 2025

Authored by:

Nick Erickson

GW M.B.A. student Terry Bitar founded Bitarchitects, an award-winning architecture, engineering and construction firm showing how multidisciplinary collaboration can shape modern cities. (Photos by William Atkins/GW Today)

On a whim, Terry Bitar diverted off the main highway that leads directly to the port of Beirut, Lebanon.

The date was Aug. 4, 2020-roughly two weeks before she was set to begin online coursework as an M.B.A. student at the George Washington University.

As Bitar was driving through the heart of the city for a last-minute meeting with her team at the nonprofit she ran, Charity Donation Foundation, she noted there was time to spare and veered off course for a quick hair appointment a few blocks away from the water.

Five minutes after her arrival, a blast of tragic proportions rattled the walls around her. Down by the port, roughly 2,750 tons of ammonium nitrate detonated after a fire broke out at a nearby warehouse. A total of 218 people died. Bitar firmly believes she would have too had she not opted to get her hair done.

"If I'd been on that highway, I would have been dead," Bitar said. "I still can't believe how I decided to turn and why I did it."

That decision marked the turning point of her life. Viewing survival as a new lease, Bitar acted on a longtime vision: to move to the United States and build an enterprise that merged her passion for architecture, business acumen and lifelong drive to help others. Less than a month after the explosion, she moved to Washington, D.C., where she continued to lead her foundation while taking classes at GW.

In the five years since, Bitar has transformed her bout with tragedy into triumph by founding Bitarchitects, an award-winning architecture, engineering and construction firm showing how multidisciplinary collaboration can shape modern cities.

Bitar paused her M.B.A. pursuit during the founding process but, in true architect form, she wasn't about to let a project stay in scaffolding. Today, she's back at GW and set to graduate in May-completing not only a degree, but a full-circle journey.

"When I'm in something, I like to finish it," Bitar said. "GW is part of my story, and what pushed me to come back is wanting to really have this chapter complete."

Bitar's successes are no surprise to Nazlin Bhimji, who served as a Mentor-in-Residencethrough GW's Office of Innovation and Entrepreneurshipduring Bitar's initial stint at the university. Bhimji recalls being impressed by Bitar's discipline and drive-qualities that, in hindsight, foreshadowed the success to come.

"Her ambition was front and center," Bhimji said. "That's who she is, and that hasn't changed."

It wasn't long before that drive translated into action. Founded in 2021, Bitarchitects began as a one-woman operation and quickly expanded into a full-service architecture, engineering, permitting and construction firm operating across five states and D.C. Today, Bitar leads a growing team of architects, engineers and specialists who bring together design intelligence, sustainability and technology.

Image

Under her leadership, Bitarchitects has been recognized as a Best of the City firm for two consecutive years and a D.C. Power Player for three. Her company's services now span architecture, mechanical, electrical, structural and geotechnical engineering, permitting, inspections and high-end construction-a fully integrated model that has well positioned Bitarchitects in the region's architecture, engineering and construction (AEC) ecosystem.

Now firmly entrenched in the business world, community impact and relationship building are still core principles for Bitar, a mindset she looks for in team members.

"I really approach everything with heart-it's not just a business transaction for me," she said. "My team is the same way-hardworking and passionate. Every project and every client represents something human-passion, dreams, stories."

Bitar's philosophy on leadership is rooted in empathy, ethics and commitment to excellence. She mentors young architects and entrepreneurs around the world through Bitarchitects' remote internship program, now in its ninth edition, which provides international students a platform to learn, contribute and grow.

Her work hasn't gone unnoticed. Beyond her firm's accolades, Bitar has been named Dynamic Woman by DC Modern Luxury Magazine, honored by the American Lebanese Engineering Societyand recognized by the U.S. government through the National Interest Waiver Petition Green Card, an acknowledgement reserved for professionals whose contributions serve the national good.

Family remains her foundation at the center of it all. From her late father's influence as a civil engineer to her mother's resilience and her husband's support, Bitar views her success as a shared reflection of those who shaped her.

"Gratitude is what keeps me grounded," she said. "Everything I build-personally and professionally-stems from appreciation and purpose."

As Bitarchitects continues to expand, Bitar envisions international offices, deeper government partnerships and a future where her firm redefines how architecture and engineering can coexist under one visionary brand. "Flexibility and resilience are everything," she said. "It's easy to talk about success, but it didn't come on a silver platter. There were a lot of challenges and moments where I had to rise up."

And rise up-and Raise High, she has.

Related Content

GW Champion Swimmer Develops Nutrition Platform

GW Alumnus Nate Diskint Builds Homes to Break Barriers

What's the Big Idea? Oncovana Guides Cancer Patients to Fertility Preservation Options

George Washington University published this content on November 06, 2025, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on November 07, 2025 at 14:40 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at [email protected]