Iran Hub Projects

About & how it works

A clear picture of Iran Hub Projects—what we do, what we don't, and how your submission moves from draft to the public directory. For phased product direction (no technical detail), see Product roadmap.

Founder

Pooria Monfared

Pooria Monfared

AI Founder | Senior Full-Stack Engineer

Technical founder and senior full-stack engineer with 12+ years of experience building fintech platforms, scalable web systems, and microservice architectures. Current focus includes Diariva, an AI-powered financial intelligence platform for analyzing personal financial data and making smarter financial decisions, and Iran Hub Projects (iranhubprojects)—the project behind this site: a structured directory for reconstruction-related initiatives in Iran, with clear idea-to-project stages, moderation, and a public browse experience.

Mission & inspiration

Iran Hub Projects was started in the same spirit as the public vision for national reconstruction and prosperity often discussed under the name Iran Prosperity Project (پروژه شکوفایی ایران): open opportunity, economic dynamism, and a practical path for projects, talent, and capital to connect after decades of isolation and mismanagement. This site is meant to be a transparent map of activity—not a campaign office or a fund.

Independence. Iran Hub Projects is an independent product and codebase. It is not an official program, subsidiary, or authorized representative of the Iran Prosperity Project, NUFDI, or any other organization unless we say so explicitly in the future. We may share a directional alignment with that public narrative; we do not speak for any third party.

What we build here.A structured directory with moderation and clear stages—so credible ideas can become visible, comparable, and discoverable in one place. That is how we contribute to the same broad goal: clarity for people who want to build Iran's next economy.

For context on how the Iran Prosperity Project has been presented publicly, see Rise Iran! — Iran Prosperity Project · NUFDI fund — Iran Prosperity Project (external sites). Focus & boundaries explains what listing here does and does not imply.

Contact us

Questions, partnerships, or feedback? Use the contact form—we read every message.

What this is

Iran Hub Projects is a structured directory for reconstruction-related initiatives: problems, solutions, teams, and (where provided) investment context—so ideas and projects are easier to discover and compare in one place.

It is for people building who want a credible listing, for readers exploring what exists, and for anyone who cares about a transparent map of activity around reconstruction—not a closed social feed or a single fund.

Focus & boundaries

We focus on clarity and structure—not on political endorsements or investment advice. Listing here does not mean we endorse a project financially or legally, and we do not guarantee returns, partners, or outcomes.

The site helps the ecosystem see who is doing what, with consistent fields and moderation. Use your own judgment and due diligence before any commitment or funding.

How projects work

Projects move through clear stages. You start with an idea—problem, solution, and basics. After an idea is approved, you can submit a project upgrade with richer detail (economics, team, risks, attachments). A verifiedtier is reserved for future use; we'll communicate it clearly when it launches.

You may see quality on cards in the directory—that reflects how complete the submission is for its stage, not a judgment of investment merit.

Until the idea is approved, the project is not shown in the public directory; you can still edit and work on it as the owner.

Trust & moderation

Automated checks (AI) run on content to catch obvious issues and spam. If something needs a closer look, it goes to a human reviewqueue. You may see "pending", "needs human", or similar statuses while that happens.

Approval is not endorsement. It means the content meets our rules for publishing in the directory. Rejection includes a reason you can act on; repeated serious issues may affect upload privileges.

Public listing can be turned off by an admin for a project (e.g. policy or quality issues) while the project still exists for you—you are not silently deleted from the platform.

Signed-in visitors can report a project page if something looks wrong. Reports are triaged by staff; repeated reports on the same project are surfaced for priority review when volume is high.

Sign-in & Google

You may sign in with email and password or with Google. Google sign-in uses industry-standard OAuth: we receive a verified identity from Google to create or link your account. You may also see Google One Tap—a small prompt from Google to sign in quickly; you can dismiss it or use the sign-in page instead.

After sign-in we set a secure HTTP-only cookieto keep your session. We don't use your email for marketing unless we say so elsewhere; this page is about the product experience, not a full legal notice.

FAQ

Is this a crowdfunding or investment platform?

No. We are a directory and transparency layer. We don’t hold funds or guarantee deals. Any funding happens outside the platform—always do your own diligence.

Why was my idea or project not approved yet?

Content goes through automated review and sometimes human review. Queues and edge cases can add time. If status is "needs human," staff will review. Check your project page for the current status and any message.

What’s the difference between “idea” and “project”?

An idea is the first tier: problem, solution, and core fields. After the idea is approved, you can submit a project upgrade with richer sections (team, economics, risks, files). Verified is reserved for a future tier.

Why doesn’t my project show in Browse?

Public listing requires an approved idea and moderation rules to be satisfied. Admins can also hide a public listing without deleting your project. Owners always see their own projects.

Why does Google ask to sign in?

If Google sign-in is enabled on our server, Google may offer One Tap or “Continue with Google” to speed up login. You can ignore it and use email/password on the sign-in page if you prefer.

Who is this site for?

Builders listing projects, readers exploring the directory, and anyone who benefits from a structured map of reconstruction-related initiatives—without replacing legal, financial, or political advice.

How do I report a problematic project?

Open the project page while signed in and use Report. Staff review open reports; when many reports pile up for the same project in a short time, it is highlighted for priority review (volume is a signal, not automatic removal).

Next steps
Browse the directory or start a submission.