How the work actually gets built:
Projects begin with a site and a constraint, not a rendering.
I work directly in material — testing joints, load paths, and assembly sequence before anything is presented as a final idea. The structure is solved physically first, then visually.
Each installation is designed to be transportable, repairable, and assembled by a small crew. Components are fabricated off-site whenever possible and installed efficiently on location.
The goal is not a sculpture.
The goal is a structure that can exist safely in the real world while still feeling improbable.
Typical build sequence:
1 — Site review
measurements, access, ground conditions, public interaction
2 — Structural testing
connections and assembly methods built and tested physically
3 — Fabrication
modular components produced for transport
4 — Installation
rapid on-site assembly with minimal disruption
5 — Public life
the structure is used, interacted with, and documented
1 — Site review
measurements, access, ground conditions, public interaction
2 — Structural testing
connections and assembly methods built and tested physically
3 — Fabrication
modular components produced for transport
4 — Installation
rapid on-site assembly with minimal disruption
5 — Public life
the structure is used, interacted with, and documented
Practical considerations handled during projects:
• transportation logistics
• assembly planning
• weather exposure
• material durability
• public interaction
• maintenance and repair
• transportation logistics
• assembly planning
• weather exposure
• material durability
• public interaction
• maintenance and repair
If you have a site, a space, or an idea that needs to exist physically:
→ start a conversation
→ start a conversation