

Museum of Light
Light is not merely a utility but a building material. In the Museum of Light, we stripped away the superfluous to reveal the essence of the Nordic sun. The structure acts as a vessel, capturing the low winter light and diffusing it through translucent marble panels. The result is a space that breathes with the changing seasons, a silent dialogue between the built environment and the natural world.
View Project

Forest Pavilion
A meditation on impermanence. The Forest Pavilion sits lightly on the mossy floor of a Kyoto cedar forest, its timber structure referencing traditional joinery while pushing the boundaries of modern engineering. The boundary between inside and outside is dissolved, inviting the scent of pine and the sound of rain to become part of the architectural experience.
View Project

Dune Sanctuary
A frame for silence. This rammed earth residence rises from the Mojave Desert not as a monument, but as a geological extension of the landscape. The architecture is reduced to its most elemental forms, creating a protective enclosure that filters the harsh desert sun into warm, golden light. It is a place of solitude, where the vastness of the horizon is tamed and brought into scale with the human body.
View Project

Coastal Monolith
A fortress against the horizon. Perched on the jagged edge of the Icelandic coast, the Monolith is designed to withstand the fury of the North Atlantic. Cast in black concrete to mimic the surrounding basalt columns, the structure feels less like a house and more like a rock formation carved by the tide. It is a shelter for the sublime, standing stoic against the wind and rain.
View Project