I have a keen eye for viewing cities through both a scientific and philosophical lens. This enables me to navigate technical realities while having human empathy in my work as an urban designer. From designing intimate moments to framing a narrative, this is the driver of my everyday work, standing on that intersection.
Rather than searching for a single “right” solution, I see urban design as a sequence of asking the right questions—questions that stimulate local discourse, identify the appropriate scale for intervention, and communicate the urgency of our built environment in the midst of the climate crisis.
During my ten years in the United States, I was fortunate to engage in conversations with diverse voices from around the world. This has provided me with hands-on experience designing within a variety of built environments, from the arid deserts of Arizona to the tidal salt marshes of New York.
Ultimately, my goal is to create places of lasting value—environments that don’t just exist but improve as they age, and projects that don’t just solve today’s problems but remain resilient as the world changes. Embracing flux over permanence.