
Hormuz Island Development Translates Geological Color into Architecture
This multipurpose development draws directly from Hormuz Island’s kaleidoscopic terrain, translating geological character into architectural color and spatial form.

This multipurpose development draws directly from Hormuz Island’s kaleidoscopic terrain, translating geological character into architectural color and spatial form.

Boulevard House exemplifies passive solar design, showing how environmental intelligence can shape architectural form without relying on spectacle. Boulevard

Kurashi No Kaori Atelier sits within the forest near Lake Yamanaka, where industrial production is carefully integrated into a landscape

Kurashi No Kaori Atelier sits within the forest near Lake Yamanaka, where industrial production is carefully integrated into a landscape

Southern Utah’s vast terrain reinforces the mythology of the American West, where architecture becomes an interface between desert scale and

The renewal of St Hilda’s College reframes Oxford’s historic campus, where contemporary intervention works through the existing fabric rather than

Garnham Street Apartments unite crafted interiors with urban density, presenting a residential typology shaped through material precision and contemporary living.

A layered grid of exposed slab beams organizes Berezowski House, aligning structure and interior rhythm into a unified architectural system.