
Common Ground: A Collective Garden as Sustainable Architecture
This ongoing collective garden project explores sustainability not as a slogan, but as spatial practice—where shared land becomes both material and narrative. Experience

This ongoing collective garden project explores sustainability not as a slogan, but as spatial practice—where shared land becomes both material and narrative. Experience

At The Nautilus Maldives, architecture dissolves boundaries between villa, ocean, and sky, redefining luxury through spatial freedom and environmental immersion. A Sustainable Common
![Residing within a small hotel in the center of Reykjavik, the capital of Iceland is [a permanent art exhibition featuring paintings, sketches, and sculptures by Icelandic artists], dating from the late 19th century to the late 20th century.](https://kanikachic.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/pic_3-Holt-Hotel.jpg)
This permanent exhibition translates Iceland’s layered cultural history into spatial narrative, where art and architecture converge as archival memory. Residing within a small

In this Mexican residence, ceramics and wood soften the rawness of concrete, demonstrating how material layering shapes domestic atmosphere. Commissioned to design a family

The Tujia Brocade Art Museum transforms 150,000 meters of red thread into architectural metaphor, weaving cultural heritage into spatial form. China Tujia Brocade
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This ongoing collective garden project explores sustainability not as a slogan, but as spatial practice—where shared land becomes both material

At The Nautilus Maldives, architecture dissolves boundaries between villa, ocean, and sky, redefining luxury through spatial freedom and environmental immersion.
![Residing within a small hotel in the center of Reykjavik, the capital of Iceland is [a permanent art exhibition featuring paintings, sketches, and sculptures by Icelandic artists], dating from the late 19th century to the late 20th century.](https://kanikachic.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/pic_3-Holt-Hotel-300x225.jpg)
This permanent exhibition translates Iceland’s layered cultural history into spatial narrative, where art and architecture converge as archival memory.

In this Mexican residence, ceramics and wood soften the rawness of concrete, demonstrating how material layering shapes domestic atmosphere.

The Tujia Brocade Art Museum transforms 150,000 meters of red thread into architectural metaphor, weaving cultural heritage into spatial form.