My work explores how systems, circulation, and infrastructure can shape architecture at multiple scales, from buildings to urban environments. Across professional practice and academic research, I am interested in the relationship between form, performance, and public experience.
Selected Work2020 – 2024
Selected Work2018 – 2021
My academic work at Cal Poly Pomona and SCI-Arc — where I studied under Thom Mayne and was awarded the NOMA Scholarship, NOMA Student of the Year, and AIAS Student of the Year and Chair awards — explored buildings and settlements whose spatial logic derives entirely from infrastructure systems: a data center where the network is made walkable; a proto-city for 250,000 organized around water reclamation rather than imposed on top of it; a performing arts center generated through computational permutation of Mayne's combinatory methodology. At Morphosis, I brought this approach to city-scale infrastructure and large-scale institutional campuses — leading computational massing studies in Grasshopper, coordinating teams of over 50, and presenting directly to client leadership. At SWA Architects, I applied the same rigor to behavioral health facilities, navigating OSHPD/HCAI compliance while managing clinical planning, interiors, and consultant coordination through construction documentation. I currently teach Advanced Architecture Technologies at Citrus College, where I continue to bridge computational design, digital fabrication, and architectural practice.