Residential projects, visual studies, and spatial work shaped through renovation, visualization, and function-first thinking.
A 1952 waterfront property reworked over multiple phases through full interior renovation, exterior upgrades, custom built-in cabinetry throughout, and the continual lessons that come with retrofitting older construction.
This project became the foundation for how I now think about function, flow, and proactive design. The project evolved over years rather than months, becoming an ongoing study in restraint, continuity, and designing around real life instead of trends.
a ground-up coastal build currently being designed from the inside out- balancing architectural simplicity, integrated function, material restraint, and the kind of planning that avoids retrofitting later.
An active study in building better before walls ever go up.
A compact shell transformed into a working studio, design office, and curated client-facing environment where merchandising, styling, and spatial function all had to coexist with a small footprint.
Proof that square footage works harder when every inch is intentional.
Project 106 begain as a layered refresh of a beachside rental property designed for short term rental living- a space created to feel relaxed, elevated, and functional all at once. Located across the street from the beach, the project focused on balancing durability with atmosphere through layered textures, updated finishes, and a modern coastal feel that photographs beautifully while still feeling lived in.
A long-running home and gift retail environment shaped through merchandising, seasonal resets, spatial editing, and layered product storytelling. From visual displays to branding, the focus remained on creating spaces that felt immersive, approachable, and visually cohesive while supporting the realties of daily retail flow.
A home decor and gift retail concept developed through hands on renovation, merchandising, display construction, and daily operational problem solving. Every fixture, layout adjustment, and visual reset became part of a larger study in how atmosphere, functionality, and storytelling shape the way people experience a space.