M.Arch I Candidate and Teaching Fellow at 
Yale School of Architecture 



Resumé Spring 2023


Action | The Visibility Project

Publication | Land of Freedom, A Private Party
Publication | Paprika!, Volume 6 Issue 1
Publication | “Boundaries”

Exhibition  | Bilaterla Logging

Investigation | Fluid Lands



Petite Planet: Measured Touch



Family Tree
Wallpapers
Is It A Horse?
Gesture as Memorial


DOMESTIC AMBIGUITY




Can housing provide a new form of intimacy with domestic spaces and each other? In the milieu of social distancing, conventional housing planned for efficiency and spatial rigidity no longer serves our highly interiorized rituals.

We require a space of domestic ambiguity.
Housing Proposal for Post-pandemic Residential Blocks

Editorial Pick
2020 Social Distancing Housing Block Competition


A Collaboration with Joshua Tan and Timothy Wong



Our proposal embraces awkwardness, indeterminacy, and ambiguity—necessary conditions for the interaction of our bodies with architectural form. While prioritizing these qualities, safety is ensured by establishing physical thresholds that are productive for intimacy and a gradation of cleanliness.


Designed for two people, the unit is structured into three zones: cleansing, social, and intimate. The unit is an intersection between a rectilinear shape and an amorphous form. A dedicated buffer zone is placed upon entrance for initial sanitation and limited human contact. Through contraction, expansion, curtains and glass, the flexible form gently separates the social and the intimate, each preceded by cleansing pockets running through the unit. This fluidity extends to the hybridity of the architectural element, transforming into occupiable furniture. Extending towards the building’s central courtyard, it becomes balconies that are arranged to provide community in socially distanced ways.

It is domesticity made safe, playful, and undefined.

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