/ Completed Work

Architecture that answers its site

Each project begins with orientation, topography, and the owner's pattern of use. The homes shown here are the result of those specific conversations.

A Body of Work

Proportion and restraint across every site

Materials vary. The underlying discipline does not.

Macro detail of a window reveal — pale plaster wall meets a deep-set steel window frame, precise shadow line cast across the sill, natural daylight, no people, selective depth of field
Macro detail of a window reveal — pale plaster wall meets a deep-set steel window frame, precise shadow line cast across the sill, natural daylight, no people, selective depth of field
Overhead macro of a stone-to-wood threshold transition — warm limestone tile meeting dark oiled oak, precise cut line, natural daylight from the left, no props
Overhead macro of a stone-to-wood threshold transition — warm limestone tile meeting dark oiled oak, precise cut line, natural daylight from the left, no props
Close-up of a walnut built-in shelving unit — recessed into a plaster wall, shadow gap revealing the depth of the reveal, side-lit by a narrow window, empty shelves
Close-up of a walnut built-in shelving unit — recessed into a plaster wall, shadow gap revealing the depth of the reveal, side-lit by a narrow window, empty shelves
Detail of a steel stair stringer meeting a concrete landing — precise weld line visible, warm side light, minimal depth of field, no people or furniture
Detail of a steel stair stringer meeting a concrete landing — precise weld line visible, warm side light, minimal depth of field, no people or furniture
— Detail Studies

Where material meets material

Window reveals, stone transitions, and millwork joins are resolved before a single panel is set. The joint is not hidden — it is designed.

These studies show the decisions that hold up under close inspection — the ones that separate a considered home from a finished one.

If the work resonates, begin here

We take on a limited number of projects each year. A brief conversation about your site and timeline is the right first step.