Architecture Books
TOWARDS AN URBAN ECOLOGY
SCAPE
Part monograph, part manifesto, 'Toward an Urban Ecology' redefines landscape architecture as a catalyst for social and environmental change. The book showcases SCAPE’s participatory and science-based design process through essays, project case studies, and collaborations. Developed through iterative content mapping, the design uses color, typographic hierarchy, and flexible layouts to guide readers through interconnected ideas — translating SCAPE’s vision of an active, evolving urban ecology into editorial form.
Published by Monacelli Press.
At MTWTF with CD Glen Cummings and AD Aliza Dzik.
Role: Senior Designer.




"Combining design, research, art, and environmental knowledge in order to advance landscape architecture as a form of activism, the practice has yielded a synthetic vision of landscape, infrastructure, and community. We hope that it will inspire you to synthesize everything that you know, to marshal your own personal talents, and to work toward an urban ecology."
— Scape



THE ART OF INEQUALITY
Published by Columbia University’s Buell Center, 'The Art of Inequality' examines the intersections of architecture, housing, and real estate. The book’s format references the pocket edition of the 1968 Kerner Report, reinforcing its social and political urgency. Designed to accommodate diverse forms of content — from essays and plans to photographs and diagrams — the layout evolves across sections, adapting to the tone and medium of each contributor while maintaining a cohesive editorial approach.
At MTWTF with CD Glen Cummings and AD Aliza Dzik.
Role: Senior Designer.




BUILDING RELOCATION: MOVING IMAGINATION
'Building Relocation: Moving Imagination' examines the architectural and emotional implications of moving a structure from one site to another. The project contrasts stability and displacement, exploring how architectural imagery can evoke tension, fragility, and transformation. Drawing on Juhani Pallasmaa’s reflections on instability and perception, the book presents a layered narrative that reframes architecture as a site of motion, memory, and reinterpretation.
Personal Project.


