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THE MAELSTROM

HOUSE FOR A MAGNOLIA TREE

IGGY AZALEA EXIT FESTIVAL AND WORLDWIDE TOUR

HARPER’S BAZAAR ART | MANIPURA BODICE & HANNYA MASK

BOSTON CHINATOWN LIBRARY

INTEGRATED SHELTER UNITS

CARIFESTA PAVILION

LOG 57: THE VERSATILE METHOD

WILLOW X GLAMOUR UK X MUGLER

MEDITATION CABIN

SOLAR TRACKER

MOONEY BAY REDEVELOPMENT

STORIES BY CHILDREN

BODY ORNAMENT

COLIN LOCASCIO X VERS

PAPER MAGAZINE: CHRISTINE QUINN

DISC ISSUE 2

A VESSEL FOR THE GANGOTRI GLACIER

GEOLOGIC RITUAL | ICELAND CAVE TOWER

GEOLOGIC RITUAL 

Architecture as an instrument of landscape and climate


Status: Competiton | Vogagjá, Iceland
Set along the fissure between the Eurasian and North American tectonic plates, this project transforms a geological divide into an inhabitable vertical experience. Three independent walls trace the axis of the fissure through parallel, perpendicular, and intersecting relationships, creating a sequence of gaps that frame movement, entry, and shifting perception. As visitors ascend, the architecture reveals a gradient of thermal and spatial conditions—from exposed, wind-driven pathways to enclosed, geothermal-warmed interiors—engaging the site’s extremes of cold air above and heated water below.

Constructed from basalt-infused concrete, rock wool insulation, and high-performance glazing, the intervention operates entirely off-grid, using geothermal heat, wind energy, and water collection systems to sustain itself. The architecture reads as a series of precise lines embedded within the landscape—never fully touching, yet continuously relating—allowing the fissure, the climate, and the act of movement to define the experience.