An interior designer who combines curiosity and a hands-on approach with a strong focus on practical solutions, he is driven by creativity, material storytelling, and the spatial potential of reuse. His work explores how obsolete structures and overlooked elements can be reimagined into new forms of living. With a background rooted in adaptive reuse and community-focused design, he seeks to challenge conventional boundaries between permanence and change, utility and meaning.
His project at the Royal College of Art, Nexus, rethinks the future of high-rise living through the lens of transformation and coexistence. Developed within the superREUSE platform, the project repurposes an existing office building in Canary Wharf into a layered residential system that blends short- and long-term dwellings. By integrating shared infrastructures and vertical landscapes, Nexus proposes a living ecosystem—one that embraces flexibility, sustainability, and collective identity within the dense fabric of the city.
He sees design not only as a solution, but as an ongoing dialogue between people, materials, and time, inviting us to dwell differently.