These aren't just pretty renders—they're actual buildings where people live, work, and honestly spend most of their time. Each one taught us something we didn't know before.
We've sorted these by what we learned, not chronologically. Some projects went smoothly, others... well, let's just say they became learning experiences. That's architecture for ya.
This one's special 'cause the clients actually trusted us to go wild with passive solar. No AC needed, even during that brutal 2022 heatwave.
Converted an old warehouse into workspace that doesn't feel soul-crushing. Got creative with the skylights—natural light does wonders for morale, turns out.
Public space that people actually use! Worked with the community for months—they knew what they needed better than any consultant could've guessed.
Threading new life into a 1880s building without destroying what made it interesting in the first place. Those original timber beams are irreplaceable.
Eight units that don't all look like cookie-cutter copies. Each family got input on their layout—took longer but worth every extra meeting.
Restaurant + cooking school combo. Acoustics were a nightmare to figure out—hard surfaces everywhere but needed it quiet enough for instruction.
Our biggest project yet. Still in progress but the foundation's done and honestly, seeing it come together after three years of planning hits different.
When your clients are master gardeners, you design around the plants, not the other way around. Every room frames a different garden view.
Produces more energy than it uses. Took some convincing with the client's finance team, but year-two operating costs shut down all the skeptics real quick.