WORKS
Material foraging, exploration and making in the response to the eruption of undersea Fukutoku-Okanoba volcano.
Exhibition, panel discussion and a publication providing an alternative set of references to the built and natural environment and a note on Hong Kong’s persistent redevelopment. Through various mediums such as writing, photography, conversations and installations, this work investigates the city’s modern architectural language together with its atmospheric condition, through a visual atlas of urban forms and geometries, materiality and historical narratives.
Project developed by Urban Ecologies Design Lab at Faculty of Architecture, The University of Hong Kong, in collaboration with Habitat for Humanity Hong Kong, examines how the thousands of underutilised buildings that are temporarily vacant or awaiting lengthy redevelopment processes could be used to generate quality housing spaces in accessible locations, improve existing housing stocks, and provide crucial community spaces in areas with the highest concentration of population in need of social services.
Future Fossils for Ukraine (FFFU) is a limited edition of ten Future Fossils made and sold to help refugees fleeing Ukraine after the beginning of Russian invasion. 100% of the proceedings were donated to Grupa Granica operating on the eastern border of Poland.
Studio aiming to employ regenerative design as a principle to imagining strategies for sustainable developments of underutilised water-based urban areas in Hong Kong. Working with topics such as food systems, spatial homogeneity, amplifying nature, and disappearing heritage of water communities, in the context of commodity-based, capitalist society, facilitates in-depth understanding of current urban, social and environmental urgencies and possible/impossible ways of addressing them.
Seminar aiming to enable student’s awareness and in-depth understanding of the perception modes and spatial typologies of complex interior environments. Questioning standard tools for perceiving and data collection, paired with mapping selected public ferry piers, facilitates revealing the condition of the space, and the expression of it’s interiority. Image: Krzysztof Wodiczko displaying Personal Instrument (1969), Warsaw, 1972.
Performative and reflective walk from Mui Wo to Chi Ma Wan on Lantau Island at the Inter Island Festival, using the formation of the ferry pier as reference point for noticing aspects of Hong Kong insular culture, the pier typology and simply in enhancing perception of the landscapes, ecologies and social activities around it.
Experimental interior design project of a coffee shop in Sham Shui Po. Through architectural inversion, use of materials, methods and qualities sampled from the outside, the interior constitutes the district’s exterior. Coupled with found and custom made furniture utilizing stone samples from materials library of closed down Interior Design School nearby, the space becomes a multidimensional material archive.
Art objects capturing the moment of discovery when pieces of concrete, old tiles or bricks emerge from among pebbles and shells, highlighting the global problem of construction waste, building methods and materials that are neither reusable nor degradable.
Group exhibition response to the ‘Redistribution: Land, People and Environment’ theme of the Hong Kong Collateral Event for the 2021 Venice Biennale of Architecture.
Esej oraz fotografie, unaoczniają wartości wschodu w dyspucie na temat utopijnych idei modernistycznych oraz ich zastosowania w miastach XXIego wieku oraz podejmują próbę wyjaśnienia dlaczego koncepcje i pomysły wywodzące się z Europy i Stanów Zjednoczonych (tzw. Zachodu) nie sprawdziły się tam skąd pochodzą, ale tak dobrze przyjęły się w Azji, a zwłaszcza w Hong Kongu.
Interview based article about Hong Kong architecture and design firm MLKK, who with its core values of collaboration, mindfulness, peace and balance, emphasises craftsmanship and sustainability in every projects. Read the full story on Design Anthology Magazine
Series of six articles with visual stories about local modernism, the history of the region after the industrial revolution and its relationship with the present, aiming to translate to the wider audience the origins of the city’s urban language and raise a little more sympathy for the not always aesthetically pleasing dense city.