View some of my work
These are some of the projects I have worked on and completed while at the University at Buffalo.
Hayes Hall Grand Lawn (2023)
This project involved the redesign of the Grand Lawn in front of Hayes Hall, a landmark building on South Campus. The primary objective was to enhance the usability and programmatic potential of the lawn while preserving the Hayes clock tower as the dominant visual and spatial focal point.
The design process was informed by precedent and case study analysis, which guided the development of strategies to activate the space without compromising its historic character or axial relationships. The work presented includes final presentation posters used for pin-up and critique. These posters document the project from initial pre-design research and site analysis, through case studies that established design intent, to final perspective renderings that illustrate the proposed interventions and spatial experience.
Center for the Arts Site Analysis (2023)
In this project, each student was assigned a specific location for which a series of infographics was developed. The work involved researching and compiling multiple layers of site-specific information, followed by the strategic selection of visual methods to clearly and effectively communicate the data. The project emphasized visual hierarchy, clarity, and graphic consistency. In addition, I learned to create and utilize 3D renderings to illustrate spatial relationships, highlight key landmarks, and provide contextual understanding of the built environment.
Broadway-Fillmore: Rooted in Community (2025)
This project served as the final studio for my studies at the University at Buffalo and was developed over the course of a full semester in collaboration with a team of ten students. The objective was to propose a comprehensive redevelopment strategy for the surrounding neighborhood, with a primary focus on the abandoned Buffalo Central Terminal as a key historic landmark and catalyst for reinvestment.
The project addressed multiple urban systems and design scales. My primary responsibility was leading the design and visualization of the green infrastructure component of the proposal. The graphics presented illustrate this work, beginning with analytical maps that define the project boundary and document existing green space conditions within the neighborhood. These analyses were used to identify gaps, underutilized land, and opportunities for expanded open space.
A subsequent map presents the proposed tree plantings and the resulting canopy continuity, demonstrating how strategic interventions could strengthen environmental performance and spatial cohesion. Comparative imagery accompanies the maps, contrasting existing site conditions with proposed perspective renderings. The final images further illustrate these design intentions, emphasizing the creation of a more walkable, connected, and verdant public realm aimed at revitalizing the Broadway–Fillmore neighborhood.