At the intersection of labor, climate, and tenant organizing, I work toward a future where housing is a public utility. I have been organizing for a Just Transition with the Architecture Lobby’s Green New Deal Working Group since 2020. I am also a member of the Alternative Building Collective, which organizes practitioners in the architecture, engineering, and construction (AEC) industry towards climate action and alternative development models.

In my professional work, I perform construction administration and project management with non-profit organizations with roots in the city's community housing movement of the 1970s-1980s. Prior to this, I worked for Outside Development, an architectural research practice where I provided mapping and research assistance, to advocate for a urban form-of-life capable of breaking our dependence on fossil fuels.

Convent in the San Joaquin Valley
    2019
    Independent Work
  • Yale School of Architecture
  • Critic: Michael Szivos




A speculative project for a monastery of nuns, whose inhabitation permits corporeal readings of a former wetland. Sited in California’s San Joaquin Valley—a historical river basin that is now one of the most agriculturally productive landscape on earth—the nuns stage hysteric displays of metabolic self sabotage.  

They tower over the I-5, at a junction where the Amazon fulfillment center approaches the San Luis Reservoir, bordering large-scale agriculture, quartered-off ducks clubs, and pristine wildlife refuges. Emulating Lina Bo Bardi’s Teatro Oficina, the convent’s architecture circumscribes the limits of human habitation. Circulation is cut, restricting movement to a spiral piling the nuns upward. The space accommodates the waste their life mandates—until their passing—as they attempt to demonstrate the metabolic distress of their locale. Their monastery hyperbolizes self-sufficiency and its limits in a commodity culture. Their only respite is to eat and keep what comes with that.