My design practice sits at the intersection of aesthetics and environmental responsibility. I design products that change behavior — not by lecturing, but by making the sustainable option more intuitive and more appealing.
This started early. Growing up with grandparents in architecture and art, I learned that design decisions carry real environmental consequences. That principle drives every project: from a portable speaker system engineered for spatial audio, to an eco-friendly battery disposal unit designed to reward recycling behavior and replace the generic bins people ignore.
I treat beauty as functional. If a sustainable product doesn't attract use, it fails. My work combines material research, user behavior analysis, and visual design to close that gap.