RAMPANT AUTOMATION

About Me

I am an architectural designer interested in the relationship between design and technology. My work combines architectural thinking with computational methods, digital visualisation, and emerging technologies. I am particularly interested in interdisciplinary approaches to design and opportunities for innovation across architecture and related fields.

Thesis Project

My thesis explores how architecture can respond to increasingly automated urban futures. As automation transforms mobility, logistics, and everyday services, cities risk becoming optimised for efficiency while reducing opportunities for collective social interaction. Using computational design as a design methodology, the project develops and evaluates urban systems that balance automated infrastructure with new forms of public life.

Through a combination of generative design, architectural typologies, and cinematic visualisation, the project proposes a network of elevated social environments embedded within a highly automated city. Rather than opposing technological progress, the work investigates how architecture can shape future urban environments where automation and social life coexist, creating new opportunities for interaction, participation, and collective experience.