A large-scale mixed-use development anchored by Tibetan medicinal culture, weaving hotel, office, and production facilities into a coherent campus identity. The masterplan draws on the spatial logic of traditional Tibetan courtyards — layered enclosures that modulate scale, climate, and ceremony — while accommodating the industrial rhythms of a working medicine park.
A cultural campus rooted in Tibetan medicinal tradition — layered courtyards organise hotel, office, and production into a unified civic landscape at Jinan's edge.
A transformation of the Dashahe Culture Sports Center in Shenzhen — a large-scale renovation competition proposing a new civic identity for an existing sports and performance complex. The project integrates a dramatic auditorium and stadium within a unified architectural language of sweeping metallic surfaces and dynamic interior volumes.
A competition entry proposing a bold civic reinvention of Shenzhen's Dashahe sports complex — merging auditorium, stadium, and public realm under a unified expressive skin.
A natural history museum for Pingyi County, Shandong — a region renowned for its Jurassic fossil deposits. The building is conceived as a geological artifact in itself: stratified in section, carved in plan, and oriented to frame views of the surrounding Mengshan landscape. Interior galleries spiral visitors through deep time from the surface downward.
A geology-inflected natural history museum for Shandong's fossil heartland — carved in section to guide visitors on a spatial journey through deep time.
A new headquarters for the King Abdulaziz Foundation for Research and Archives (DARAH) in Riyadh — custodian of Saudi Arabia's national documents, manuscripts, and historical memory. The proposal draws on Islamic courtyard typology to organise a public exhibition sequence, research facilities, and deep archive beneath a layered facade that mediates between civic monument and scholarly sanctuary.
A headquarters for Saudi Arabia's national archive — balancing monumental civic presence with the quiet interiority of scholarship and collective memory.