Architecture, Design & Engineering
Architecture as the physical encoding of civilization. Victorian ornament, pure brutalism, and Islamic-inspired geometry represent different answers to the same question: how does space shape human behavior?
I read buildings like arguments. Every arch, wall, courtyard, column, material choice, and ornament tells me what a culture believed about order, beauty, power, and the human body moving through space.
How does space teach people where to move, gather, pause, or feel small?
When does ornament become structure, and when does structure become philosophy?
What would engineering look like if it treated beauty as a constraint, not a decoration?
Studying civic scale, thresholds, arches, courtyards, and monumental space.
Comparing Victorian richness, Islamic geometry, and brutalist material honesty.
Looking for design principles that transfer into hardware, interfaces, and systems.
The tension between Victorian ornamental richness and brutalist structural honesty reveals the full spectrum of architectural expression.
Islamic architecture's use of geometric patterns, muqarnas vaulting, and courtyard hierarchies offers a mathematical approach to sacred space.
Brutalism's raw concrete and monumental scale speaks to an architecture of truth, material, structure, and program expressed without disguise.
Courtyard typologies across cultures demonstrate how enclosed space mediates between private and public, human and civic.
Victorian Gothic revival, particularly the work of Pugin and the Houses of Parliament, represents architecture as moral philosophy built in stone, every ornament carries meaning, every proportion follows from theological principle.
The arch as a structural and symbolic form: from Roman aqueducts to Gothic cathedrals to Islamic iwans, the arch is the simplest way to transform a gap into a threshold.