Spaces

Green Cove Springs Private House

A riverfront house shaped by a diagonal wetland boundary, where triangular planning and a wing-like roofline turn a constrained site into the project’s organizing force.

Spaces gathers architectural and experiential work that sits around the furniture practice: houses, rooms, installations, and environments where proportion, procession, material, and light are tested at a larger scale. These projects show the spatial context that often precedes the objects.

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Springfield House

A proposal for Jacksonville’s Springfield Historic District, using the Prairie idiom as a period-appropriate opening for a more ambitious horizontal language.

New York Times Listening Room

A 2020 commission to reimagine an executive conference room as a lounge-like environment for The New York Times’ daily podcast, treating furniture as an ensemble rather than a set of objects.

Spatial practice

Before ili.ad became a furniture and object practice, much of the work moved through architecture, retail environments, and experiential design. Contract projects for cultural institutions, media companies, retailers, and global brands required speaking fluently in another voice: translating identity into space, display, circulation, and atmosphere.

The projects above are different. They represent a more authorial spatial language, where architecture is not only a container for objects but one of the sources from which the objects emerge. The same questions recur across scales: how a body moves through a room, how a line becomes a frame, how ornament can become structure, and how a place leaves its pressure on a form.