One architect. Four ways to work together.
Whether you are building from the ground up, adding an ADU, reworking what you already have, or designing a space for your business — the process starts the same way: a conversation.
Residential
Most of my work is houses — new homes, second homes, the one you'll retire in. I design for how a family actually moves through a day: where the light lands at breakfast, where the muddy boots go, which window you'll stand at with your morning coffee. The Willamette Valley has its own rules — rain, overcast winters, long low summer light — and a house here should answer them honestly. I stay involved from the first cup of coffee through the last punch-list walk.
Explore ResidentialADU
Accessory dwelling units are Eugene's smartest move — for aging parents, rental income, a home office, or the kid who isn't quite ready to leave. The trick is making something small feel architecturally complete, not like a shed with insulation. I know the city's ADU rules cold, including the pre-approved Domino design that skips most of the permitting wait.
Explore ADURenovation
Some of the best projects start with a house that's almost right. I like reworking what's there — opening a dark floor plan to the light, adding the room you've always needed, honoring an old Craftsman while bringing it into this century. The hard part is knowing what to keep. I draw existing and proposed together so you can see exactly what changes and what stays.
Explore RenovationCommercial
I've designed retail and workplace spaces that have to earn their keep — move people, hold up to traffic, and still feel like somewhere you'd want to spend a Tuesday. Good commercial design is mostly about experience: the approach, the entry, the first ten feet. I keep it warm and specific to your brand rather than generic and safe.
Explore Commercial


