Street & Architecture

Street and architecture photography taps into a different part of the way I see things. It’s less about directing anything and more about catching something that’s already there before it disappears. I’m drawn to places that have character, scenes that feel lived in, and the kind of everyday details most people pass without a second thought until something about them suddenly feels worth stopping for.
That’s what I like about this kind of work. It can make something ordinary feel worth looking at again. It doesn’t have to be dramatic or grand to matter. Sometimes it’s the quietness of a place or the wear in it. Other times, it’s simply the way everything lines up for a second and suddenly feels worth noticing.
What Draws Me In
What draws me in most is the history and visual character of a place. I’ve always been fascinated by older buildings and the way they carry evidence of what they once were. Some have been left behind, others have been repurposed, and many still hold traces of the lives and activity that moved through them before.
I’m interested in how places change over time and what they hold onto in the process. Part of what I enjoy about this kind of photography is documenting that evolution and capturing a place at one point in its story.


What I Want the Images to Do
I want these images to do more than show how a place looks. They should capture where it is in its story- the changes it’s gone through, what’s still there, and the things that still make it feel like itself.
They should also make people pause long enough to notice something they might have overlooked and recognize the beauty in places that are aging, overlooked, or in the middle of becoming something new. Places that may not always exist in quite the same way again.
Street & Architecture Gallery





