This project began as an exploration of the question: “What if architecture grew like a living organism?”
I imagined a world where structures aren’t built, but instead grown, guided by unknown natural forces. The staircases, instead of being functional, to being part of a larger biological process.
I wanted the viewer to feel a mix of curiosity and discomfort. Are we inside a creature? A landscape?
The forms were inspired by microscopic textures of the human body, gums, bones, muscle tissue, scaled up to an architectural level. The idea was to blur the line between the internal and external, the natural and the man-made.
Technically, I challenged myself to create depth and complexity with a limited color palette, focusing on texture and form to guide the viewer’s eye. Every staircase was intentionally placed to create a feeling of looping movement — like being trapped in a dream you can’t wake from.
This piece is part of a series I’m developing around “bio-architecture”: imagining spaces where biology and architecture merge, creating environments that are alive, unpredictable, and unsettling.



