Designing interiors for me has always been about shaping atmosphere and emotion through space. I’m drawn to environments that feel immersive, layered, and deeply intentional, spaces where lighting, materiality, proportion, and storytelling work together to create a memorable experience.
My background spans luxury residential interiors, experiential environments, and retail storytelling, with work ranging from private residences in Santiago, Chile to immersive brand environments for global retailers. Across every project, I’m interested in how spaces can guide emotion, shift perspective, and create connection through thoughtful design.
Selected work
W Residences Santiago
Luxury Residential Interior Build-Out
Santiago, Chile
Designed for a hotel owner seeking the warmth of a private residence with the sophistication of a luxury boutique hotel, this full-scope condominium interior balances dark materiality, integrated lighting, and refined architectural detailing to create an atmosphere that feels both intimate and elevated. The project included custom spatial planning, finish specification, lighting integration, millwork detailing, and technical documentation throughout the residence.
Key design interventions included a concealed linear lighting feature embedded within the wood-paneled hallway to guide circulation and visually expand the narrow space through reflection and contrast, as well as a multi-material kitchen island designed to support entertaining, dining, and food preparation simultaneously.
Project Highlights
Distribution Hall
One of the most important interventions within the residence was the redesign of the main distribution hallway, conceived as a transitional spatial experience connecting the darker, more intimate entry sequence to the brighter living spaces beyond.
I designed a concealed linear lighting feature embedded directly within the wood wall paneling to guide circulation through the space while visually elongating the corridor. Smoked mirrors were introduced opposite the light beam to expand the narrow hallway through reflection while maintaining a moody and dramatic atmosphere. At the end of the corridor, a textured wall finish and sculptural focal point were framed intentionally to draw the eye forward and create a sense of arrival.
The result was a space that transformed a functional circulation zone into a more immersive and emotionally layered experience.
Rendering Study
Kitchen Island
The kitchen island was designed as a multifunctional centerpiece that could support entertaining, dining, and food preparation simultaneously while maintaining a sculptural presence within the open living space.
I developed the island using three different marble surfaces at varying heights, each responding to a specific use and interaction within the space. The white marble dining surface was designed for seated gathering, the black marble preparation area created a more functional workspace within the kitchen, and the elevated grey marble section acted as a casual bar surface connecting directly to the dining and social areas of the residence.
The intention was to create an island that felt less like a traditional kitchen element and more like an integrated architectural object that encouraged movement, interaction, and hospitality throughout the space.
Rendering Study
Technical Drawings
Powder Room
The powder room was designed to transform a very compact footprint into a space that felt intimate, elevated, and immersive. I approached the room almost like a hospitality environment, using reflection, lighting, and material contrast to create a stronger sense of depth and atmosphere within a limited space.
Mirrored surfaces were integrated strategically to visually expand the room while concealed lighting and dramatic stone applications helped create a layered and more sculptural experience. The goal was to make the space feel less utilitarian and more like a refined moment within the overall journey of the residence, similar to the experience of entering a private lounge or luxury restaurant bathroom.
Despite its scale, the room became one of the most expressive and atmospheric spaces within the project.
Rendering Study
Technical Drawings
Technical Drawings
Private Residence
Private Hillside Residence
Santiago, Chile
Designed for a private hillside residence in Santiago, Chile by architect Cristián de Groote, this project focused on balancing the home’s sculptural modern architecture with warmth, material richness, and a more personal sense of intimacy.
Working closely across the interior development of the residence, I was involved in spatial detailing, custom millwork design, material selection, lighting integration, render development, and technical documentation throughout multiple areas of the home. The project blended existing vintage furnishings and collected pieces with contemporary interventions to create interiors that felt layered, curated, and deeply connected to the architecture.
One of the most distinctive interventions was the custom wine cellar embedded directly into the exposed hillside rock formation, where transparency, reflection, and material contrast were used to transform the natural stone into the focal point of the space. Throughout the residence, the design language focused on creating environments that felt immersive, refined, and emotionally grounded while preserving the architectural strength of the home.
Project Highlights
Custom Wine Cellar
Designed as an immersive architectural feature embedded directly into the hillside rock formation, the wine cellar was conceived to balance high-capacity storage with transparency, atmosphere, and material contrast.
I designed the curved stainless steel and glass wine display systems to maximize bottle storage while preserving uninterrupted views of the exposed natural stone, allowing the live rock wall to become the focal point of the space. A central illuminated display was developed specifically to showcase magnum bottles as a sculptural moment within the room, while custom integrated lighting enhanced the texture and depth of the stone throughout the experience.
As an extension of the main storage system, I also designed a custom tasting table integrated into a larger wood and stainless steel wine rack utilizing diamond-mesh storage for additional bottle capacity. The intention was to create a space that felt less like a traditional cellar and more like an intimate hospitality environment, balancing craftsmanship, functionality, and atmosphere within the architecture of the home.
Rendering Study
Technical Drawings
Other Interior Design Projects