This project explores the potential of in-between space to challenge traditional architectural boundaries through ambiguity, adaptability, and dynamic transitions. It aims to create hybrid environments that promote connectivity, inclusivity, and resilience in urban design.
Located at Taylor Yard, where urban development meets ecological restoration, the project introduces an architectural system that operates between infrastructure, landscape, and building. Rather than defining fixed zones, it embraces fluid, layered spaces that respond to movement, interaction, and context.
The design engages three interrelated scales—urban, infrastructural, and architectural—each representing different conditions of in-between space. These are not separate, but overlapping systems that together propose a more flexible, open-ended way of designing the city.
