Practice

Truth is revealed at the interface.

The work begins from a simple premise: many of the forces that shape landscapes are not directly visible. They emerge through relationships — between law and implementation, disturbance and recovery, infrastructure and opportunity, atmosphere and perception, institutions and lived environments.

Relational Land develops spatial methods, public data systems, maps, technical documentation, and research notes that make those relationships easier to see, evaluate, and discuss.

The work spans housing policy, land use, environmental systems, post-fire recovery, climate anomaly detection, atmospheric interfaces, and geospatial decision-support tools. The common thread is not a single subject area, but a way of looking: studying the thresholds where systems act on one another.

Current work focuses on regional housing implementation, transit-oriented development, displacement exposure, climate and vegetation anomalies, and post-disturbance landscape trajectories.

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