Framework

Most consequential processes occur not within systems, but at their boundaries.

A law becomes real where it meets local implementation. A fire becomes a long-term landscape process where disturbance meets recovery. A climate anomaly becomes visible where observation meets a well-constructed baseline. These interfaces are reactive environments. They are where latent forces become measurable, contested, and visible. Baselines are not neutral backgrounds. They are constructed expectations that determine what becomes visible as change, stress, anomaly, risk, or uneven implementation.

01

Policy · Planning · Institutions

Implementation Geography

Research on how laws, plans, public agencies, political decisions, and administrative rules become spatial outcomes. This work focuses on the gap between statutory intent and lived implementation.

  • State policy and local implementation
  • Regional planning systems
  • Institutional decision pathways
  • Spatial consequences of administrative design
02

Housing · Transit · Land Use

Housing & Land Use

Analysis of housing production, transit-oriented development, displacement exposure, redevelopment capacity, and the spatial distribution of regulatory benefits and burdens.

  • Transit-oriented development policy
  • Housing capacity and feasibility
  • Displacement exposure and vulnerability
  • Historic preservation and redistribution effects
03

Fire · Climate · Recovery

Environmental Signals & Baselines

Research on environmental change as a spatial and temporal process: fire recovery, vegetation response, climate anomaly detection, and the baseline conditions that make departures interpretable.

  • Post-fire vegetation recovery
  • Climate anomaly baselines as analytical objects
  • Landscape disturbance trajectories
  • Remote-sensing indicators and uncertainty
04

Atmosphere · Optics · Transition

Atmospheric Interfaces

Exploration of atmospheric transition zones where radiative, chemical, optical, and perceptual regimes meet. This work treats interface conditions as moments of heightened observability.

  • Solar terminator transitions
  • Photolytic and oxidative regimes
  • Radiance-field visualization
  • Environmental perception and exposure
05

GIS · Data Systems · Public Explanation

Methods & Public Data Systems

Applied methods for making hidden relationships visible: spatial analysis, remote sensing, baseline construction, public data systems, policy research, technical documentation, and interactive visualization.

  • GIS and spatial data pipelines
  • Remote sensing and temporal baselines
  • Policy research and legislative analysis
  • Public-facing maps and methodological transparency