Hello, I'm Eva
B.S. in Architecture, Kent State University 2024
HERE'S A BIT OF WHAT I'VE BEEN WORKING ON.​
Projects
Professor Matt Hutchinson
Cleveland, OH
Fall 2023
A local developer purchased the Trent Manufacturing Co. (a former brush manufacturing factory and warehouse) in midtown Cleveland. The purpose of this project is not only to design offices for an anchor tenant, but to help facilitate a more ambitious endeavor – the creation of a social hub for co-working, collaboration and community engagement.
Professor Adam Yaracs
Los Angeles, CA
Spring 2024
To focus on the technical processes behind architectural design, this project dives into the structural, mechanical, and environmental systems in application to a fitness center in the Arts District of Los Angeles, CA.
Professor Keyla Hernandez
Miami, FL
Spring 2023
Calle Ocho is a very loved and celebrated street in the outskirts of downtown Miami. Each year theres a festival that blocks off any and all traffic going up and down the street to celebrate the Cuban culture that lives vibrantly in southern Florida. However, this vibrancy lacks a couple crucial things - shade and landscape. Without these, walking the streets of Miami is somewhat impossible, especially during the exceptionally hot days (which are quite frequent). The focus of this project is to imagine a solution to this issue.
Professor Ryan Scavnicky
Cleveland, OH
Fall 2021
FEATURED IN 2021 KENT CAED X-GALLERY
The common ideology of "architecture is everywhere", truly gets put into practice in this project where inspiration is drawn from an unexpected place - video games. The application of form is taken directly from the phone game Monument Valley, challenging the limitations of geometry, color, and expression in both a graphic and an architectural context.
Professor Paola Gionica
Florence, IT
Fall 2022
In 1966, the Arno River flooded in Florence, destroying everything and anything in it's path. Consequently, project have done everything in their power to avoid proximity to the Arno for decades. However, as time has gone by, the Arno remains neglected and feared. This project was driven with the goal of breaking the stigma created the Arno while also embracing the Torrino di Santa Rosa, a historic architectural artifact, sitting alongside the site.