Co-living for later life

Across my studies, shaped by distinctly different cultural contexts and ways of telling stories, my projects have remained grounded in a quiet attentiveness: to materials, to memory, to place. I work with a deep respect for what already exists, and an enduring care for what might come after.  This thread continues in my thesis, which considers how architecture might ease loneliness in a post-industrial town like Crewe—where the old railway echoes still—and where I imagine intergenerational co-living not just as housing, but as a gentle framework for resilience, for mutual care, and for belonging.