独创性
工作室

As designers, it is easy to focus on how a space looks on paper—symmetry, clean lines, and perfect balance.We create "beautiful" drawings. But people don’t live in drawings. They live in physical spaces, and they don’t use a space based on its look, they use it based on how it feels. In many gardens, large open areas are treated as the main feature. On a plan, they look minimal and organized. In reality, these are often the least used spots.
Think about a cafe: very few people choose to sit in the exact center of the room. We naturally move toward the edges—near a wall, a window, or a corner. This isn't a design choice, it is a human instinct. We look for a sense of support.Creating Enclosure.

A perfectly open lawn might look "balanced," but without a sense of enclosure, it feels exposed.People rarely stay in a space where they feel "watched" from all sides.

In my design process, I prioritize "Spatial Support." This means using planting, low walls, or level changes to create boundaries. It’s not about building a cage, it’s about giving the body a place to "land." When you feel protected from behind or sheltered from above, you naturally relax. Good landscape design is not just about visual composition. It is about understanding human behavior. My goal is to design spaces that don’t just win awards for their looks, but spaces where people actually want to sit, stay, and breathe.

