“That day, giving a loose my soul,
I spent on the unimportant wood.”
-Robert Frost
from Two Tramps in Mud Time (1936)
[designing]
Hilltop Cabin
Personal
Central New Hampshire
2025
Town Square Pavilion
Academic
Intermediate Architectural Design (HARC0330)
2023
Experimentation in Light, Mass, and Rhythm
Academic
Intermediate Architectural Design (HARC0330)
2023
Vermont Barn Planset
Professional
2022
[building]
Hilltop Cabin
Personal
Central New Hampshire
2025
Chicken Coop
Personal
Central New Hampshire
2023
Moldering Privy
Design Assembly Program
Squam Lake, New Hampshire
2023
Truck Camper
Personal
2023
[writing]
Senior Economics Research
Environmental Economics (ECON0465)
2022
In this paper, I seek to indentify an empirical link between the most significant economic factors incentivizing consumers to purchase electric vehicles. Through my methodology, I found that — on average — each additional charger corresponds with roughly 61 new EV registrations per state, while controlling for county-specific measures. The effect is stronger in recent years and in politically Democratic-leaning states, suggesting both market maturity and social attitudes shape EV adoption.
Senior Economics Research
History and Development of the World Economy (ECON0453)
2022
This Economics paper assembles a narrative argument linking the rise of large-scale textile manufacturing with an economic shift away from family farms and towards wage-based employment. This shift, in turn, induced enduring welfare benefits, including medical insurance, PTO, and an increased prevelance of women in the workforce through “Mill Girl” employment programs.
Development Proposal — Middlebury Riverfront
Developing the Built Environment (HARC0267)
2022
with Max Taxman
This presentation proposes transforming Middlebury’s underused Bakery Lane parcel into a mixed-use development with retail, office space, housing, and publicly accessible waterfront amenities along Otter Creek. Through market analysis, appraisal comparisons, and financial modeling, we demonstrate our proposal to be feasible, offering strong community benefits and investor returns while revitalizing a key gateway into downtown.
Immigration and Economic Outcomes
Theory and Measurement of Economic History (ECON0329)
Fall 2021
In this research proposal, I investigate how the mass arrival of Irish immigrants during the Great Famine affected economic outcomes in major U.S. cities, leveraging the event as a natural experiment. I argue that large migration waves can both diversify labor markets and disrupt existing occupational structures, creating measurable differences in socioeconomic advancement between immigrants and native-born workers.
[about]
I am a designer and craftsman born and raised in Concord, NH.
Through my work, I aim to communicate themes of belonging and community in rural areas, emphasize the importance of craftsmanship through the design process, and connect with the historic traditions of my New England upbringing.
My design perspective, however, is a dynamic reflection of my lived experiences. As an aspiring architect, I am fortunate to reflect on my past projects and identify their influences in my life as I progress towards a more complete and holistic representation of my design values.
If you have any comments or questions about my work, please feel free to get in touch.