London: Urban Ecologies
This series documents the relationship between urban infrastructure, mobility, and emerging forms of ecological design within the city of London.
Stations, public spaces, and redevelopment sites reveal how contemporary cities are shaped by overlapping systems: transport networks, historic architecture, consumption patterns, and efforts to reintroduce biodiversity into the built environment. Living walls, urban wetlands, and water gardens appear alongside steel structures, transit corridors, and dense flows of people.
These landscapes reflect broader shifts in urban planning and environmental governance, where cities are increasingly expected to support both human mobility and ecological resilience.
Rather than focusing on iconic views, the photographs observe quieter moments of interaction between infrastructure and nature. In doing so, the series considers London as a dynamic urban ecosystem — a place where movement, history, and environmental renewal continuously reshape the relationship between people and the city they inhabit.








