Tokyo in autumn: a whirlwind of golden ginkgos, Lego-like architecture stacking shrines against skyscrapers, and flea markets humming with hagglers’ calls amid train rumbles.
From Ueno’s treasure hunts to Tsukiji’s sizzling stalls, golden hour reflections on glass towers, and evenings unwinding in quiet apartments—every frame captured the city’s vibrant pulse.
Chasing these moments through crisp air and neon nights felt like poetry in motion.
What’s your favorite Tokyo season?
There’s something special about late nights in Tokyo. After wandering its neon alleys and cozy restaurants, I return to my hotel, where the city finally grows quiet. Hours slip by as I edit my photos—its glow still alive on my screen, even as the streets outside fall asleep.
A reminder that sometimes the best part of travel is not only living the moment, but reliving it before you drift into dreams.
When reality feels straight out of a fairytale…
Wandering through Chinzanso Garden as mist rolls over ancient camellias is like stepping into a dream. The garden, blanketed in clouds of mist, transforms into a “sea of clouds” — a surreal oasis in the heart of Tokyo
What if you could walk through a hotel before it’s even built?
With AI, we can prototype suites, lobbies, restaurants, even guest journeys in hours — not months.
This isn’t about replacing architects or designers, it’s about giving them a new sketchbook: faster, more flexible, and with endless possibilities.
For hoteliers, it means testing atmospheres before investing.
For creators, it means expanding imagination beyond the physical.
These 5 images don’t exist in the real world. But they could…and they probably will.
Would you stay in a place like this?
#HotelDesign #HospitalityDesign #ConceptDesign
#InteriorArchitecture #FutureHotels #DesignInspiration
Two frames.
One city.
A skyline that never sleeps.
Shot on 120 film, Shibuya reveals itself in layers—lights, movement, and quiet moments between.
For those who see beauty in the spaces in between.
—
🎞 Edition from my Japan analog archives.
In Japan, the onsen is more than a bath — it’s a ritual.
A moment where time disappears, and the only sound is water.
These are my imagined luxury onsens, inspired by real spaces l’ve experienced and others I hope to capture.
For those who find beauty in the spaces in between - the full story and more designs are inside my newsletter, ROOM 404.
Link in bio.
Neon lights, last trains, and the city still wide awake — Tokyo’s nights start and end on the platform.
What’s your favourite Tokyo station at night? 🚇
I don’t photograph hotels to show how they look.
I photograph them to show how they feel.
Light, silence, rhythm —
these are the things I wait for before pressing the shutter.
This is the kind of work I share in *Room 404* too.
A visual journal of quiet places, both real and imagined.
Link in bio.