

Providing the highest quality architectural rendering for Charlottesville and beyond.
It was fun to have both of these projects in process during this month. These two projects couldn’t be much more different. The first project is a single family residential that is on a heavily wooded lot. It’s a traditionally styled house with wood and stucco. The rendering is in a watercolor illustration style and was prepared for presentation to an architectural review board.
The second project is a contemporary/ modern styled 6 story mixed-use apartment building on the H street corridor in Washington, DC. This rendering was completed for their marketing website and the idea was to do a photo realistic render to give it a sense of liveliness and urban context.
I have quite a few new images to share, and I will have more coming as soon as they are public. I’ll have some videos as well to add to my website soon. I can’t wait to post those.
I’ve been working on finalizing illustrations for a coffee shop concept. (You can see a couple of the unedited computer renderings in last month’s post.) Here are views of some of the highlighted spaces.
I’ve prepared some renderings for a few concept buildings. Here is a high-rise apartment building.
This is a display concept for placement in a well-known retailer.
Time again for posting some of my latest architectural renderings, illustrations, and related work. Two projects that I particularly enjoyed are a poster for the new Habitat for Humanity development in Charlottesville, and a watercolor style illustration for a new home. For the Habitat project, I updated a site plan rendering I had completed before to show some new lots, and then helped put together the poster layout for them.
For the residence, I built a computer model from existing CAD plans, and used some site photos to detail the context. I then used the watercolor technique I’ve been developing to make the following image.
I’ve finished a set of illustrations, both interior and exterior for the restaurant shown in the previous post. There were a few changes from the preliminary images: new lighting fixtures, revised furniture (pub height tables and bar stools to match the table seating,) and I’ve also added more detail and texture to the images. The set of images also include some exterior views, showing the entrance, the rooftop dining terrace, and outdoor patio. Click on the illustrations for a larger image.