Re(treat)
Sansusī Forest Food Court
2023
Susėja, Latvia
In collaboration with Laura-India Garinois
Awarded 2nd Prize by Buildner
2023
Susėja, Latvia
In collaboration with Laura-India Garinois
Awarded 2nd Prize by Buildner
Section Perspective
Unit Plan
Circulation Diagram
Elevational view
Assembly diagram
Rooms (Hug House)
Rooms Option Studio2015
Garrotxa, Spain
Guided by Bet Capdeferro and Ramon Bosch at Cornell University.
Hug House redefines the concept of enclosure by exploring both personal and territorial scales, drawing inspiration from the natural texture of Garrotxa. The canopies and partitions of the landscape inform a design language that operates at both human and territorial scales. The project emphasizes thresholds, celebrating their ability to blend distinct conditions and create dynamic spatial boundaries. These limits shift with use, time, natural forces, approach, and materiality, while concave arches introduce varied conditions of enclosure and programmatic specificity.
Eating/Daydreaming
Outdoor Bath
Territorial and Elemental Embracing in Garrotxa.Topographical embrace of the air. Weather patterns are directed by the mountain behind the site, producing a unique microclimate.
Sprouts
Floating Pavilion2019
Amsterdam, Netherlands
In collaboration with Laura-India Garinois
Awarded the Editor’s Choice Award by Switch
Featured in POOL Magazine Issue n.7: Float
Plan over time
Sprouts in its first growth
Sectional transformation over time
Elävä Museo
Art and Design Museum
2024
Helsinki, Finland
In collaboration with Laura Stargala, Timothée Ryan,
and Amparo Dominguez Soler
Sámi Building Structures
Indigenous communities built shelter with the materials available to them - the architecture was dictated by the constraints of the site, climate, labour, and culture. Similarly, the Elävä Museo responds to its current context, using timber as the main structural material, as well as for wall paneling, roof tiles, and furniture. It is a response to industrialized globalized markets, offering a new way forward for design.
Indigenous communities built shelter with the materials available to them - the architecture was dictated by the constraints of the site, climate, labour, and culture. Similarly, the Elävä Museo responds to its current context, using timber as the main structural material, as well as for wall paneling, roof tiles, and furniture. It is a response to industrialized globalized markets, offering a new way forward for design.
Covered Goods Shed
This image, painted by Magnus von Wright in 1842, illustrates how the previous buildings occupying the site were a ‘katettu tavara vaia,’ a covered goods shed, made of timber. The Elävä Museo recognizes its past by embracing the timber structure that once stood on its site. While the timber structure can be used to house goods, it can also be used to house artifacts of architecture, art and design.
This image, painted by Magnus von Wright in 1842, illustrates how the previous buildings occupying the site were a ‘katettu tavara vaia,’ a covered goods shed, made of timber. The Elävä Museo recognizes its past by embracing the timber structure that once stood on its site. While the timber structure can be used to house goods, it can also be used to house artifacts of architecture, art and design.
Harbour Structures
This photograph, taken by Gustaf Nyström in 1883, shows a pier’s goods shed. The timber structures were commonly built to house goods and provide shelter for the people occupying the piers. The Elävä Museo utilizes the commonly used material, timber, to create a unique interpretation of sheds across the Finnish harbour landscape.
This photograph, taken by Gustaf Nyström in 1883, shows a pier’s goods shed. The timber structures were commonly built to house goods and provide shelter for the people occupying the piers. The Elävä Museo utilizes the commonly used material, timber, to create a unique interpretation of sheds across the Finnish harbour landscape.
Fishing Villages
The fishing villages of Finland exemplify the use of timber construction along the water. Timber is not only used to construct architecture, but also boats, furniture, and other design objects. The Elävä Museo is an example of Finnish vernacular architecture, utilizing regional methods and techniques in order to create a meaningful impact on its urban condition and cultural traditions.
The fishing villages of Finland exemplify the use of timber construction along the water. Timber is not only used to construct architecture, but also boats, furniture, and other design objects. The Elävä Museo is an example of Finnish vernacular architecture, utilizing regional methods and techniques in order to create a meaningful impact on its urban condition and cultural traditions.
Plan Drawings
Aerial Perspective from the Harbor
Over-UnderUrban Public Bench Reinvented
2016
Winnipeg, Canada
In collaboration with Laura-India Garinois
Awarded 1st Place by STUFFgroup, Featured in Cornell AAP News
Cornell University AAP Spring 2017 Newsletter, and The Street is a Public Space by STUFFgroup
Visitors taking a break from their bike ride
Axonometric diagram
Vibrations
Handknotted Wool Rug2016
Los Angeles, California
In collaboration with Laura-India Garinois
Awarded 1st Prize Rug Your City by Floorplan
Available for purchase at Floorplan.
Vibrations of L.A.
Air As Infrastructure
Infrastructural, Botanical, and Ecological Information System
2016
Tapajos River Basin, Brasil
In collaboration with Laura-India Garinois
2016
Tapajos River Basin, Brasil
In collaboration with Laura-India Garinois
Total RF propagations in the Tapajós generated by the communication network, providing local communities with protective tools to monitor the forest.
Temporal densities mapped in the Tapajós National Forest
App interface: geotag and identification of species along path
Archaic modes of specimen collection
Line of Sight/Site cataloguing the topographical obtrusions in the broadband range
Mesh Node propagation
About Liam Martin
In 2015, collaboration with Laura-India Garinois, he cofounded Superinfra, a design-research practice focused on infrastructure, phenomenology, and ecological restoration. Liam has also worked with Madrid-based RICA*studio, assisting in the design of a biophilic play-therapy garden for La Fe Hospital in Valencia, Spain.
Since joining COOKFOX Architects in 2018, he has been a key member of the visualization team, crafting imagery with the project teams of St. John’s Terminal, 555 Greenwich Street, Terminal Warehouse, 335 8th Avenue, Bruce Springsteen Archives and Center for American Music, and Marymount School of New York.
Liam’s work bridges speculative projects and built architecture, and through an interdisciplinary and collaborative spatial process, he advocates for thoughtfully crafted, contextually-sensitive design that prioritizes nature, wellness and sustainability.
His work has been published by POOL Magazine, Association, Archdaily, and Metropolis Magazine.
Journal
Re(treat) Superinfra wins 2nd Prize of the 2023 Sansusi Forest Food Court Competition. With Laura-India Garinois.
Community Center. Feasibility study for a heavy timber community center in The Bronx. With Todd Drucker. 2022.
Proton. With Laura-India Garinois / Superinfra. Supervisor: Stephanie Owens. 2017.
Evil Katsu. Storefront Design in the East Village, with Todd Drucker. 2021.
Metropolis Magazine Workplace of the Future 2.0 Finalist. With Laura Stargala and Justin Yoo. 2014.
Catnap. Proposal for a temporary pavilion in Montpellier, France. With Laura-India Garinois. 2024.