
Ripple is an attempt to bring the wind’s gentle trembling of light—an almost breathing motion—into the interior of architecture. The source of the idea lies in the ripple formed when a raindrop touches the surface of water. It expands, then disappears. The form leaves no trace, yet its order quietly persists. The work seeks to extend that structure into space. Acrylic pipes and triangular prisms hang from the ceiling, standing autonomously through their specific spatial configuration. Natural light refracts inside them and casts wavering patterns across the floor. These fluctuations shift over time, responding even to the slightest movement of air. The patterns continue in sequence but never return to the same shape. For the design, wind direction and solar altitude were measured on site, and the materials’ transmission and reflective properties were rigorously tested. No artificial force is used. The space moves solely through the natural conditions of air and light. Rather than a building that presents a completed form, Ripple is a structure that prepares the conditions to receive natural forces. Each time wind and light intersect, the slow flow of time becomes visible.





