I am a Geography and Urban Studies PhD student at Temple University.
My research examines how urban heat is produced through interactions between biophysical systems,
human processes, and the built environment. My work is situated at the intersection of hazards geography,
urban analytics, and urban sustainability, with a growing emphasis on critical physical geography as a
framework for understanding the relationship between physical processes and political structures.
Drawing from both technical and critical approaches, my research bridges geospatial data science and
qualitative inquiry to investigate how thermal risks are distributed, experienced, and mitigated in cities.
I apply quantitative methodologies such as remote sensing, microclimate modeling, and machine learning
to quantify patterns of heat exposure and environmental change, while also using qualitative methods to
examine questions of equity, security, and the lived experience of urban heat. Their interdisciplinary
approach is informed by political ecology, urban climatology, environmental justice, and the geographies
of vulnerability and resilience with the goal of advancing more just and effective strategies for climate
adaptation. I am particularly interested in how urban form, environmental conditions, and structural
inequities shape the spatial and social distribution of heat.
In my spare time, I enjoy making websites, doing crafts, being outside, and writing songs.