It was born from a simple gesture: a surname crossed by a hyphen. A stroke that does not divide, but opens a fold — a fissure, a fertile gap where the personal becomes collective, where technique turns into art, and the image — inert by nature — becomes architecture: alive and habitable.

That hyphen is not a cut, but a bridge; a declaration that places CAN-GA in dialogue between commission–authorship, digital–analog, intimate–shared, root–future. It is a workshop of visual and architectural creation, a space where imagination and craft coexist. Its practice breathes through two intertwined paths:

The collaborative one, where commissioned works are understood as an act of complicity with other architects, studios, and developers. Here, technique is placed at the service of a critical and artistic gaze — to create images that help imagine, convince, and win competitions or clients.

The personal one, conceiving self-initiated or requested projects — houses, architectures, interiors, and atmospheres — as author pieces: images created without haste, closer to a gallery work than to a conventional commission. A way to explore and expand the workshop’s vision and knowledge.

Both paths converge into a single language, crafted with diverse tools: digital and analog; infographics and photography; hand sketches and 3D-BIM software; emotional and artificial intelligence. All coexist in the service of one obsession — to narrate architecture with warmth, cultural density, and a human pulse.

A practice immersed in a hybrid territory — to imagine, to evoke, and to offer architecture as experience.
With the conviction that what truly matters is not technique, but the gaze: that of an architect, the certainty of a companion, the interpreter and narrator of a script yet to be written.