Fukushima, observing how infrastructures, decisions, and economic systems quietly persist and transform beyond the moment of disaster.
Rather than focusing on spectacle, the work traces subtle continuities: abandoned schools, dormant stations, storage sites, new solar fields. These spaces function as archives, where memory, policy, and imagination intersect.
The project asks how a future is constructed in places once defined by rupture—and what remains when silence becomes the dominant narrative.

A damaged clock recovered from debris in a tsunami-affected area two years after the 2011 disaster.

An abandoned shopping street entrance sign reading “The Bright Future of Nuclear Power,” photographed in the evacuation zone.

An elementary school classroom left abandoned within the evacuation zone.

Tomioka Station platform overgrown with vegetation within the evacuation zone.

A tractor left inside a farm shed within the evacuation zone.

Milk discarded in a field following the nuclear accident.

Flexible container bags filled with contaminated soil stored in a mountainous area following the 2011 nuclear accident.

Utility-scale solar panels constructed on land affected by the 2011 nuclear disaster.

A vacant lot where a residential neighborhood once stood before the 2011 nuclear







