Video production
Telling stories about architecture, people and place
Films that capture the sensory and experiential nature of architecture, the people who design and inhabit it, and the places these buildings occupy
With a background in architecture and over 200 films in the design industry, we understand what makes a project meaningful beyond the visual. We're drawn to the intangible qualities of space, light, material, and the human experience within it.
This shapes how we approach every film
Beyond documentation
Most videographers treat architecture like any other subject. They capture what looks good and leave. The result might be polished, but it rarely communicates what matters about the design
We work with practices who need more than documentation. Video done well articulates your design philosophy and draws in the right clients while deterring mismatched enquiries
Our approach
Every film starts with understanding what matters about the project. Not just what it looks like, but why certain decisions were made, how spaces function, what the design is really about
The camera movement, the pacing, the moments we linger on—all informed by the design itself. A dolly tracking through a hallway communicates how the building guides movement and reveals itself over time
On set
We're dedicated to getting it right. If we miss something, we come back. If a shot needs time, we'll take our time
Our clients continually remark that the whole process feels collaborative, considered, and fun. You're working directly with the people who understand your work, not a rotating crew following a formula
Different practices need different videos at different stages
Every production is tailored to your specific goals and audience, but these are the most common forms our work takes:
Project documentaries →
In-depth films (typically 4–8 minutes) that combine thoughtful cinematography with interviews. These explore design intent, client relationships, material choices, and the story behind the work. Useful for portfolios, tender responses, and explaining your approach to prospective clients who want to understand how you think.
Project showcases →
Purely visual films (typically 2–4 minutes) with no interviews or voiceover. Focused on materiality, spatial sequence, light, and atmosphere. These let the architecture speak for itself and work well when the design is strong enough to carry the narrative without explanation.
Practice profiles →
Films about your practice, your people, and what drives the work (2–5 minutes). Built around interviews with directors or key team members, combined with project footage and studio moments. Essential for tender submissions, new business pitches, or repositioning in the market.
Short form content →
Social media and website content (15–90 seconds) designed for Instagram, LinkedIn, and your online portfolio. Condensed project highlights, construction progress, pieces-to-camera, or behind-the-scenes moments. Keeps you visible across platforms and communicating consistently without demanding too much of your time.
Construction documentation →
On-site filming during key build stages to capture process, craft, and collaboration. Can be delivered as standalone progress updates or woven into longer project films. Valuable for showing how design translates to reality and for celebrating the trades and builders who bring the work to life.