Design rooted in how spaces make people feel.
About Hall & Home
Architecture for Homes — and Purposeful Spaces
Hall & Home is a South Carolina-based architecture practice specializing in residential design and select small-scale commercial projects.
We believe architecture should bring clarity, not complication. Whether designing a custom home, reimagining an existing residence, or coordinating a professional office build-out, our work is grounded in structure, precision, and thoughtful execution.
Every project is approached with careful consideration of function, longevity, and cohesion. We do not chase trends. We design spaces meant to endure.
Destiny Hall, AIA, NCARB
I grew up in Asheville, North Carolina, in the shadow of the Biltmore Estate, one of the most extraordinary examples of architecture and intentional design in the country. Long before I understood what architecture was as a profession, I understood what it could do to a person. How a space could make you feel small in the best way, or completely at ease, or quietly inspired. That early exposure never left me.
I've been practicing architecture since 2016, beginning with residential and commercial work before moving into federal and government projects in 2020, where I built and led the architecture department for a design-build firm. That experience gave me a deep understanding of technical documentation, contractor coordination, and the kind of precision that protects a client's investment at every stage of a project.
Hall & Home was founded on a straightforward belief: that every client, residential or commercial, deserves the same level of architectural rigor and coordination that large institutional projects receive. Whether it's the home you live in every day or the commercial space where you serve your clients, the environment around you shapes how you feel and how you work. It should be designed with that weight in mind.
My focus in every project is on the people inside the space, whether that's a family in their home or a team in a commercial environment. How will you feel when you walk into this room in the morning? How will this space work for the people who use it every day, five years from now? What decisions in proportion, light, material, and flow will create the sense of calm or energy or focus the space needs to support? Architecture at its best is something you feel without being able to name it. The space just works.