Zoë Sizer

Interior Architecture, 2023

Zoë Sizer is an Interior Architect with deep interest in issues facing vulnerable people and social justice. She hopes to use her skills to create a safe and equitable world where all people can come together to feel comfortable and safe.

She is proficient with Rhino 3D, Revit, and the Adobe Suite, and especially enjoys working on graphic design projects and tasks. In her free time Zoë enjoys playing video games and doing hand stitched embroidery.

She helped design and construct the University of Canberra booth for Canberra Comicon 2023. Her group was selected as the Overall Winners of the inaugural 2022 Swayn Student Ideas Competition.

Zoë Sizer

Selected Portfolio

Rainy Day Render

Rainy Day Render

A render of a foggy day in St. John's Newfoundland using traditional Photoshop techniques. My cosy courtyard design nestles perfectly into the local vernacular architecture while hiding a secret garden interior.

Commonwealth Circle Sections

Commonwealth Circle Sections

Select sections from the winning design of the 2022 Swayn Competition. The stratified levels create a safe transit interchange for pedestrians to be separated from traffic above, while the open plaza counteracts the unsafe connotations of traditional pedestrian underpass.

Welcome to the Mojave

Welcome to the Mojave

I was allowed to choose my own theme for this graphic design project, so I made a suite of posters about my favourite video games. This poster replicates a popular postcard design from the 1920s using scenes and themes from the video game "Fallout: New Vegas"

Dynamic Ribbon Site Map

Dynamic Ribbon Site Map

Proposed location of a pavillion for the Digital Design Techniques 2 class. We used parametric techniques (in Rhino and Grasshopper) and a randomly selected material process (in our case robotic plastic extrusion) to generate a translucent and ghostly structure in the middle of a major pathway on campus. We used this opportunity to split the pathway so that students images would be warped and refracted by the structure as they walked past one another.