#ModelMakers: Julia Barreiros do Amaral
Introducing #ModelMakers — a new series highlighting architecture students across the world! Today, we’re featuring Julia Barreiros do Amaral, a B.Arch student at Florida Atlantic University. Scroll to learn more about Julia and her work:
Name: Julia Barreiros do Amaral
School: Florida Atlantic University
Degree Program: 5 year Bachelors in Architecture
Year in School: 4th Year
Describe Your Design Style: Neo-futuristic Architecture
Share a Project You’re Proud of: The Flowline Gallery
What Inspires You? I’m inspired by how design has the power to shape not only spaces but also the way people think, feel, and connect with the world around them. A well-designed environment can challenge perceptions, spark curiosity, and create meaningful experiences that stay with someone long after they’ve left the space. It’s that potential for design to change minds and elevate everyday moments that drives me to keep pushing my creativity forward.
What’s Your Student Superpower? My student superpower is resilience. No matter how many challenges, setbacks, or long nights come my way, I stay committed to reaching my goals. In architecture school, there are moments where things don’t go as planned. Models break, ideas get critiqued, deadlines stack up—but I’ve learned to adapt, problem-solve, and keep moving forward. That persistence not only helps me finish what I start, but it also pushes me to grow stronger with each project.
Describe The Flowline Gallery:
Nestled in Hugh Taylor Birch Park, the Flowline Gallery blends seamlessly with the natural landscape, drawing inspiration from the fluid forms of the ancient Banyan tree. Designed as an immersive experience, the gallery dissolves boundaries between interior and exterior, guiding visitors through curved, light-filled spaces that echo the rhythms of nature. Architecture, art, and ecology converge as pathways mimic meandering roots, and clerestories and skylights invite daylight to animate the space. Rather than imposing on the site, the design responds to its contours, weaving around existing vegetation and framing views of the surrounding forest. Natural light becomes a key spatial element, creating dynamic atmospheres that shift throughout the day. The gallery invites reflection and connection, proposing a model for architecture that is responsive, poetic, and deeply contextual. Flowline is not just a building—it’s a living, breathing continuation of the landscape, where design flows in harmony with nature.
Follow Julia to see more of her work: @Archidesignsbyju