Parking garages at night are liminal spaces—meant for movement, yet disturbingly still. This series captures the unease of these empty structures, where flickering lights cast long shadows, and every dark corner suggests something unseen. The hum of distant traffic is muffled, footsteps echo, and the absence of people feels less like solitude and more like a warning.
Artificial light becomes both a guide and a trap, illuminating sections while leaving others in deep, impenetrable darkness. The glare of streetlamps, lens flares, and harsh fluorescents distort perception, creating a disorienting and almost cinematic sense of tension. These are spaces designed for brief, functional visits—yet at night, they take on an entirely different presence, one that hints at vulnerability, at something lurking just beyond the frame.
Through these images, I invite the viewer to enter that unease and experience the parking garage as more than just a structure but a psychological space that feels unsettlingly empty yet never quite abandoned.