Web Design & Framer Development
Eden Blue
Making the future feel like it's here: Designing the digital foundation for a next-generation airport infrastructure company. Website design and Framer development translating physical innovation into digital clarity.
Year :
2026
Industry :
Aviation & transportation
Client :
Eden Blue Inc.
Project Duration :
2 weeks



Problem :
EdenBlue is pioneering a new generation of autonomous mobile lounges, redefining how passengers move between aircraft and terminal. It represents a fundamental evolution of airport infrastructure - one that merges engineering, autonomy, and architectural thinking.
My role was to design and build EdenBlue’s website - the digital foundation that introduces this vision to airports, partners, and stakeholders around the world.
This wasn’t simply about presenting information. It was about translating a complex, physical innovation into a digital experience that communicates clarity, confidence, and inevitability.
The website needed to feel as intentional and forward-thinking as the technology itself.



Solution :
My process began with architecture.
I took inspiration from Washington Dulles International Airport - the first airport to introduce mobile lounges as an extension of the terminal itself. That philosophy became the foundation for the digital experience.
The website was designed to feel structured, grounded, and intentional. Layout, typography, and spacing were treated as architectural elements, creating rhythm, hierarchy, and clarity.
Every interaction was purposeful. Motion was subtle and reinforcing. Information was revealed progressively, allowing the user to build understanding naturally.
The goal was not to decorate the innovation, but to give it a digital form that feels inevitable.
The entire site was designed and built in Framer, allowing for precise control over layout, responsiveness, and interaction, ensuring the final experience remained true to the original vision.






Challenge :
EdenBlue is not a consumer product. It exists at the intersection of infrastructure, aviation, and global logistics.
The challenge was to communicate a highly technical, spatially complex system in a way that felt clear, trustworthy, and immediately understandable to airport authorities, investors, and partners alike.
The design needed to establish credibility instantly. It needed to convey scale, vision, and architectural permanence, without overwhelming the user with technical detail.
Most importantly, the digital experience needed to reflect the same principles that define the physical system: clarity, structure, and purpose.
Summary :
The final website establishes EdenBlue’s presence as a serious, forward-thinking infrastructure company operating at global scale.
It provides a clear, structured introduction to a complex system - building trust through clarity and intentional design.
The website does not simply explain EdenBlue. It embodies its philosophy.
It demonstrates how thoughtful digital design can translate physical innovation into a coherent, accessible experience - creating alignment between vision, technology, and perception.
This was such a fun project to take on. The most enjoyable part? Making the future feel real.
More Projects
Web Design & Framer Development
Eden Blue
Making the future feel like it's here: Designing the digital foundation for a next-generation airport infrastructure company. Website design and Framer development translating physical innovation into digital clarity.
Year :
2026
Industry :
Aviation & transportation
Client :
Eden Blue Inc.
Project Duration :
2 weeks



Problem :
EdenBlue is pioneering a new generation of autonomous mobile lounges, redefining how passengers move between aircraft and terminal. It represents a fundamental evolution of airport infrastructure - one that merges engineering, autonomy, and architectural thinking.
My role was to design and build EdenBlue’s website - the digital foundation that introduces this vision to airports, partners, and stakeholders around the world.
This wasn’t simply about presenting information. It was about translating a complex, physical innovation into a digital experience that communicates clarity, confidence, and inevitability.
The website needed to feel as intentional and forward-thinking as the technology itself.



Solution :
My process began with architecture.
I took inspiration from Washington Dulles International Airport - the first airport to introduce mobile lounges as an extension of the terminal itself. That philosophy became the foundation for the digital experience.
The website was designed to feel structured, grounded, and intentional. Layout, typography, and spacing were treated as architectural elements, creating rhythm, hierarchy, and clarity.
Every interaction was purposeful. Motion was subtle and reinforcing. Information was revealed progressively, allowing the user to build understanding naturally.
The goal was not to decorate the innovation, but to give it a digital form that feels inevitable.
The entire site was designed and built in Framer, allowing for precise control over layout, responsiveness, and interaction, ensuring the final experience remained true to the original vision.






Challenge :
EdenBlue is not a consumer product. It exists at the intersection of infrastructure, aviation, and global logistics.
The challenge was to communicate a highly technical, spatially complex system in a way that felt clear, trustworthy, and immediately understandable to airport authorities, investors, and partners alike.
The design needed to establish credibility instantly. It needed to convey scale, vision, and architectural permanence, without overwhelming the user with technical detail.
Most importantly, the digital experience needed to reflect the same principles that define the physical system: clarity, structure, and purpose.
Summary :
The final website establishes EdenBlue’s presence as a serious, forward-thinking infrastructure company operating at global scale.
It provides a clear, structured introduction to a complex system - building trust through clarity and intentional design.
The website does not simply explain EdenBlue. It embodies its philosophy.
It demonstrates how thoughtful digital design can translate physical innovation into a coherent, accessible experience - creating alignment between vision, technology, and perception.
This was such a fun project to take on. The most enjoyable part? Making the future feel real.
More Projects
Web Design & Framer Development
Eden Blue
Making the future feel like it's here: Designing the digital foundation for a next-generation airport infrastructure company. Website design and Framer development translating physical innovation into digital clarity.
Year :
2026
Industry :
Aviation & transportation
Client :
Eden Blue Inc.
Project Duration :
2 weeks



Problem :
EdenBlue is pioneering a new generation of autonomous mobile lounges, redefining how passengers move between aircraft and terminal. It represents a fundamental evolution of airport infrastructure - one that merges engineering, autonomy, and architectural thinking.
My role was to design and build EdenBlue’s website - the digital foundation that introduces this vision to airports, partners, and stakeholders around the world.
This wasn’t simply about presenting information. It was about translating a complex, physical innovation into a digital experience that communicates clarity, confidence, and inevitability.
The website needed to feel as intentional and forward-thinking as the technology itself.



Solution :
My process began with architecture.
I took inspiration from Washington Dulles International Airport - the first airport to introduce mobile lounges as an extension of the terminal itself. That philosophy became the foundation for the digital experience.
The website was designed to feel structured, grounded, and intentional. Layout, typography, and spacing were treated as architectural elements, creating rhythm, hierarchy, and clarity.
Every interaction was purposeful. Motion was subtle and reinforcing. Information was revealed progressively, allowing the user to build understanding naturally.
The goal was not to decorate the innovation, but to give it a digital form that feels inevitable.
The entire site was designed and built in Framer, allowing for precise control over layout, responsiveness, and interaction, ensuring the final experience remained true to the original vision.






Challenge :
EdenBlue is not a consumer product. It exists at the intersection of infrastructure, aviation, and global logistics.
The challenge was to communicate a highly technical, spatially complex system in a way that felt clear, trustworthy, and immediately understandable to airport authorities, investors, and partners alike.
The design needed to establish credibility instantly. It needed to convey scale, vision, and architectural permanence, without overwhelming the user with technical detail.
Most importantly, the digital experience needed to reflect the same principles that define the physical system: clarity, structure, and purpose.
Summary :
The final website establishes EdenBlue’s presence as a serious, forward-thinking infrastructure company operating at global scale.
It provides a clear, structured introduction to a complex system - building trust through clarity and intentional design.
The website does not simply explain EdenBlue. It embodies its philosophy.
It demonstrates how thoughtful digital design can translate physical innovation into a coherent, accessible experience - creating alignment between vision, technology, and perception.
This was such a fun project to take on. The most enjoyable part? Making the future feel real.




