Weisz Architects is a boutique studio defined by clarity, focus, and discernment —where design begins with dialogue and unfolds through intention.

The practice is led by CP Weisz, whose foundation in architecture began with a summa cum laude Master’s from Boston Architectural College. She developed her voice through years of collaboration with some of the region’s most respected architects—refining her eye across typologies, scales, and complexities. Her approach is both sensitive and strategic: a design mind with deep construction fluency and LEED AP BD+C certification, grounded in how spaces are formed, regulated, and occupied.

Quietly confident with a sensitivity to what often goes unseen, CP is driven by a desire to shape the new while honoring both the present and the echoes of the past. From this foundation, the studio emerged—not as a bold leap, but as a natural evolution. An open door. A place where ideas are realized and form becomes story.

Inside the studio, creativity is communal. The process is fluid, intense, and comprehensive—rooted in discovery. It begins with questions: perceiving what’s said and unsaid, the site, the constraints, the possibility. Moving quickly and in sync— the collaboration evolves: adjusting, testing, refining in rhythm. Each voice adds perspective; every decision is considered. Sometimes less is more. Sometimes it isn’t. Knowing the difference is everything.

Beneath the fluidity is structure. Vision and execution stay connected, all the way through. Behind each gesture is a foundation of construction knowledge-- strengthened by a deep understanding of what holds and what doesn’t—how code functions in practice, how zoning shapes potential, and how to navigate cost without compromising craft: protecting both intent and investment. The result is a space that feels as though it has always belonged.

What emerges is essence.

Not noise, but clarity.
It holds light, silence, motion.
It speaks in thresholds and textures.
It lives in the spaces between.

It doesn’t explain itself.
It doesn’t need to.