ABSTRACT
This visual essay explores notions of interiority by reflecting on the physical and psychological spaces occupied while traveling. Specifically, it considers spatial characteristics, atmospheres, and human behaviors common to notions of the interior that are experienced while moving or being transported from one place or space to another. The airplane, train, automobile, pedestrian, and digital technology are explored as devices connecting the built and non-built environments as well as varying degrees of enclosure. The essay reveals travel experiences and spaces that contain physical, programmatic, and psychological characteristics common to the simple enclosure, offering an expanded conversation to understand interiors as more malleable, fluid, and interstitial spaces.
