Indris Studio creates architectural images for architects, developers and design teams.
The studio is independent, focused, and forward-looking. Its work sits between architectural understanding, 3D craftsmanship and new image technologies — not to chase trends, but to produce clearer, sharper and more useful visuals.
A good architectural image has to do more than look beautiful. It has to explain a project. It has to respect the design, the proportions, the materials, the atmosphere. It has to help a client, a jury or a future buyer understand what is not built yet.
That is how Indris Studio works.
For now, the studio is deliberately focused on still images. Not as a limitation, but as a discipline. A single image can carry a lot: a façade, a mood, a material intention, a public space, a competition idea, a development story. When it is carefully made, it becomes a precise tool for communication.
Indris Studio is led by me, Eric Imboden, a 3D artist specialized in architectural visualization. Working with an independent studio means direct communication, continuity and clear responsibility from the first brief to the final image. No unnecessary layers. No diluted process. Just a focused collaboration around the project.
The name “Indris” refers to the indri, a remarkable lemur from Madagascar. One story says that the name came from a guide pointing into the forest and saying: “look there.” Whether legend or etymology, the idea stayed: attention, observation, and the act of helping others see.
That is also the purpose of Indris. To look carefully. To reveal the intention. To make the project visible before it exists.
If you are working on a concept, definitive plans or 3D, Indris Studio can help you turn your project into clear, compelling visuals.
