This project explores how environmental comfort can be redistributed through architecture. Rather than treating comfort as a fixed condition, the project uses seasonal environmental analysis and temporal occupation patterns to shape massing, program distribution, and façade systems. Environmental data such as solar exposure informs tower orientation, setbacks, and void formation, while daily and weekly occupancy cycles organize relationships between retail, office, hospitality, and residential programs. Shared spaces—including gardens, restaurants, and pools—are positioned where different temporal patterns overlap, creating moments of interaction between programs. The façade adapts to orientation and programmatic needs through calibrated transparency, modular punched windows, and louver systems that control daylight, heat gain, privacy, and visibility. By integrating environmental performance with temporal occupation, the project proposes a mixed-use tower that responds dynamically to changing urban and environmental conditions. The project ultimately frames time, environment, and occupation as interconnected systems that continuously influence architectural form and spatial experience.