Bespoke websites
Hand-built sites that load fast and read well — marketing pages, portfolios, learned societies. No bloated page-builder unless you actually want to edit it yourself.
design + buildI'm José Luis Herranz, a nuclear engineer who designs and ships websites and web apps. The same rigour I bring to simulating liquid-metal flow inside fusion reactors goes into your pages: measured, not guessed. Fast where it counts, accessible by default, and built to outlive the next framework fad.
No two projects share a template. I scope each one like a problem with boundary conditions, then build only what earns its place on the page.
Hand-built sites that load fast and read well — marketing pages, portfolios, learned societies. No bloated page-builder unless you actually want to edit it yourself.
design + buildMember portals, internal tools, data explorers. I once built a property database and expert system for a liquid-metal alloy in PHP — your CRM is not going to scare me.
PHP · FastAPI · ReactPapers, datasets, rendered equations, IEEE references that don't fall apart. Built for the kind of reader who opens the methods section first.
Typst · MathJaxTurn simulation output into something a browser can actually show — streamlines, scalar fields, time series — without shipping a forty-megabyte payload to do it.
Plotly · D3 · WebGLCore Web Vitals in the green, semantic markup, a sitemap that search engines like. Speed is a feature; I treat it as a requirement, not an afterthought.
Core Web VitalsUpdates, backups, monitoring — the unglamorous work that keeps a site alive after launch. You get a site that's still standing in two years, not a liability.
retainersIn a fluid simulation you don't trust a result until the residuals converge and the numbers stop moving. A website deserves the same honesty. I specify before I build, measure instead of assume, and I don't call it finished because it looks done.
We agree what the site has to do — and what it doesn't — before a single pixel is placed.
Load time, accessibility, conversions: instrumented and reported, never hand-waved.
Plain, well-documented code over the framework of the month. You — or the next person — can still read it.
"I'd rather hand you a site that's slightly less flashy and entirely under control than a beautiful one nobody can maintain."
— how I think about every brief
Representative of the work, with client detail kept deliberately light.
An expert system for the thermophysical properties of a Pb-15.7Li eutectic: ingest papers, store every value with its uncertainty and temperature range, query it in seconds.
A full rebuild for a national scientific society: membership tiers, online payments, an events calendar and a newsletter pipeline — all on one maintainable WordPress stack.
A browser tool to slice 3-D simulation fields, scrub through time steps and compare runs side by side — so engineers stop emailing screenshots of ParaView.
A fast, static academic site: publication list with proper references, equations that render crisply, and a build that deploys from a single command.
Define the domain and the boundary conditions — who it's for, what it must do, what success looks like.
Mesh the problem: information architecture, the right stack, wireframes you can react to early.
Solve it in short iterations. You see the site take shape and steer it before it sets.
QA, performance, accessibility, every device. We don't ship while the result is still diverging.
Deploy, watch the metrics, and keep it healthy. Launch day is a milestone, not the finish line.
I didn't arrive at the web from design school. I came through nuclear engineering — a doctorate on the liquid-metal alloys that will line fusion reactors, proposal evaluation for the European Commission, the occasional paper along the way. Building clear, fast websites started as a way to make that work legible to other people. It turned into something I'm good at and, honestly, enjoy.
Work with me and you deal with me: the same person who scopes the project, designs it, writes the code and answers your email. No account managers, nothing lost in a handoff. I keep only a few projects open at once — on purpose, so each one gets the attention it needs.
A line or two is enough to start. I read every message myself and reply within a couple of working days — usually with questions, because the right questions save you money.