Sculptural fluidity at Beachside Haven by Bean Buro
Designing a sky high home in the heart of southern Hong Kong, overlooking Repulse Bay, this residence by Bean Buro is perfectly balanced for work and play.
Designing a sky high home in the heart of southern Hong Kong, overlooking Repulse Bay, this residence by Bean Buro is perfectly balanced for work and play.
On one of the world’s most populous islands, the ample living and recreation spaces of Atrium House Hong Kong makes it particularly desirable.
In Hong Kong, JJ Acuna / Bespoke Studio has created a contemporary fine-dining restaurant, fit for his eminence, the top Korean chef, Mingoo Kang.
With a small 316 square feet footprint, the Alto Residences still manage to pack in a lot of inspired ideas thanks to a considered design from Studio Adjective
UPDATE: In view of the current situation in Hong Kong, Hong Kong Design Centre has made the difficult decision to cancel the BODW Summit, as initially scheduled on 2-7 December at the Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre.
Within contemporary urban settings, architects and designers are working to redefine and challenge the preconceived concept of what a family home really means.
Through design, Studio Adjective presents the process behind making tea, and showcases tea’s restorative and natural abilities at Yú Teahouse.
There are many ways to tackle the constraints of small square footage. Studio Adjective’s clever space planning and use of materials for an apartment in Hong Kong makes an exemplary case study.
Herzog & de Meuron’s thoughtful intervention to the historic fabric of a former police station transforms a walled-off compound into a nexus of cultural exchange.
Rattan-lined sideboards (and a striking rattan chandelier), timber counter tops and cement tiles are the hallmark design cues of Aesop’s sixth store in Singapore – ironically designed by a Hong Kong-based studio: MLKK.
Without realising it, and certainly without apologising for it, the work of WOHA’s Wong Mun Summ and Richard Hassell has a tendency towards the radical.
If you don’t have pieces from these top Asian fashion designers in your wardrobe yet, you’re missing a trick.