wigglywarroom

The giraffe, the barcode, wiggly [made for the Cameron Highlands BOH Visitor Centre Retail] and BIGchair [designed for DigiTelecommunications Head Offices] are just samples of our furniture designs, created as we move projects into the realm of user requirements. We take every opportunity to produce work that lend themselves to the same content as the building itself.

Whilst we think furniture is a very competitive market, the design opportunities and innovation prospects represents a whole new concept for us. It is perhaps the single most important element in our built environment simply because it is something we touch, feel, and see everyday, at close proximity. The work of Marc Newson and Ross Lovegrove would have demonstrated the continued development in this all-appealing field presently into architectural realms as well, and the progressively disappearing gap between art, architecture and furniture design.

www.zlgdesign.com

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coroflot.com/huatlim

on philosophy

" Thinking is a form of [conscious] action, a necessary precursor to making something beautiful."

Huat LIM

on design

"Design may indeed be complex, but I could not yet imagine it to be complicated...A work can be torturously complex, extravagant, excessively vulgar even…or it can be so simple and plain, almost to the point where it is devoid of any embellishment or decoration, I wouldn’t have an issue with either, but when it is neither that it is considered utterly mundane and ugly."

Huat LIM

on architecture

Yet there is still a little problem I have to solve in my head, and that is that I think architecture is taking a bit too long to becoming like what good art is, generative and always assuming an emotive role. We have yet to make it possible for us to connect to our buildings as easily as we do with a work of art or a piece of music, or things we adore, like our children or our books.

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