The
Design Anthology
Archive
The World’s Oldest Fine Leather Goods House Brings Heritage and Wit to Hong Kong
With a legacy dating back to 1829, Delvaux brings its historic savoirs and savoir faire to Hong Kong’s K11 Musea, combining them with local references that carry a hint of Belgian wit
In Bangkok, a Workplace Trades Rigidity for Range
At One Bangkok, a new Workplace Show Suite sheds the rigidity of the traditional office in favour of something more open and adaptable. Through layered zoning and spatially responsive furnishings, the space explores how the modern workplace can support fluid and distinctly human ways of working
A Family Home in Khao Yai, Raised Above a Garden for the Cows
IDIN Architects elevates a single-storey family home in Pak Chong, reinterpreting the traditional Thai house on stilts in concrete and timber
The List: Our Editors’ Guide to Design-Focused Destinations and Products in April and Beyond
The monthly briefing from Design Anthology’s editors on the most interesting things to see, places to go and products to know
Foster + Partners Summons a Naga at Cambodia’s Techo International Airport
Phnom Penh’s new Techo International Airport by Foster + Partners aspires to be green, efficient and human-centric
Five New Hotels Worth Checking Into, From Bali to Lugu Lake
Our pick of the latest design-forward lodgings from around the world
The Signature Language of Volker Haug Studio
After two decades of illuminating interiors, Melbourne-based Volker Haug is still chasing the curiosity and wonder that first drew him to the medium at the age of ten.
Enough Is Enough: A 1950s Singapore House, Rebuilt Without Starting Over
Goy Architects extends a single-storey house with restraint, preserving its scale, materials and closeness to the ground while drawing nature inward through a central courtyard
The List: Our Editors’ Guide to What to See, Where to Go and What to Read in 2026
The biannual briefing from Design Anthology’s editors on what to see, where to go and what to bring home — from objects and spaces to openings and books.
This Kitchen Is Meant to Be Experienced Like a Walk in the Forest
In a forest-cloaked setting, Fisher & Paykel’s Nature—Ritual exhibition at Milan Design Week 2026 draws on New Zealand’s landscape to frame the kitchen as a lived, everyday space shaped by routine.
In Contrast to its Panoramic View of Auckland, This Apartment Is Intentionally Intimate
At Jervois Apartments, an eight-residence apartment in Auckland considers how compact living can still feel generous, with Fisher & Paykel appliances embedded into the kitchen planning
The Designer Reclaiming Indonesia’s Creative Voice From the Factory Floor
With its unique approach and presentation, Jia Curated is becoming a destination event for the region’s creative industry. Ahead of the fourth edition, we spoke with founder Budiman Ong.
Meet the Indonesian Design Collective Advocating for the Small Details
Millimeter Manifesto is an initiative by nine Indonesian product designers that aims to elevate the country’s design ecosystem by demystifying the discipline down to the finest detail. We speak with participant Alvin Tjitrowirjo of design studio AlvinT to learn more.
A Chair for Life
The Wishbone chair has passed through generations of hands and homes. Over seven decades later, it remains one of the most recognised chairs in the world, its legacy reflecting a conviction that longevity and respect for craft are the ultimate luxuries
The List: Our Editors’ Guide to Design-Focused Destinations and Products in March and Beyond
The monthly briefing from Design Anthology’s editors on the most interesting things to see, places to go and products to know
Step Inside a 1970s Apartment that Chiselled Away the Past to Reveal a Bauhaus Future
Musician Leonard Soosay and designer Dennis Cheok reshape a four room flat with raw concrete, colour and restraint, guided by the Bauhaus belief that form follows function
The List: Our Editors’ Guide to What to See, Where to Go and What to Read in February and Beyond
The monthly briefing from Design Anthology’s editors on the most interesting things to see, places to go and books to read
How Design Anthology and Aesop Designed a Different Way to Experience Tokyo
Design Anthology and Aesop came together in Tokyo for a sensory-led retreat, translating the ethos of both a media brand and a skincare leader into a lived experience shaped by design, craft and the city itself
Revisiting the Design Philosophy That Can Fix the Modern Workplace
In an era of short-lived offices and borrowed workplace models, Knoll brings together Thailand’s design community in Bangkok to reconsider Florence Knoll’s idea of Total Design and its enduring mark on how we design today
Designing for a World That is Neither Purely Digital Nor Wistfully Analogue
Set against Hong Kong’s layered urban landscape, in December Studio Kohler convened architects and designers to consider how memory, technology and cultural identity continue to shape contemporary practice