Welcome



Project  THE BARHUB





More than a university bar, it’s a welcoming home-away-from-home for all students, designed around a British domestic theme with tailored furniture and interiors. Blending theatre set flexibility, its walls are easily reconfigured to shift the space’s mood at will. The furniture doubles as an interactive archive, merging the cozy vibe of a house party with the energy of a student bar—serving as both a social hub and a common space for the university community (students, professors, staff, guests alike).






Thames Youth Hub

09/12/2024





A youth community hub at 17 Thames St, Kingston upon Thames, inspired by Malevich’s Suprematism. With functional partitions, it unites study, leisure and creative spaces for local teens/students (free for student ID holders, run by university volunteers). Blending red-brick heritage and river resources, it addresses the lack of local public facilities, building an inclusive youth space to foster community connection and growth.





Spatial Iteration & Inhabitation

2024





This portfolio explores interior design from basic research to comprehensive space creation, integrating core design principles of location, curation, organisation, inhabitation, development and detail. It covers material & ergonomic study, structural joint design, site-specific exhibition planning (with glass recycling theme), and the design of a multi-functional Tink Tank office space balancing public and private areas. The work fully records the entire design process from conceptualisation, research and model making to scheme iteration, orthographic representation and structural detailing, demonstrating the practical exploration of spatial functionality, human scale and design implementability.






Pulp Texture Craft

13/07/2025



This project innovatively reuses paper waste to develop child-friendly pulp texture decorative panels for kindergartens, adhering to the concept of creativity-driven sustainability. Based on an ancient Chinese high-fiber pulp formula, we optimized the production process with waste paper as core raw material, combined with laser-cut mold molding to realize replicable production. Inspired by water ripple light and shadow, the panels feature unique tactile textures, are non-toxic, soft and safe for children. The low-tech, easily replicable process realizes the value rebirth of paper waste, providing an eco-friendly design solution for children's space and verifying the feasibility of waste recycling combined with personalized design needs.





Fast Fashion Vs Slow Fashion

2025




We believe in earth -, people - and future - kind fashion. Amid fashion industry's waste and environmental harm, our exhibition aims to inspire change. Fast fashion is taking a toll on the planet, with vast amounts of clothing discarded yearly, harming ecosystems and fueling climate change. Annually, millions of tons of textiles are tossed. People buy 60% more clothes than 15 years ago but keep them half as long. This "disposable" fashion culture is rife. Fast fashion undeniably pollutes water, accumulates waste and emits greenhouse gases, but it can be different.