Behind the recent revitalised public parks in Hong Kong is a robust process in experimentation and prototyping Hong Kong architect Marisa Yiu, believes to inspire change, we need to slow down and focus on design-making first.
What were some of the influences and moments that led to your current work on leading design efforts and inspiring positive changes?
Growing up, I’ve always been interested in local cultures and in public spaces around us. I’ve had different mentors and influences throughout my school days and career that made me more curious about why people live the way they do and how we can better appreciate and design our city.
A pivotal moment for me came when we won the competition to curate the 2009 Hong Kong & Shenzhen Bi-City Biennale of Urbanism and Architecture. Based on the theme of “City Mobilisation: BYOB (Bring your own biennale)”, we activated an empty site that was to be the future home of the West Kowloon Cultural District.
We wanted to get people excited about participating in the future of their own city. The biennale energised both designers and the public from different walks of life in seeing different possibilities for action and the potential impact on our future generations. Children had the chance to be part of building an eco-farm, where they got to touch the soil and care for plants.
The biennale inspired me and many others to think about our roles as architects in not just designing buildings but getting more involved in shaping the public realm and how we can work with the community to take greater action to implement change in our city.
Design Trust Futures Studio workshop in 2018. Image credit: Design Trust.
You saw the need to go deeper into research and partnerships that resulted in the focus for the non-profit group, Design Trust, nurturing design talents and supporting many design projects.
We were one of the first believers in building community, culture, and research. Around the time of the 2009 biennale event, I was also involved with other Hong Kong based curators creating festivals and small exchanges to help promote young designers’ work.
But I realised that if we wanted to make a difference in the way we design and the way we shape our public realm, we needed to go deeper and invest more in research driven work. And if we wanted young designers to be able to experiment more with their ideas and make an impact, they needed greater support.
Thus, in 2014, we made the shift for Design Trust, which was already part of a registered charity since 2007, to focus more on research and partnerships as a grant-funding and community platform.
What were some of Design Trust’s initial efforts?
One of our first efforts was a research fellowship programme that started in 2015 with M+, Hong Kong’s visual culture museum which opened in 2021, supporting original research projects on design and architecture. Through the fellowship programme, we also supported the museum’s design and architecture team on their collection and research.
To date, Design Trust has supported over 200 projects through our grants and fellowship programmes, and we have also built up a network of more than 500 mentors, mentees, grantees, collaborators and design advisors.
Why is it important to invest in the community and research?
Design is very much a part of our everyday life. Around the design of our spaces and the city, we need to appreciate our heritage, our archives, our public realm.
It is also about telling stories about the unique Hong Kong identity both locally and globally. Ultimately, we want to build a rich legacy that our designers, architects, and the public can draw from that will inspire ongoing and future designs, conversations, and efforts.
One of the revitalised parks – Pei Yi Square Playground, showing a before and after of the space. Image credit: Design Trust.
You led the revitalisation of four micro-parks in Hong Kong that changed the way we look at public spaces and parks. Take us behind the scenes on how this came about.
With our living spaces getting smaller, we were already having conversations about how we could continue to enhance our living environments and that included public parks and spaces. But if you look at these spaces, they tend to be quite generic and don’t seem to be designed for dignity and humanity.
At the same time, we have a lot of amazing young talents who have strong design thinking and new ideas. Many of them are serving in corporate organisations and other sectors and are still finding themselves. Yet there was very little done to support our young designers especially those who are 25 to 35 years old.
We were looking for the right models and ways in which we could support and nurture our young designers in their continuous learning and give them a voice and stake in being able to contribute more actively to the public realm. Thus, we started a platform called Design Trust Futures Studio where well-established architects and designers are paired with young designers in a mentor-mentee partnership.
In the first year, the focus was “small is meaningful”. The initial experiments and prototypes we did, from mobile parks to interventions in districts for the underprivileged, attracted the interest of policy makers. So, we worked with policy makers to focus on improving our park spaces, starting with four pilot parks.
What has been some of the impacts of these redesigned park spaces?
The efforts inspired greater interest for policy makers to look at the design and enhancement of another 170 playgrounds and play spaces and to have more community involvement and young architects and designers.
The young designers themselves benefitted from the design process that included studying other public spaces and projects in a study trip to New York and working closely with the community.
Marisa Yiu with the young designers at the Pei Yi Square playground. Image credit: Design Trust.
It has been an ongoing learning experience for policy makers, the community and us as designers in understanding how designs of such micro-spaces could meet different needs and demographics. The work has not ended as we want to also measure the impact of such spaces on the community and understand how people are using the spaces.
The design process included experimenting with materials that would last when exposed to the weather. We were also conscious to design the spaces to give the community a sense of place, comfort and to support their social lives every day, right down to the tactile experience. For example, for the senior residents who love to play chess, when testing some furniture for one of the parks, they found the grooves for the chess table not deep enough for them to control their chess moves.
In a way, we saw the design process as a living laboratory, communicating and experimenting real time on what works best.
In building a more design-conscious culture, what should we focus on?
We should focus on encouraging designs that are durable, legible, sustainable, and timeless. To be mindful about minimising waste generated from our designs. More importantly, we should spend more time understanding the design process and its value and impact to arrive at better outcomes.
Kids enjoying the space at the revitalised Pei Yi Square playground. Image credit: Design Trust.
We must make space for meaningful conversations and invest in the design process, in prototyping, in design making and research, to hone our tools and skills.
No one can create something powerful and impactful overnight. We need the time to slow down and think more deeply about important issues. To find the right partners and invest in the right process. With good designs and processes, you can then change mindsets, influence policies and most crucially, our young minds.
An eight-year-old girl who participated in the design process with the young designers for one of the parks shared that she too wanted to become a designer in future.
Marisa Yu is the 2023 President*s Design Award (P*DA) Jury Member of the Design Panel. This interview is part of a series with P*DA Jury Members to explore the importance of design and its potential impact on our lives.
About Marisa Yiu
Marisa Yiu is the Co-founder and Executive Director of the DESIGN TRUST initiative, that supports creative and research content related to Hong Kong and the Greater Bay Area. She has been instrumental in shaping the growth of the NGO since 2014 and created and conceptualise the Design Trust Futures Studio programme. Marisa is also an architect and Founding Partner of ESKYIU, an award winning multi-disciplinary architecture and research design studio actively integrating culture, community, art and technology based in Hong Kong. She was the Chief Curator of the 2009 Hong Kong & Shenzhen Bi-City Biennale of Urbanism/Architecture located at the West Kowloon waterfront; and curated Studio-X Shenzhen. Along with her partner Eric Schuldenfrei, they were awarded the ‘Architectural League Prize’ for their installations featured in the Venice Biennale received Architectural Record’s Design Vanguard recognition and Design for Asia Award for Ephemera, commissioned by Swire Art Basel and Movement culture: installation for Ido Portal.
The President*s Design Award is Singapore’s highest honour for designers and designs across all disciplines. For more information about the award, go to https://pda.designsingapore.org/presidents-design-award/
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Thumbnail image credit: Design Trust.