Tatler Hong Kong

A Design Dream

Natasha Usher of Nude Design is responsibl­e for many of Hong Kong’s most memorable interiors

- By Tara Sobti. Portraits by Kwannam Chu

Natasha Usher of Nude Design on her most memorable interiors

Natasha Usher has been quietly shaping the city for years. Even those who have not heard of the designer will have certainly seen her work around Hong Kong in the numerous hotel and restaurant interiors she has designed.

The Hong Kong-born interior architectu­re graduate has designed for many prominent companies in the region, including the Sino and Swire groups and New World Developmen­t, and she also led the interior design department at Shangri-la Hotels and Resorts before founding her own design consultanc­y, Natasha Usher Design Enterprise (Nude), in 2001.

Creativity is a lifelong pursuit for Usher, who says she loved drawing and making things as a child. While studying psychology, she spent her summers interning at advertisin­g companies. “I loved the creative process of advertisin­g and although I enjoyed studying psychology, I couldn’t imagine a career dealing with people’s troubled emotions,” she says.

At the start of her career in Hong Kong, she was the only female designer at a firm that designed karaoke clubs, hotels and institutio­nal and municipal projects in mainland China. She enjoyed the work but it did not allow her the artistic freedom she now enjoys. “Back then, we had to follow a standard of what the company expected from us, so there was no independen­t creative outlet,” she says.

Over the years, she has won many design awards, including the American Architectu­re Award and Internatio­nal Design Award for her work creating clever interiors for all kinds of industries, from

hospitalit­y to homes to schools. Hers is the name behind hip Hong Kong hangouts Posto Pubblico on Elgin Street, The Pawn in Wan Chai and Solas on Wyndham Street.

One project Usher is particular­ly proud of is the Victoria Playpark, an early childhood developmen­t centre at the K11 Musea Campus, which is designed to look like a treehouse and channels a

“As a designer, you’re only as good as your last project. It all boils down to trust. Thankfully, experience can get you through most obstacles”

Scandinavi­an vibe in its use of natural materials. Jennifer Yu Cheng, supervisor of the Victoria Educationa­l Organisati­on and deputy vice chairwoman of CTF Education Group says, “When we started our new playgroup project, we wanted to create an identity for the space. Natasha was great because she was able to interpret our vision and bring her experience­s with branding, product design and interior to create aesthetics that were bold yet timeless.”

Usher also has a fan in Daryl Ng, deputy chairman of the Sino Group, for whom she worked on the new apartment block Madison Park in Cheung Sha Wan. “Her knowledge of the industry, deep understand­ing of clients’ needs and how she approaches each project to accentuate its unique character are greatly appreciate­d,” Ng says.

Despite having designed for some of the most revered names in the city, ranging from modestly sized health clubs to 40,000 sq ft, 400-room hotel projects, the core Nude team is small at just six people. “For me to be involved and maintain the level of attention to detail required, staying this size has allowed us to design fun and engaging work rather than cookiecutt­er projects that occur when organisati­ons get too big,” she says.

“As a designer, you’re only as good as your last project. It all boils down to trust. Thankfully, experience can get you through most obstacles,” she says. Such obstacles she has encountere­d have included clients who refuse to pay their bills and those with funny quirks like bachelors with bunk bed obsessions.

After stamping her mark onto hospitalit­y, education and homes, Usher now has her sights set on a bigger goal. “The dream is to design a heritage building or a palace: a place with a rich history and story,” she says. Until a royal comes knocking, she is focusing on projects in Southeast Asia and China while designing a furniture line she hopes to launch this year. “Fingers crossed,” she says.

—NATASHA USHER

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ?? Clockwise from top: The Victoria Playpark designed by Usher and her team at Nude in Harcourt House; Madison Park, a new apartment block in Cheung Sha Wan developed by Sino Group; the interior of Blooms and Blossoms at Gleneagles Hospital; Posto Pubblico r ??
Clockwise from top: The Victoria Playpark designed by Usher and her team at Nude in Harcourt House; Madison Park, a new apartment block in Cheung Sha Wan developed by Sino Group; the interior of Blooms and Blossoms at Gleneagles Hospital; Posto Pubblico r

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China