The Star Malaysia

Contest elevates interior design students’ standards

- By LEE CHONGHUI educate@thestar.com.my Well done:

KUALA LUMPUR: The annual Interior Design Students’ Saturday, the country’s largest annual competitio­n for interior design students, will help to elevate the country’s interior design standards by encouragin­g competitio­n among them.

The host of the competitio­n, Erican College founder and managing director Datuk Eric Chong, said the competitio­n engages students and boosts their creativity.

“Students usually operate and learn in the confines of their own environmen­t (institutio­ns) and here is where they can see what their peers from different institutio­ns are doing, and try to match them,” he said after the prize-giving ceremony.

Now into its 20th year, the competitio­n is organised by the Malaysian Institute of Interior Designers (MIID), with Dulux, a brand of Akzo Nobel Paints Malaysia, as its corporate partner.

Mah Sing Group Bhd, a believer in the power of interior design to enhance the attractive­ness of property, debuted as the first property developer to sponsor the event while Erican College, which offers diploma in interior design, played host to the competitio­n for the first time.

The competitio­n themed IDMOJI was held at Perpustaka­an Kuala Lumpur and Menara DBKL on Saturday.

Despite it being a competitio­n, Chong said the participan­ts had good spirits and remained courteous towards their fellow competitor­s.

“There was a team which did not bring enough tools, yet other teams offered their tools to them. This is the sort of healthy competitio­n we emphasise,” he said.

MIID vice-president Ooi Boon Seong said the competitio­n exposed students to what an interior designer does.

“Many people think that interior design is just decorating a space but it is actually a highly-specialise­d profession that involves architectu­re, structural changes and other factors to create space using good designs,” he said.

Through the competitio­n, participan­ts learned to work with people to create quality projects in a short duration of time, he added.

MIID council member Sharifah Suzana Syed Hassan, who chaired this year’s Students’ Saturday, said no one could choose the colleagues they would like to have in the real working environmen­t.

Mah Sing senior general manager of corporate communicat­ions Lyanna Tew said sponsoring the event was a great opportunit­y to engage with future interior designers of the nation and thanked the organisers for it.

“This is a great chance for us to engage students through such a large scale educationa­l project as we (Mah Sing) value and believe in life-long learning,” she said, adding that the company also supports initiative­s by Teach for Malaysia, Dignity for Children Foundation.

Akzo Nobel manager in charge of interior design Khiew Wei Yi said the competitio­n was the “best event in town” for interior design students to showcase their talents.

Kuala Lumpur City Hall (DBKL) project implementa­tion and building management deputy director Sharifah Junidah Syed Omar said the competitio­n has been made part of DBKL’s Kuala Lumpur Design Month (October) 2016 and was a good platform for the students to broaden their minds.

A total of 53 cash prizes worth RM15,000 were given out to the winners.

 ??  ?? Tew (centre) presenting a prize to interior design student Dan Piai Yew (left) as Chong looks on.
Tew (centre) presenting a prize to interior design student Dan Piai Yew (left) as Chong looks on.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia