Advertisement
Advertisement
Interiors

MIDS 2024: PIID Highlights Design Collaboration and Foresees More Global Partnerships in Future Events

July 27, 2024
|
By 
Katherine Lopez

The Manila Interior Design Summit (MIDS), held from July 18 to 20, placed the spotlight on design synergy. Organized by the Philippine Institute of Interior Designers (PIID), the three-day event became an inspiring gathering of interior design professionals, enthusiasts, and industry leaders from around the globe as it followed the theme, “A Festival of Collaboration.”

Attendees register at the MIDS Marker at Bonifacio High Street, Bonifacio Global City, Taguig. Photo courtesy of PIID.

Rossy Yabut Rojales, Executive Director for Professional Development at PIID and MIDS Program Chair, shared that MIDS 2024 was influenced by global design showcases. 

“For this year’s Manila Interior Design Summit, the inspiration really was a lot of the international design events, such as [3daysofdesign in] Copenhagen, then Maison[&Objet] in Paris, France, and Milan Design Week. You know, these events have been there for a while, and it’s really nice that we have the Manila Interior Design Summit now because we want to make sure that we’re [at] a global standard in terms of our events and to make sure that we’re competitive in how we take these initiatives to the market,” she explained.

IDr. Rossy Yabut-Rojales inside the MIDS 2024 booth.
Rossy Yabut-Rojales browses design books displayed at the MIDS 2024 booth at Bonifacio Global City, Taguig. Photo courtesy of PIID.
IDr. Tessa Prieto-Valdes standing in front of the MIDS 2024 booth.
Tessa Prieto-Valdes poses happily in front of the MIDS 2024 booth at Bonifacio Global City, Taguig.

Carla Leonor, Director for Public Relations and Communications at PIID, added, “It’s really a showcase of what we can do. And that was coming from the first Manila Interior Design Summit last year, which was a huge success. So we want to follow that up with something bigger, something stronger, something that really gathers all of us.”

Advertisement

MIDS Recap

(from left to right) Lorezono Valencia Jr., Katherine Anne Correa, Rossy Yabut-Rojales, Furnitalia Co-Founder Florence Ko, Tessa Prieto-Valdes, Ivy Almario, Cyndi Fernandez-Beltran, John Paolo Castro, Carla Leonor, Daikin Sales Manager Chihiro Ohashi, and Ma. Carmen Regala-Lim

MIDS 2024 kicked off with a ribbon-cutting ceremony at the MIDS Marker at Bonifacio High Street. Then came messages of support and thanks from John Paolo Castro, PIID National President; Ivy Almario, Asia-Pacific Space Designers Association (APSDA) Vice President and former president of PIID; and Keat Ong, APSDA President. 

IDr. Paolo Castro, PIID President
Paolo Castro, PIID National President gives a welcome message at the Focus Global Showroom. Photo courtesy of PIID.

“The PIID, MIDS, and APSDA are all one because we only have one goal: for an exciting, creative community that’s collaborative,” Almario said in a speech delivered at a lunch gathering at the Focus Global Showroom, Bonifacio Global City, Taguig. 

IDr. Ivy Almarion, VP for APSDA
Ivy Almario, Vice President for APSDA, gives a speech at the Focus Global Showroom. Photo courtesy of PIID.

MIDS 2024 also featured various design pocket events held at different participating brand showrooms such as Focus Global, Furnitalia, Porcelanosa, Rimadesio, Studio Dimensione, Abension, Lazuli, and Dexterton at Bonifacio Global City, Taguig. Attendees visited these showrooms and participated in various activities, talks, games, and raffles. 

Advertisement

The three-day event concluded with a Design Symposium, where renowned global designers such as Lyndon Neri, Alvin Tjitrowirjo, Kezia Karin, Vignesh Kaushik, Jonathan Matti, and Ben Stevenson shared their insights and experiences. 

Lyndon Neri at MIDS 2024.
Award-winning architect and designer Lyndon Neri explores the interplay of pairings and dualities in his work. Photo by Ed Simon.
Indonesian furniture designer Alvin Tjitrowirjo discusses how cultural roots give design concepts purpose and direction. Photo by Ed Simon.
Vignesh Kaushik at MIDS 2024.
Vignesh Kaushik, Principal and Design Technology Director of Gensler, gives a presentation on the role of AI in today’s design landscape. Photo by Ed Simon.
Jonathan Matti at MIDS 2024.
Design luminary Jonathan Matti sparks thought-provoking conversations about balancing historical preservation and the demands of modern living. Photo by Ed Simon.
Ben Stevenson at MIDS 2024.
Ben Stevenson of Foster + Partners talks about research-based design, showcasing projects that spanned the globe. Photo by Ed Simon.

The Value of Working Together

Leonor shared that collaboration is a multidisciplinary approach. “It involves a lot of different professionals, whether you are in the interior design sector, you’re in architecture, you’re in engineering, you’re in landscape architecture. It’s really coming together to deliver really good solutions for the new demands of the market.”

For Rojales, a good collaboration means pursuing a shared objective. “We hear the word collaboration a lot in design and in other fields as well. And for me, to have a good collaboration [means] having a common goal and there will be a process in terms of working together to make sure that there is a great output,” she reflected. 

Advertisement

Working with other professionals from different fields can be challenging, but that’s where its beauty lies. “I always say that it has to make you uncomfortable to collaborate with someone else. Because if it gets you uncomfortable, it sparks curiosity. It sparks questioning your design style, questioning the other person’s ideas. That’s where good, innovative designs come out,” Rojales shared. 

Design Synergy Beyond MIDS

Ed Calma, Florence Ko, Anthony Nazareno, and other members of the audience listening to the speakers at the Design Symposium. Photo by Ed Simon.

Rojales believes communication and curiosity “to create something groundbreaking” are vital for any collaboration to succeed. She also promotes “participating in your design community, knowing the artists that are emerging, reading” to foster collaboration outside events like MIDS.

“Because we still encourage a lot of designers to read a lot and to do their research. If you meet somebody, then you never know that a collaboration can start right away. I guess a lot of good ideas sometimes start when it’s unexpected,” the interior designer added.

Advertisement

The Future of Collaborative Design

Attendees at the Design Pocket Event at Abenson, Bonifacio Global City, Taguig. Photo courtesy of PIID.

“I really believe that it would change the landscape of interior design in the Philippines,” Leonor envisioned the succeeding MIDS. “Maybe more collaborations from other partners across the globe, especially that we are forging really strong relationships with organizations such as the Asia-Pacific Space Designers Association, among others.” 

Cyndi Fernandez-Beltran, PIID National Vice President, gives a speech during the MIDS Welcome Dinner at Manila House, Bonifacio Global City, Taguig.

Gone are the days when designers worked in silos. By becoming an avenue for networking opportunities, showcasing creative work, and insightful discussions, MIDS 2024 has set the stage for more fruitful partnerships between interior designers, architects, artists, and even those from other sectors, paving the way for groundbreaking designs that not only impress but also provide solutions.

Related reading: Manila Interior Design Summit 2024: A Celebration of Collaboration

Advertisement
https://bluprint-onemega.com/interiors/homes/at-home/smart-luxe-home-appliances-worth-investing-in/

Fisher & Paykel: A Legacy of Innovation and Design Freedom 

For more than nine decades, Fisher & Paykel has approached design with a simple but exacting belief: that the best living environments are those shaped by people, place, and purpose. Rooted in New Zealand and deeply attuned to island and coastal living, the brand’s philosophy centres on quiet performance, material honesty, and appliances that integrate […]

Helm Restaurant by Josh Boutwood. Designed by Kevin Nieves

Helm Restaurant

At Helm, dining unfolds as choreography. An open kitchen anchors the room, allowing guests to witness the precision behind its Michelin-starred fine dining menu. Designed by Kevin Nieves of Headroom, the 24-seat restaurant reflects that same discipline in its interior design. Tucked within Ayala Triangle Gardens in Makati, Helm brings together culinary recognition and architectural […]

ALT ART 2026: Showcasing Philippine Contemporary Art

Designing ALT ART 2026 at SMX Manila: Baby Imperial on Building an Art Fair

Exhibition designer Baby Imperial of All At Once shaped the spatial strategy of ALT ART 2026, its largest edition to date. The fair occupied Halls 1 and 2 of SMX Convention Center Manila, expanding in both footprint and ambition. Organized by the ALT Collective—Artinformal, Blanc, The Drawing Room, Galleria Duemila, Finale Art File, MO_Space, Underground, […]

Advertisement
ALT ART 2026: Raffy Napay

How ALT ART Continues to Shape Philippine Contemporary Art

ALT ART, organized by the ALT Collective—Artinformal, Blanc, The Drawing Room, Galleria Duemila, Finale Art File, MO_Space, Underground, Vinyl on Vinyl, and West Gallery—presents a focused platform for Philippine contemporary art. As the fair continues to evolve, it expands its scale and curatorial scope, reinforcing its growing presence within the Philippine art scene. Creative Practices […]

For Art Fair Philippines 2026, Max Balatbat reconstructs his grandmother's street chapel in Kapilya.

Inside Art Fair Philippines 2026: Religious Imagery, Material Experimentation, and Social Commentary

Art Fair Philippines 2026 gathered art enthusiasts and collectors in Makati for one of the country’s leading showcases of contemporary Philippine art. Designed by Nazareno/Lichauco, the fair moved to Circuit Corporate Center One in Ayala Circuit, marking a new chapter in its spatial identity. Across its booths and projects, the fair positioned contemporary Philippine art […]

Ronald Ventura

Filipino Contemporary Artist Ronald Ventura on Reinvention and Layered Identity

Ronald Ventura is one of the most recognizable figures in Southeast Asian contemporary art. Since his first solo exhibitions in the 2000s, Ventura has become known for his signature multi-layered paintings. Featuring hyperrealism, cartoons, graffiti, and other recurring motifs, hisworks—from paintings to sculptures—are pluralistic in both form and material. Throughout his career, his art has […]

Advertisement
Download this month's BLUPRINT magazine digital copy from:
Subscribe via [email protected]

To provide a customized ad experience, we need to know if you are of legal age in your region.

By making a selection, you agree to our Terms & Conditions.