Michael Wong isn’t your typical design educator. He’s a working designer who still takes on projects, still solves real problems, and still learns new techniques every month. That hands-on reality shapes everything he teaches.
Over 14 years, he’s completed over 200 projects across residential and commercial spaces throughout Hong Kong. More importantly, he’s learned what actually matters to designers in the field. It’s not the fanciest software or the most cutting-edge trends — it’s solving problems efficiently and communicating clearly with clients.
His specialty has always been Hong Kong’s unique design challenges. Compact apartments in Tai Po, Sheung Shui, and beyond. Commercial spaces squeezed between other businesses. Mixed-use projects with impossible spatial constraints. He’s developed practical solutions for these real-world limitations, and those solutions form the backbone of his courses.
The mood board methodology he created in 2018 came from frustration. He watched brilliant designs get lost in translation — designers struggled to help clients visualize spatial concepts from 2D plans. So he built a framework that combines the best of photography, color theory, and 3D visualization. It works. Design revision cycles dropped 40% for studios using it. That’s not theory — that’s measurable, real-world impact.
Today, Michael leads courses at Spatial Design Studio Limited while continuing to work on select projects. He’s particularly passionate about mentoring emerging designers in the New Territories who are building their visualization skills. He believes that great design communication should be accessible to every designer, regardless of technical background or budget constraints.
When he’s not teaching or designing, you’ll find him exploring new rendering techniques, attending design conferences, or working with local studios to refine and improve the mood board framework that’s now used across the industry.