Cheng Hua Li is an interior designer with extensive industry experience, having led numerous notable projects across residential, commercial, and public spaces. For him, design is a medium through which emotion and beauty can be communicated through space.
Hi! I'm Cheng Hua Li. Simple Spatial Design was founded on deep observations of life’s essence. Rooted in nature, it translates light, materiality, and spatial proportion into experiential living aesthetics.
This recognition signifies international acknowledgement of Simple Spatial Design's nature-driven philosophy and affirms its spatial language of living aesthetics.
The award has elevated our global visibility, attracting high-end residential and cultural commissions while opening opportunities for cross-disciplinary collaborations.
Experimentation lies at the core of the practice—testing materials, light, and proportion to reinterpret nature within spatial experiences.
Inspiration often stems from forests, water reflections, and seasonal shifts, translated into layered facades and rhythmic lighting compositions.
Design is not merely a stylistic expression but an integrated system balancing lifestyle, environment, and craftsmanship precision.
A nature-and-lifestyle framework guides dialogue, balancing client expectations with the studio’s design philosophy.
The greatest challenge lies in executing minimalism, achieved through repeated prototyping and refined construction techniques.
Creative renewal emerges through immersion in natural landscapes and historic architecture.
Reflections on slow living are embedded through spatial voids, material warmth, and rhythmic light.
I encourage aspiring designers to build a strong foundation in the fundamentals, develop a deep sensitivity to nature and their surroundings, and gradually shape a design language that truly reflects their own perspective and values.
Tadao Ando would be an ideal collaborator, whose philosophy of light and nature deeply resonates.
My most desired question would be: "How does Simple Spatial Design define living aesthetics?"
And my answer would be: A return to natural order and inner calm.
Click to read and gain even more design insights From Beijing’s Layered Cityscape to Global Architecture with Ruonan Du here.