The clubhouse, which is located near the sea, inspires the designers to use ‘sea’ as the main theme of this design. When someone thinks of the sea, first thing that comes into mind must be blue. Other than using blue as one of the main colour tones, the designers also focus on how to illustrate the ‘sea’ concept through various wavy forms and lines that would remind people of the waves. They extract the steady waveforms and soothing feeling that associate with the sea.
Upon the entrance, branches of vertical rods elongate from the floor to the ceiling, mimicking the waveforms of the surface of the steady sea. Without using an obvious reminder of the color of the sea, blue, the designers choose some earth tone colors, which represent the comforting and quiet feeling of the sea. These square rods are made of metal and covered in wood, creating an eye-catching ‘art installation’ that would easily draw people’s attention to it. Three various colors of marbles combine to form the floor pattern, which when one looks closer, would notice the hidden waveforms. They display in a rather smooth and circular motion, mix and match randomly to give out a natural vibe.
The waveforms represent themselves via various materials and shapes throughout the clubhouse. In the multi-function room, mirror-finished stainless steel installations decorate the ceiling, like an inverted sea that’s hanging above the incomers. The shape of this feature is not an easy task at all - the designers need to create a 3D model first, but some of them might look different in reality, so the designers would need to adjust the angle and length of each sculpture one by one to achieve the best effect. In addition, the chairs and walls are composed of subtle hint of blue.
On the ceiling of the changing room, long rectangular pieces of paper-like designs arrange themselves with different lengths and angles. They resonate with the theme of free waveforms which remind incomers of the peaceful warmth of the sea.