2011 W Hotels Designers of the Future Award

Asif Khan
(Image credit: Mischa Haller)

Asif Khan
London-based Asif Khan works across architecture, product design, interiors and furniture design, often combining these disciplines in unexpected ways. The architecture graduate (from the Bartlett School of Architecture) founded his studio in 2008 and counts Magis, Idee, Danese, Sawaya & Moroni and the Design Museum among his clients. Current projects include a restaurant in London’s Borough Market and furniture for schools in Malawi

Asif Khan, Studio Juju and Mischer'Traxler have been crowned the winners of this year's W Hotels Designers of the Future Award - the annual accolade given to the most mould-breaking, discipline defying and conceptually vanguard creatives working in non-industrial or limited edition design.

A partnership between Design Miami/ Basel and W Hotels, the award was announced today in Milan, where the design crowd has arrived en masse for the Salone del Mobile. The winners - all of whom have been practicing for less than 15 years, as the prize stipulates - were picked out by a panel of design heavyweights, including industrial designer Konstantin Grcic, trend forecaster Li Edelkoort, soon-to-be ECAL director Alexis Georgacopoulos and Dezeen founder Marcus Fairs.

London-based designer Asif Khan is known for his experimental work across architecture, interiors and furniture design; while Viennese studio Mischer'Traxler is celebrated for the way it fuses elements of nature with machine technology; and Singapore-based Studio Juju is remarkable for its hands-on approach to prototype making, and pushing the boundaries of form, function and material.

'While our three winners represent three very diverse and unique viewpoints, they all share an experimental and multi-disciplinary approach that we believe will encourage visitors to rethink the future of the design field,' says Design Miami/ director Marianne Goebl.

As with previous winners - which last year included Beta Tank, Random International, Graham Hudson and Zigelbaum & Coelho - the three practices have been commissioned to create a new work for this year's Design Miami/ Basel in June, which will then be exhibited in W Hotels across the globe. Under the theme 'Conversation Pieces' the designers are encouraged to create interactive works that prompt people to 'overcome social barriers while sparking conversations between strangers'.

'Harvest' chair

'Harvest' chair by Asif Khan

(Image credit: James Moriarty)

West Beach Cafe by Asif Khan

West Beach Cafe by Asif Khan

(Image credit: Julian Abrams)

Katharina Mischer and Thomas Traxler


(Image credit: Press)

Katharina Mischer and Thomas Traxler founded their studio in Vienna soon after graduating from Design Academy Eindhoven in 2008. Their experimental works, including product design, furniture and exhibitions, fuse the natural world with the machine, for example, in 2008 they created their 'Idea of a Tree' - a solar powered machine that made furniture whose shape and colour was determined by the amount of sunlight available during each piece's production. Often collaborating with other artists and designers, their clients include Droog, Nespresso and a selection of international festivals.

'Relumine' by Mischer'Traxler

'Relumine' by Mischer'Traxler

(Image credit: Press)

'Limited Moths' by Mischer'Traxler

'Limited Moths' by Mischer'Traxler

(Image credit: Press)

Studio Juju, Singapore


(Image credit: Press)

Timo Wong and Priscilla Lui established Studio Juju in 2009. They work across product and space design, and art direction, creating playful pieces inspired by 'snippets of the everyday'. The duo takes a hands-on approach to prototype making, enabling a rigorous exploration of functionality, form and material.

'One Shelves' by Studio Juju

'One Shelves' by Studio Juju

(Image credit: Press)

'6 Table Trays' by Studio Juju

'6 Table Trays' by Studio Juju

(Image credit: Press)

Malaika Byng is an editor, writer and consultant covering everything from architecture, design and ecology to art and craft. She was online editor for Wallpaper* magazine for three years and more recently editor of Crafts magazine, until she decided to go freelance in 2022. Based in London, she now writes for the Financial Times, Metropolis, Kinfolk and The Plant, among others.