NITAPROW: Modern Designs For Dreamy Playgrounds
Established in Bangkok by Nita Yuvaboon and Prow Puttorngul, NITAPROW is an architecture and interior design company. This amazing company counts with more than 10 years of experience in architecture and their works range from newly constructed buildings to interior and exterior renovation, exhibition, custom furniture and master planning. However, it was their inspirational interiors for kids that caught our attention – have a look!
YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE: Piero Lissoni – A Recognizable Stylistic Code and Visual Identity
This tiny kid’s boutique is a part of an indoor playground, Playville, located in the heart of Bangkok, Thailand. The pastel colors and the insightful combination of details make it a truly beautiful setting, with a considerable amount of natural light and terrazzo backdrop and fixtures, highlighting the finer texture and speckled color of the artisanal and natural material.
It’s through research and numerous collaborations with creative thinkers, entrepreneurs, engineers, designers and visual artists that they develop their design from conceptually engaging ideas with social-historical and environmental awareness. Imposing a ‘simple’ architecture with a bold and balanced approach and bringing out its most fruitful personality is what NITAPROW os known for.
Over the recent years, we had all been experiencing increasingly hostile outdoor conditions. Conditions that may be at times too harsh for our little ones to comfortably take in what nature has to offer. It was important for NITAPROW to consciously bring in some of its inspirational aspect into the design thinking of this sheltered playground. By conceiving and implementing numerous types of architectural terrain and play structure as the tool to encourage the little crawlers and toddlers to walk, climb, dive, crawl in countless ways – maybe one of the most fundamental methods in helping them to fully explore their physical and cognitive abilities.
[contact-form-7 id=”50685″ title=”Download Catalogue”]
Featured Image: © Archdaily
//







