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Flymoth

Department of Creative Design, National Yunlin University of Science and Technology

形象圖

四點設計 Contact to Flymoth for cooperation

500

Discovering the public's low awareness and negative image of moths, we used design to raise public awareness of moths, using works from different perspectives to help understand and improve knowledge: visual colorless illustrations, actual night-viewing products, and moth education spaces to guide learning and reflection.

A children's educational book about moths, using cute and gentle illustrations. The moths are printed using relief printing to present a colorless image, and can be collected into a booklet. Reduce night-viewing equipment to night-viewing umbrellas that can be used by small groups. It can be operated quickly like a regular umbrella and can be used with a portable light source and low-risk observation. With a focus on moth identification and promotion, a suitable venue for observation and learning will be designed in Gukeng. The interior features ample natural light and barrier-free ramps, and incorporates elements that foster moth growth.

24HR CAPE

Dept. of Interior Design Chung Yuan Christian University, Chung Yuan Christian University

Thirty years of the fishery’s ebbs and flows have settled here. The shore-based center stands quietly at the tip of Nanfang’ao’s tied island, awaiting its rebirth. Sheltered by mountains that frame the scenery, it commands views of three harbors—greeting the dawn and tracing the wake of ships. In this haven not far from the bustling world, it preserves the temporal rhythm of the fishing port, connecting daily life with local vibrant moments to form a serene yet connected hospitality sanctuary. Historically, from fishing and rituals to markets and recreation, human presence, activities, and communities were packaged into individual "boxes," scattered along the harbor. Yet beyond these boxes, human behavior continues to flow between the mountains and the sea—unfolding organically within nature’s own nature. Today, this design proposes a "Free Time Zone" to resonate with the harbor's rhythm, allowing guests' innate life rhythms and states of being to extend seamlessly into their stay. By introducing "boxes," it disrupts the established order and dissolves boundaries. Embraced by "nature," the space accommodates the mountains, the sea, light, shadow, and spontaneous human behaviors, ultimately shaping a new paradigm of hospitality that harmonizes with one's personal pace of life.

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