Design with Precarity: 4 Lessons from the Pacific Rim Community Design Network
Project House @1QRW wins Australian Good Design Awards - Social Impact
The Australian Good Design Awards, one of the world’s longest-running international design award programmes, has announced 2025 Australian Good Design Award Winners. This year’s theme, “Design for Better”, underscores the vital role design plays in shaping a more balanced, inclusive, and sustainable world. Among the Winners was Project House @1QRW, recognised with a prestigious Australian Good Design Award Winner accolade in the Social Impact category.
Our Business can be a Force for Good: onebite’s B Corp Journey
By challenging the stereotype that doing good and making profits cannot exist at the same time, we want to tell people that companies like onebite can focus on doing doing good and be commerical sustainable as well.
Making Space for Inclusiveness (Part 2)
Through the power of interdisciplinary collaboration and co-creation, can we reimagine urban spaces, foster community initiatives, and champion inclusivity to transform the heart of Hong Kong into a vibrant, liveable and caring neighbourhood?
Making Space for Inclusiveness (Part 1)
What’s the essence of co-creation? It is a prefect synthesis of listening to users’ needs, observing their use context, and iterating solutions together that makes them exclaim, “Why hasn’t this appear earlier!”
Community life on demand in ground-floor shop spaces: Tactical placemaking in Hong Kong
onebite launched the urban ‘matching’ platform Project House as a pop-up design to steer city regeneration and community revival. Using a tactical place-making approach, Project House pairs vacant shops with local social groups facing spatial needs. The win–win results bring local exposure to pop-up vacant shops while providing marginalised community groups with adequate space for new social practices.
The 8 tips we learnt to collaborate beyond physical place
When we talk about placemaking, we usually start with “place”. Despite the boundary of 'place' becoming blurry between physical and virtual, people remain at the core of the experience. Show care and pay extra attention to details. Embrace the new normal with openness, fun, and new twists.
Do You have Engagement-phobia? Five Indicators to Show Public Engagement is not “Consultation 2.0.”
Feeling confused and wary of engaging your stakeholders? Don’t worry la! One Bite has listed five indicators (sprinkled with Hong Kong colloquial sayings) to help you build a quality public engagement culture!

