Designing Experiences: Lessons from the 2025 IIDA Global Excellence Awards

Learn five key lessons from award-winning projects, including fostering social hubs, embracing vibrant colors, respecting cultural memory, and letting natural landscapes take center stage in design.

Design Lessons Worth Stealing

  • The best social spaces don’t sit on the sidelines; they become the heart of the plan.
  • Color works harder when it guides movement, sets mood, and leaves a lasting impression.
  • Spaces feel more memorable when local culture and history are treated as design material.
  • When hierarchy fades, choice, accessibility, and connection have more room to lead.

Design doesn’t just organize space—it shapes how we experience it. From workplaces to schools, hospitals, and hotels, the most compelling environments feel intentional, intuitive, and memorable. The projects below—all winners of the 2025 IIDA Global Excellence Awards—offer five lessons designers can apply anywhere. From creating social hubs at work to letting a dramatic landscape lead the story, these spaces show how design can shape the narrative. Let’s take a closer look.

The Workplace That Actually Works

Boston Consulting Group, Calgary | HOK

In Calgary, Boston Consulting Group’s new office reflects the realities of hybrid work. The design is flexible, comfortable, and focused on people. A phased renovation brought in bookable offices, touchdown desks, and plenty of places to gather and move. And it’s got personality. The retro-modern look brings in wood, chrome, and a handcrafted waffle-block ceiling that anchors the kitchen, which is now a social hub. It just works. And it reflects how people want to work today.

Steal this idea: Pay special attention to the social hubs. Make the kitchen, lounge, or gathering spaces a destination.

The School Where You Can’t Help but Smile

New Borovaya School, Belarus | ZROBIM architects

I bet your school didn’t look like this when you were a kid. At the New Borovaya School in Belarus, learning looks and feels fresh. Bright and playful, the design offers spaces for recreation, rest, and discovery. Flexible zones let curiosity take the lead. Vibrant colors help kids with wayfinding, and furniture offers choice—and just the right amount of whimsy.

Steal this idea: Don’t fear color. Used strategically, it can guide movement, boost mood, and make spaces unforgettable.

The Hospital That Feels Human

King’s College Hospital London, Jeddah | HKS Architects

For the designers behind this hospital, the cultural and spiritual stakes were high. The building sits along a pilgrimage route to Mecca, and the design had to bring together cultural identity, hospitality, and next-generation care. They did it. In the entry hall, light filters through a honeycomb facade. Warm tones reference rawashins, the ornate wooden screens found on historic Jeddah buildings. And green accents nod to the nearby Red Sea. It’s warm, it’s compassionate, it’s intuitive, and it’s deeply human.

Steal this idea: Design with cultural memory. A space that reflects local history instantly feels grounded, welcoming, and authentic.

The Office That Ditches the Corner Office

PwC Canada, Toronto | M Moser Associates

PwC Canada’s Toronto HQ ditches the pre-COVID office model in favor of a design that’s flexible and built for connection. Designers asked employees what they wanted, and the answer was loud and clear: choice and control. There are no private offices here, just easily adaptable zones that support collaboration and customization. Accessibility is front and center, with barrier-free pathways and contrast cues. It’s a workplace where the future of professional services feels a little more human.

Steal this idea: Kill the corner office. When hierarchy disappears, collaboration and connection get a lot easier.

The Hotel That Lets Nature Steal the Show

Deqin Meri Poodom Hotel | W.DESIGN

Listen—this hotel brings the drama. The Deqin Meri Poodom plays to the strength of its site. It’s 3,600 meters above sea level, on China’s Meili Snow Mountain. The space merges regional culture with passive design to create a retreat that feels like a sanctuary. And honestly, you can’t beat those views. Large windows let in light and landscapes, and minimal furnishings allow snow-capped mountains to play a starring role. Overall, the effect is transfixing and transcendent.

Steal this idea: When the site is spectacular, step back. Let the views do the storytelling.

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