Hilda & Lloyd
TMAC+U 2 Nikko Wonoto
Nikko Wonoto redefines terrazzo by breaking away from tradition and reshaping its identity through new forms, functions, and expressions. In collaboration with TMAC, he challenges the expectations often tied to this familiar material—elevating it into a fresh and striking visual language. The result is a body of work that feels both deeply intentional and energetically free.
Rather than relying on nostalgia, the design speaks in bold gestures—fluid yet structured, abstract yet grounded. Each curve and contour carries a sense of movement, while the material itself stands unapologetically at the forefront. These pieces are not content to blend into the background; they demand to be noticed, experienced, and remembered.
This collaboration is a declaration: design should not only reflect the past, but also assert the present and imagine the future. Sculptural and assertive, the work speaks to a modern sensibility that values clarity, contrast, and confidence. It reframes terrazzo not as surface or ornament, but as a medium for fearless, contemporary expression.
Nikko Wonoto redefines terrazzo by breaking away from tradition and reshaping its identity through new forms, functions, and expressions. In collaboration with TMAC, he challenges the expectations often tied to this familiar material—elevating it into a fresh and striking visual language. The result is a body of work that feels both deeply intentional and energetically free.
Rather than relying on nostalgia, the design speaks in bold gestures—fluid yet structured, abstract yet grounded. Each curve and contour carries a sense of movement, while the material itself stands unapologetically at the forefront. These pieces are not content to blend into the background; they demand to be noticed, experienced, and remembered.
This collaboration is a declaration: design should not only reflect the past, but also assert the present and imagine the future. Sculptural and assertive, the work speaks to a modern sensibility that values clarity, contrast, and confidence. It reframes terrazzo not as surface or ornament, but as a medium for fearless, contemporary expression.