JungDesign

Project Management / Proof

David Jung has spent decades making complex design and development projects real.

Before painting became the main daily practice, JungDesign was a working design and project-management practice: products, environments, systems, rollouts and commercial problem-solving.

JD
Professional spine

JungDesign’s commercial work is the evidence behind the paintings: clear composition, practical judgement, careful sequencing, a feel for materials and a habit of turning vague problems into usable form.

This is not a document dump. Each project is treated as a compact case study: what the problem was, what David/JungDesign did, why it mattered, and what changed because the work was done.

01

Problem

Identify the real friction: use, cost, safety, programme, legibility, manufacture or movement through a place.

02

Response

Turn the brief into something buildable: an object, system, environment, rollout plan or working prototype.

03

Outcome

Hold the practical result in view: clearer use, safer handling, better delivery, lower cost or reliable implementation.

04

Painting link

The same habits now surface in the paintings: structure, edges, sequence, material intelligence and visual nerve.

Commercial projects

Proof of method, not nostalgia.

These projects show David working where design has consequences: live airports, retail rollouts, hospitality deadlines, budgets, safety systems and manufactured products. The point is not to compete with the paintings, but to show the discipline that made them possible.

Image montage View the visual wall →
Source document image for AMEX America’s Cup Village
Floating yacht club / chalets / stage
01 / Commercial project delivery

AMEX America’s Cup Village

A compressed, high-visibility programme delivering hospitality environments for the America’s Cup Village: floating yacht club, corporate chalets, boat-party moorings, public canopy, bar, entertainment stage and seating.

Problem
Create a series of distinct hospitality venues across five village locations, with fixed budget, public scrutiny and a hard event deadline.
Outcome
The capped programme was delivered within the stated budget, with the final venue opened a week early.
Read case study →
Source document image for Air New Zealand Terminal Developments
Regional terminals / sales offices
02 / Aviation environments

Air New Zealand Terminal Developments

Regional front-of-house terminal rebuilds in New Zealand, plus international terminal and sales-office reimaging work in Australia, Japan, Singapore and Taiwan.

Problem
Airline spaces have to work hard: brand clarity, passenger movement, security, contractors, live operations and immovable opening dates all converge.
Outcome
A sequence of regional and international aviation environments delivered with programme discipline and an understanding of operational detail.
Read case study →
Source document image for Air New Zealand Self-Service Kiosks
Self-service kiosk network
03 / Service system rollout

Air New Zealand Self-Service Kiosks

A national airport survey and installation programme supporting early self-service ticketing kiosks, followed years later by a replacement programme for ageing units.

Problem
Self-service infrastructure only works if the entire environment supports it: airport layouts, passenger flow, services, installation conditions and maintenance expectations.
Outcome
A practical technology rollout managed across a dispersed national network, with approximately $4m later replacement programme over 18 months.
Read case study →
Source document image for BNZ / ANZ Bank Reimaging
Bank interiors / regional rollout
04 / Retail and branch rollout

BNZ / ANZ Bank Reimaging

Branch interior reimaging across the East Coast of the North Island, followed by ANZ relocation and reimaging work into newly acquired National Bank locations.

Problem
Bank interiors require careful staging: customer access, brand consistency, compliance, contractors, budgets and repeated delivery across many locations.
Outcome
A sustained multi-site rollout programme delivered through repeatable process and local project control.
Read case study →
Source document image for Telstra Australia Retail Rollout
Live-phone retail stores
05 / Retail rollout / value management

Telstra Australia Retail Rollout

A national retail programme for live-mode telco stores across Australia, beginning with cost review and moving into large-team rollout management.

Problem
The proposed store interior needed to support live phones, customer interaction and national consistency, while reducing the original fitout budget.
Outcome
The initial store budget was reduced from about $500k to $425k, followed by broad implementation across Australia.
Read case study →
How to read this archive

Design here means responsibility.

Not just styling. Not just management. The recurring JungDesign move is to take responsibility for the whole chain: the object, the setting, the people using it, the money available, the deadline approaching and the detail that must still be right.

That is why this section belongs on a painting site. It explains the confidence of the work without over-explaining the paintings themselves.

“The paintings don’t leave design behind. They make its instincts visible.”