
Product Design · Industrial Design
Enclosure and form, documented for manufacturing.
Ergonomics, CMF, and interface layout — hardware that looks considered and survives DFM review, not presentation decks.
Form is engineering made visible.
Industrial design here is not styling on top of someone else’s geometry. It is enclosure, ergonomics, CMF, and interface developed alongside mechanical and electrical constraints — so what gets approved is what gets tooled.
Scope
Industrial design deliverables
Concept through manufacturing documentation — held to the same standard as the engineering that surrounds it.
01
Concept & form development
Volume studies, surfacing, and design intent locked against use context, brand, and manufacturing method before detail work begins.
02
CMF & materials
Color, material, and finish specification with durability, environment, and supplier reality — not sample-board aesthetics alone.
03
Ergonomics & interface
Controls, displays, grip, access panels, and service paths — validated for the people and environments the product serves.

04
DFM & production documentation
Drawings, BOMs, and tolerance stacks that pass manufacturing review — coordinated with PCB, mechanics, and firmware under one team.
How we work
From brief to tooling-ready enclosure.
Requirements first, then form — iterated with engineering until the package is frozen with documentation the shop can build from.
- 01 · Context & constraintsUse environment, regulatory context, manufacturing targets, and internal component architecture — locked before surfacing.
- 02 · Form & CMFVolume, surfacing, material direction, and interface layout developed in parallel with mechanical and electrical packaging.
- 03 · ValidationErgonomics, assembly sequence, service access, and thermal paths reviewed against real hardware — not renderings alone.
- 04 · Manufacturing handoffDFM review, production drawings, and BOM release — ready for prototype build or tooling.
The standard
Documentation that ships — not decks.
Industrial design is finished when manufacturing can quote it, tool it, and assemble it without reinterpretation.
01
One team on the enclosure
Form, PCB keep-out, mechanics, and firmware constraints resolved together — no handoff between designer and engineer.
02
Built-environment fit
Mounting, finishes, and service access coordinated with the architecture and MEP when the product lives in our buildings.
03
Prototype-ready package
When electronics and firmware are in scope, prototyping runs on the same team — no vendor seam.
Tell us what you are building.
Share your concept and constraints. We review every inquiry personally.