In an industry where design intent is often diluted by value management and procurement pressures, Klaro Industrial Design positions manufacturing as a creative ally – allowing commercial interior designers to deliver unique pieces aligned to the project’s original vision.
December 18th, 2025
For Klaro Industrial Design, retaining design integrity doesn’t begin at the tender stage, it starts well before a concept is even drawn. Creative Director Alona shares that the most overlooked advantage in commercial design is early and meaningful engagement with suppliers. Even long before “the pencil hits the paper” she adds.
Founded on the principle of “fewer products, more intent,” Klaro operates as a vertically aligned industrial design studio specialising in commercial furniture, particularly for workplace environments.
With a background spanning interior architecture and sculpture, Alona approaches design holistically – balancing spatial thinking, materiality and structural logic with a strong problem-solving mindset.
This vertical alignment is key. Klaro designs for a manufacturing ecosystem it understands intimately, working closely with Corporate Furniture, which manufactures many of Klaro’s products and facilitates their broader supply chain.
It all amounts to furniture and one-off solutions that are aesthetically resolved, but also commercially viable and realistically buildable within Australian manufacturing conditions.
For Mitch, Director of Corporate Furniture, their role as manufacturer is to ensure what appears on paper is delivered on site, and built to endure. While CNC machinery and digital fabrication continue to evolve, he emphasises that craftsmanship remains essential, particularly when durability and detailing are non-negotiable.
This collaboration allows Klaro to act as a translator between designers and manufacturers. Alona describes this integral role as being able to convert design intent into “manufacturing language,” ensuring that what the designer envisions can be faithfully realised through production. For commercial interior designers navigating tight programmes and cost pressures, this translation is critical.
Sustainability, in Klaro’s view, is inseparable from longevity. Modularity is treated as a core design principle, enabling furniture to be reconfigured, relocated and adapted over time rather than replaced.
It’s a way of thinking that directly addresses waste, an ongoing concern in the commercial design sector, by designing pieces intended to endure both physically and visually.
Working with local manufacturing is also a form of industry insurance. By actively supporting Australian production, Klaro helps strengthen the very capabilities designers rely on – making quality, speed and collaboration more viable over time.
For commercial interior designers seeking to deliver projects that survive procurement intact, Klaro offers a compelling model – one where early collaboration, manufacturing intelligence and design ambition are aligned from day one.
Watch the video now and learn more about Klaro Industrial Design and how they support designers in realising build-ready outcomes.
Klaro Industrial Design
klarodesign.com.au
INDESIGN is on instagram
Follow @indesignlive
A searchable and comprehensive guide for specifying leading products and their suppliers
Keep up to date with the latest and greatest from our industry BFF's!
Herman Miller’s reintroduction of the Eames Moulded Plastic Dining Chair balances environmental responsibility with an enduring commitment to continuous material innovation.
In a tightly held heritage pocket of Woollahra, a reworked Neo-Georgian house reveals the power of restraint. Designed by Tobias Partners, this compact home demonstrates how a reduced material palette, thoughtful appliance selection and enduring craftsmanship can create a space designed for generations to come.
At the Munarra Centre for Regional Excellence on Yorta Yorta Country in Victoria, ARM Architecture and Milliken use PrintWorks™ technology to translate First Nations narratives into a layered, community-led floorscape.
In Kobe, Japan, TOTTEI GREEN HILL by Tomohiro Hata Architect & Associates brings a new, versatile event space to a previously industrial marina.
In this STORIESINDESIGN conversation, architect Phillip Mathieson discusses his formative personal experiences and his residentially focused work out of Sydney.
The internet never sleeps! Here's the stuff you might have missed
The final tower in R.Corporation’s R.Iconic precinct demonstrates how density can create connection — through a 20-metre void, one-acre rooftop and nine years of learning what makes vertical neighbourhoods work.
The new Footscray Hospital by COX Architecture and BLP has set the bar high for best practice health design.