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CIFF Guangzhou 2026: Building a Net-Zero Future for Office & Commercial Spaces

by creativehomex

The second phase of the 57th CIFF Guangzhou closed on March 31st, pairing the Office & Commercial Fair with CIFM/interzum Guangzhou. Together, they spanned the entire chain – from finished spatial applications to upstream components. This year’s guiding theme – “Green Foundation, Intelligent Enhancement, Innovation Leadership” – was not just a tagline. Throughout the halls, sustainability and social responsibility emerged as the real narrative drivers.

Office environments go net-zero and age-friendly

The office zone put net-zero carbon practices on display, but what stood out was the integration of age-friendly and wellness concepts into the workplace – a clear nod to global ESG trends.

VICTORY presented a “Wellness Apartment” prototype. Here, rest, activity, and storage were condensed into a single, finely tuned layout. Circulation widths and furniture dimensions were recalibrated for elderly comfort – a small but significant signal that China’s office design is starting to address demographic shifts.

QUAMA offered a full-spectrum workplace scenario – from C-suite offices and collaborative benches to communal lounges and residential-style units. The most talked-about piece was a modular sofa system. Through simple reconfigurations and controlled proportions, it switched between high-performance meeting mode and a looser, lounge-like atmosphere.

JIECANG’s SMARTStop™ zero-gap anti-pinch technology drew steady crowds. The system uses high-sensitivity motion monitoring and refined control logic to detect obstacles at zero distance. Millisecond response times reduce pinch-risk to near zero – a quiet but serious upgrade for height-adjustable desks and automated partitions.

Seating: adaptive support redefines workplace health

In the seating section, the conversation centred on ergonomic support and all-day comfort. Self-adaptive technologies, dynamic support mechanisms, and breathable sustainable materials were everywhere.

KOKUYO (Japan) made its CIFF Guangzhou debut with the ingCloud chair. Its 3D Ultra Auto Fit system and three-point omnidirectional sliding mechanism delivered continuous micro-adjustments as the user moved. The large 3D mesh back distributed pressure while maintaining stable support – a hit among visitors who tested it for extended periods.

UE’s “lumbar-support technology” was another crowd-pleaser. A follow-up waist rest and zoned pressure mechanism provided continuous, stable support even as sitters shifted between postures.

MERRYFAIR took a different route with the Spinelly ergonomic chair. Instead of soft padding, it relied on a spine-like elastic system that responded organically to posture changes – a structural approach that felt genuinely fresh.

Public and commercial: modular systems drive low-carbon transformation

The public/commercial zone showed how modular, quick-install systems can decarbonise schools, healthcare facilities, and transport hubs.

HUIMEI demonstrated smart school furniture with real-world scenarios. The Xiqiwen task chair allowed tilt-angle and headrest adjustments, adapting to different student body types. The Mingde desk-and-chair set featured curved back and seat surfaces – subtle but effective for long study hours.

Three thematic exhibitions – green innovation from multiple angles

Three special exhibitions added critical depth.

“Linking Design Star” functioned as an industry testbed. Twenty-seven brands and designers worked together, tracing the journey from collaborative design to commercial application. Crucially, the exhibition itself used recyclable modular display structures – making green scenography part of the message rather than an afterthought.

“Design Culture: Art and Artistry” took a more narrative turn. The Classic Archive juxtaposed Bauhaus steel tubing with Nordic bentwood, showing how different eras imagined the workplace. The Structure Lab exposed the mechanical anatomy of comfort – support systems and dynamic mechanisms laid bare. The Regeneration Institute focused on circular materials, integrating recycled plastics and regenerative resources into viable design systems.

The “Guangzhou Office Environment Theme Pavilion” – titled “Built・Boundless・Sustainable” – examined relationships between furniture, systems, and space. A flowing ribbon structure made from sustainable materials and woven reed craftsmanship ran through the pavilion, linking five scenes: a Deep Thinking Pod, Collaborative Cluster, Community Exchange Terrace, Healing Garden, and Design Evolution Corridor.


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