Chiang Mai Design Week 2025, 6 –14 DEC

Update & Visitor Guide

CEA Gathers Local Creative Network to Shape CMDW2025

CEA Gathers Local Creative Network to Shape CMDW2025The Creative Economy Agency (Public Organization) Chiang Mai recently hosted a collaborative meeting with over 20 local partners, including creative professionals, academic institutions, and public and private organizations, to reflect on the outcomes of Chiang Mai Design Week (CMDW) from the past year and to gather insights and recommendations for the upcoming festival.The session aimed to foster dialogue among key stakeholders to co-develop the direction of CMDW2025, ensuring it continues to reflect and amplify the creative potential of the region. This year, the festival marks its 11th edition under the theme “Local Plus”, which envisions Northern Thailand as a thriving hub of positive thinking, creative energy, and limitless collaboration. The theme focuses on elevating Chiang Mai and the North through local strengths and global connections.CMDW2025 will take place from 6–14 December 2025, inviting all to explore the power of Northern Thai creativity and its capacity to generate meaningful, lasting impact.Let’s come together in Chiang Mai to celebrate creativity with a positive spark that reaches far beyond the local!#CMDW2025 #ChiangMaiDesignWeek #LocalPlus

Transform your space into a new urban hotspot!

Chiang Mai Design Week 2025 invites landowners and property holders with underused or developable spaces to participate in the festival. Be part of a city-wide network of creative venues—transform your space into a hub of ideas, collaboration, and community-powered projects that spark positive change for Chiang Mai under the theme “Local Plus”𝗪𝗵𝗮𝘁 𝘆𝗼𝘂’𝗹𝗹 𝗴𝗮𝗶𝗻:– Development ideas and creative use concepts from leading designers and creative teams– Public exposure through the festival’s website, CMDW map, and social media channels– Opportunities to scale future business or social impact projects– Access to a network of potential investors and future collaborators– The right to use festival activity photos for your future promotionDon’t miss this chance to be part of something bigger!// Now Open for Applications // https://www.chiangmaidesignweek.com/apply/𝗔𝗽𝗽𝗹𝘆 𝗻𝗼𝘄 𝘁𝗵𝗿𝗼𝘂𝗴𝗵 𝟯𝟬 𝗠𝗮𝘆 𝟮𝟬𝟮𝟱#CMDW2025 #chiangmaidesignweek #LocalPlus

Open Call for CMDW2025

Call for Participation: Chiang Mai Design Week 2025Open from May 15 – June 30, 2025Here’s your chance to become a “creator” at a national-level design festival — powering up Northern-style creativity and elevating the local through boundless collaboration.Chiang Mai Design Week is where creative minds come together. New doors swing wide open when local communities team up with networks, both near and far. Together, we can navigate change and drive our communities and cities toward meaningful, creative growth.Entering a new decade of Thailand’s first design festival, Chiang Mai Design Week returns with the concept 𝗟𝗢𝗖𝗔𝗟 𝗣𝗟𝗨𝗦—aiming to elevate Chiang Mai and the northern region as a positive-thinking space for fresh ideas, innovation, people, joy, and seeds of creativity. Here, design is more than just beauty and function—it’s a real, tangible force that drives the economy and society forward.We welcome entries from both Thai and international creatives between May 15 – June 30, 2025, in the following categories:1. Showcase and Exhibition – Present works that propose solutions or improve quality of life, with potential for real-world application.2. Creative Activities – Including events, workshops, talks, tours, music, and performance.3. POP Market – Open to vendors offering design products and local brands that showcase regional potential through creative, sustainable, and eco-conscious living, such as fashion, lifestyle goods, home décor, and food.4. Venues – Open call for spaces with the potential to host exhibitions or creative activities, including studios, shops, restaurants, hotels, warehouses, open spaces, and more.📍 Apply now at: https://www.chiangmaidesignweek.com/apply📢 Selected participants will be announced on July 15, 2025, via the Chiang Mai Design Week Facebook page.See you in Chiang Mai — where creativity meets community!#CMDW2025 #LocalPlus #ChiangMaiDesignWeek #CreativeCity #BusinessOpportunity #DesignForImpact #CallForCreators

LOCAL PLUS Unleash Creativity, Empower Communities Chiang Mai Design Week 2025

As the world spins faster—shifting economies, disrupted societies, and an unpredictable environment—how do we face it all, if not through collaboration?Chiang Mai Design Week is where creative minds come together. We believe that new doors swing wide open when local communities team up with networks, both near and far. Together, we can navigate change and drive our communities and cities toward meaningful, creative growth.Entering a new decade of Thailand’s first design festival, Chiang Mai Design Week returns with the concept LOCAL PLUS—aiming to elevate Chiang Mai and the northern region as a positive-thinking space for fresh ideas, innovation, people, joy, and seeds of creativity. Here, design is more than just beauty and function—it’s a real, tangible force that drives both the economy and society forward.LOCAL PLUS isn’t just about positive thinking—it’s a symbol of limitless potential, expressed through mathematical signs that point toward infinite outcomes:Multiply (×): Amplifying creative energy exponentially. This year, Chiang Mai expands its showcases across a network of creative cities in the North, connecting local talents with international platforms.Divide (÷): Sharing innovation and knowledge. The festival serves as a space for open exchange, turning grassroots collaboration into a mechanism for national economic and social uplift.Minus (−): Removing barriers through cooperation. By cutting redundancy, reducing waste, and minimizing environmental impact, we create room for progress that’s smarter and more sustainable.Join us in exploring the positive energy of the North, leading to ENDLESS (∞) positive impacts, at the 11th Chiang Mai Design Week 2025, from December 6–14, 2025, in Chiang Mai.#CMDW2025 #LocalPlus #ChiangMaiDesignWeek

CMDW2025 Exhibitors Seminar

Chiang Mai Design Week 2025 Announces the Theme LOCAL PLUS: Empowering Creative Synergy in the North, 6–14 December 2025Chiang Mai Design Week (CMDW) is an annual festival organized by the Creative Economy Agency (Public Organization) or CEA, in collaboration with networks of creatives and entrepreneurs across Northern Thailand. The festival showcases design works and ideas that integrate innovation into everyday life, while also serving as a platform connecting regional and international collaborations. Its mission is to elevate the economy and address contemporary social and environmental challenges through creativity.In 2025, CMDW returns for its 11th edition under the theme LOCAL PLUS, creating spaces for positive thinking and fostering collaboration among people, organizations, and the public sector.Drawing inspiration from mathematical symbols, the festival positions design as a tangible driver of economic and social progress. The plus sign (+) represents collaboration. The multiplication sign (×) signifies the amplification of creative energy from local to global. The division sign (÷) symbolizes the sharing of knowledge and innovation. The subtraction sign (−) reflects the reduction of constraints and environmental impact.Together, these ideas form an equation relevant to all generations, strengthening connections across age groups through diverse creative activities.These concepts will be brought to life across Chiang Mai, from the Old Town to Chang Moi–Ratchawong Road, Tha Pae Road, and Chang Klan Road. They will also be reflected in programs presented by creative networks from across the North, spanning food, crafts, design, and music. The festival aims to achieve three core goals: celebrating returning creative talents, sustaining local ways of life, and building networks for collaboration.Highlights of CMDW2025 include exhibitions and programs that revisit the cultural and natural assets of the North through a contemporary lens, while amplifying collaboration across disciplines:– An exhibition by leading Thai perfumers who transform local resources and agricultural surplus into fragrances that reduce environmental impact and add value for farmers.– An exhibition by the food sustainability network, presenting the potential of local ingredients and collaborative practices to add value to the food industry.– LABBfest, a music festival that connects Northern artists with audiences on both regional and international stages.– Pop Market, a creative marketplace featuring products and services shaped by sustainable processes, from production to event management.– A wide range of workshops and contemporary art performances that highlight creativity as a force for change.To expand the reach of LOCAL PLUS, CMDW2025 also partners with international networks to host showcasing designers and artists from Taiwan, Austria, Uzbekistan, Japan, and other countries. The program will include workshops and exchanges that foster dialogue between local and international creatives.As a local platform evolving into a global stage for creativity and exchange, the festival takes place from 6 to 14 December 2025 across Chiang Mai’s Old Town, Chang Moi–Ratchawong Road, Tha Pae Road, and Chang Klan Road.#CMDW2025 #ChiangMaiDesignWeek #LocalPlus

Honey Dialogues: Beyond the Sweet Potential of Honey

Honey Dialogues: Beyond the Sweet Potential of Honey“Sweet like honey in the fifth month” is a classic Thai expression that reflects the exceptional flavor of honey harvested at the peak of the season—when bees across the country produce their finest nectar.Interestingly, despite honey being one of the oldest ingredients in human civilization, and Thailand being home to over 100 of the world’s 20,000 bee species, most Thais are familiar with just one type: longan blossom honey. This particular honey, while undeniably pleasant, dominates Thailand’s food industry, representing a narrow view of what honey can truly offer.“While honey is always sweet, the character of that sweetness can vary significantly depending on the bee species—even within the same species, differences in forest habitats can create complex flavor profiles,” said Benz Weerawit Inprayong, founder of Bumrungsook Farm. Benz is a young honey enthusiast and one of the very few in Thailand who collects and catalogs more than 130 varieties of honey.We met Benz at Peoples, Bees, and Forests, an exhibition held during Chiang Mai Design Week 2024, where he introduced visitors to the incredible diversity of Thai wild honey. Guests were invited to sample up to ten distinct flavor notes—each sourced from different forest hives around the country.“Several factors influence honey’s flavor. First is the species of bee. In Thailand, we commonly distinguish between two major groups: true honey bees (such as Apis dorsata, Apis cerana, Apis florea) and stingless bees from the Meliponini tribe, known locally as channrong, of which we’ve identified at least 35 species,” Benz explained.“Some stingless bee honeys—like those from channrong khon-ngoen or thuai dam—taste quite similar to conventional honey. Others—like ung-mee or i-tama—are more acidic, almost citrusy. Still others, such as channrong din, have strong medicinal notes due to their habitat in underground nests and their diverse diets,” he added.Benz likens wild honey collecting and curating to winemaking. Through Bumrungsook Farm, he aims to make high-quality, varietal honeys accessible to more people—not just as a business pursuit, but as a social passion. To him, the diversity and vitality of bees directly reflect the health of Thailand’s ecosystems. The broader the public’s access to different kinds of honey, the more robust and resilient our forests likely are.According to World Integrated Trade Solution (WITS), Thailand exported over 880 million baht worth of honey in 2024, ranking second in ASEAN (after Vietnam) and 23rd globally—the vast majority of which is still longan honey.While Benz champions the biodiversity of Thai wild honey, Asst. Prof. Dr. Terd Disayathanoowat, a biologist at Chiang Mai University and co-curator of the Peoples, Bees, and Forests exhibition, focuses on developing the domestic honey industry—especially through exploring the untapped potential of stingless bees.This effort has led to SMART BEE SDGs, a research project dedicated to promoting sustainable beekeeping and value-added products from bees. “Many Thai farmers are now turning to stingless bee farming,” Dr. Terd said. “These bees are gentle, their honey has exceptional nutritional and medicinal properties, and we’ve seen growing interest from younger generations. That’s a promising sign for the future.”Beyond honey production, Dr. Terd’s research explores ways to convert bee byproducts into new goods, such as silk protein-based cosmetics. The aim is to help farmers diversify their income through innovation, knowledge transfer, and consistent support.“One ongoing challenge is how to meet organic certification standards for Thai honey in high-value export markets. The definition of ‘organic’ is strict and requires further study,” he added.Dr.Terd also emphasized the importance of empowering local collectors and producers. Through workshops, community outreach, and free honey quality testing services offered via SMART BEE SDGs, farmers are able to command higher prices and enter new markets with greater confidence—thanks to tangible data and government or private-sector support.Much like Benz, Dr. Terd believes that honey offers more than sweetness or economic gain—it reflects environmental well-being.“If bees disappear due to human activity—chemical use, monoculture farming—pollination declines, plant reproduction falters, fruits and vegetables diminish, and animals depending on those plants suffer too. Eventually, it loops back to us, the top of the food chain,” he warned.“When ecosystems collapse, so do civilizations. But if we can do small things—plant more flowers, keep water sources moist, avoid harming bees when we see them—we might just help bees keep visiting, pollinating, and sustaining life.”Whether through Benz’s mission to elevate the sensory potential of wild honey, or Dr. Terd’s push for innovation in the beekeeping industry, the diversity of bees has deeper implications for our collective quality of life than we often realize.Exhibition Info Peoples, Bees, and Forests was held from 7–15 December 2024 at TCDC Chiang Mai as part of Chiang Mai Design Week 2024.

From Blue Zone to Blue Ocean: Exploring Economic Opportunities in Chiang Mai

By 2035, Thailand will become the first developing nation to enter a super-aged society, with over 30% of the population aged 60+. Some areas, like Chiang Mai, are already there.Chiang Mai—Thailand’s largest province by land area—now has 404,512 elderly residents (24.08% of its population) and 1,152 centenarians, the third highest in the country. This doesn’t include the many Western retirees who have made it their final home.While this shift poses challenges for a service-driven city, it also opens economic possibilities.Blue Zone: Where Sustainability Meets LongevityIn the early 2000s, Belgian demographer Dr. Michel Poulain and Italian epidemiologist Dr. Gianni Pes studied Barbagia, Sardinia, for its unusually high longevity. They marked it with a blue circle, leading to the term Blue Zone.Their 2004 research was later expanded with journalist Dan Buettner, resulting in the Blue Zones book (2008). The term now refers to places where people live longer, healthier lives.Six original Blue Zones include Okinawa (Japan), Sardinia (Italy), Nicoya (Costa Rica), Ikaria (Greece), Loma Linda (USA) and Singapore. Buettner also identified six key factors of longevity: (1) purposeful living, (2) eating in moderation, (3) plant-based diets, (4) strong social/family ties, (5) spiritual or religious practice, and (6) restful, low-stress lifestyles. These depend not just on habits, but on city design, access to food, healthcare, and community life.Return to Chiang Mai—where lush nature, vibrant culture, an easygoing rhythm, and nourishing local fare converge. Home to about 1,152 centenarians—the third‑highest count in Thailand—the city points to clear Blue Zone potential and presents a blue‑ocean landscape for fresh, well‑matched ventures.Ready Set OldAt Chiang Mai Design Week 2024, the “Ready Set Old” exhibition invites visitors to explore the assets and readiness of Chiang Mai across various dimensions that support a high quality of life for the elderly. At the same time, it highlights opportunities to develop the economy through careers that align with Blue Zone principles. These are presented through four key elements: access to diverse healthy foods (with potential for developing senior-focused health food businesses), daily routines that encourage natural movement (such as senior fitness trainers or wellness content creators), housing that supports multi-generational living (like holistic rehabilitation specialists or senior-friendly travel services), and a strong sense of purpose rooted in religion and cultural engagement (creating opportunities in cultural tourism and related careers).While Blue Zone and Blue Ocean share the same color, their meanings differ. The first blue refers to longevity-friendly communities, while Blue Ocean describes untapped market spaces with little competition. Yet, when we view Chiang Mai’s resources as economic potential, we can envision a new Blue Ocean driven by aging demographics.An Opportunity Still Unfulfilled? The Ready Set Old exhibition not only showcased potential careers and businesses for an aging society, but also encouraged public reflection on Chiang Mai’s existing limitations.Visitors voiced concerns over insufficient green space, air pollution, inadequate public transport, poor pedestrian infrastructure, and limited government support for senior welfare.Although various policy proposals have been put forward—by Chiang Mai University’s Lifelong Education Institute or national ministries like the Ministry of Social Development and Human Security—there has yet to be a comprehensive, implemented plan to turn Chiang Mai into an aging-friendly economy. “Actually, Chiang Mai has elderly spaces, but most are private and costly. Public ones are limited and under-promoted,” said Aunt Daeng – Narumon Klangwichian, a community leader from Phuak Taem. “Since our city is already fully aged, public activity spaces for seniors should be part of basic social welfare,” she emphasized. Similarly, Aunt Nid – Wanida Intawong, a retired government official, added: “Although community life here supports senior well-being, if the city helps us turn this into income-generating opportunities, Chiang Mai would be even more livable.” She also noted recent developments such as the Senior Wellness Center ( Chiang Mai University,) but also pointed out that access remains limited and costly. “The city needs to integrate these resources, making them low-cost or even free.” These voices highlight the gaps the government must address—from infrastructure and service design to policy integration. If successful, Chiang Mai could become not just a model for healthy aging, but also a thriving, inclusive economy powered by seniors. And in doing so, it may not only become the seventh Blue Zone in the world—but also transform into a Blue Ocean, where aging is not a burden, but a driver of growth.Ready Set Old Exhibition was held during 7th – 15th December, 2024 in Chiang Mai Design Week 2024 at TCDC Chiang Mai. Sources:https://www.bluezones.com/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK298903/ https://www.swc.cmu.ac.th