In the heart of Kuala Lumpur’s Mid Valley Mall, Halla Holla, a bakery brand celebrated for its dedication to natural sourdough, embarks on a bold experiment in spatial design. The project, named Planter Island, begins with two fundamental questions: How can we create an oasis of landscape in a basement with-out sunlight? In contrast to the artificiality of typical shopping environments, how can a bakery stall cultivate a more natural dining experience that aligns with its philosophy?
The design responds through the creation of a massive in-door planter, a sculptural island that integrates greenery with public life. Supported by the latest grow-light technology, thriving plants transform the basement sefling into a lush and inviting environment. Shaped organically, the planter evokes a natural island— a soft break amid the hard geometry of the mall. Shoppers are invited not merely to pass by but to pause, rest, and socialise, treating the installation like park furniture at the scale of an urban interior.
The form is constructed from stacked layers of CNC-cut timber boards, an approach that both grounds the design in craft and highlights a process-driven honesty. The layered timber echoes the artisanal qualities of sourdough baking: patience, precision, and the transformation of raw material into nourishment. Just as bread is shaped through time and nature, so too is the island sculpted through layers that celebrate human ingenuity working with natural inspiration.
Planter Island synchronises seamlessly with Halla Holla’s brand ethos. For the bakery, bread is more than a product — it is the outcome of a natural process rooted in authenticity. Likewise, this architectural intervention insists that even within the artificial shell of a mall, one can carve out a fragment of nature, a grounded place of gathering. By merging greenery, materiality, and spatial generosity, the project creates a dining environment that feels both restorative and real — an oasis where food, people, and landscape come together in harmony.