Tsz Kiu
Wong
Credentials
Intern
Gensler
Felix Wong is an emerging architect and sustainability professional whose practice integrates ecological systems thinking with architectural design and urban resilience. Educated at the University of Edinburgh, he has trained across international studios including Shigeru Ban Architects in Tokyo, SOM in Hong Kong, and Aedas in Shenzhen, where he explored how architecture can regenerate rather than consume its environment.
Earning the SITES Accredited Professional (SITES AP) credential marked a shift in Felix’s approach—from viewing sustainability as an applied layer to understanding it as a living framework that begins with the ground itself. He advocates for design that restores ecosystems, enhances soil health, improves water cycles, and cultivates biodiversity as an inherent part of architecture. For him, each site is not a blank canvas but an existing ecology waiting to be healed and reconnected with human use.
Felix believes that SITES is not only a certification system but a movement—a collective reminder that the built environment can repair what decades of development have eroded. Whether designing public spaces, adaptive reuse projects, or large-scale urban interventions, he seeks to apply the SITES framework to promote regenerative outcomes that extend beyond energy efficiency and carbon metrics. His vision is a future where buildings and landscapes work symbiotically, generating net-positive ecological and social value.
As an active contributor to ASHRAE Guideline 14 and ICC Green Construction Code development committees, Felix bridges design intent with measurable performance. Through this integration of architecture, policy, and metrics, he aspires to shape a built environment that not only reduces harm but actively improves the planet’s health—one site, one project, and one community at a time.
Earning the SITES Accredited Professional (SITES AP) credential marked a shift in Felix’s approach—from viewing sustainability as an applied layer to understanding it as a living framework that begins with the ground itself. He advocates for design that restores ecosystems, enhances soil health, improves water cycles, and cultivates biodiversity as an inherent part of architecture. For him, each site is not a blank canvas but an existing ecology waiting to be healed and reconnected with human use.
Felix believes that SITES is not only a certification system but a movement—a collective reminder that the built environment can repair what decades of development have eroded. Whether designing public spaces, adaptive reuse projects, or large-scale urban interventions, he seeks to apply the SITES framework to promote regenerative outcomes that extend beyond energy efficiency and carbon metrics. His vision is a future where buildings and landscapes work symbiotically, generating net-positive ecological and social value.
As an active contributor to ASHRAE Guideline 14 and ICC Green Construction Code development committees, Felix bridges design intent with measurable performance. Through this integration of architecture, policy, and metrics, he aspires to shape a built environment that not only reduces harm but actively improves the planet’s health—one site, one project, and one community at a time.