Welcome to our blog, the digital brainyard to fine tune "Digital Master," innovate leadership, and reimagine the future of IT.

The magic “I” of CIO sparks many imaginations: Chief information officer, chief infrastructure officer , Chief Integration Officer, chief International officer, Chief Inspiration Officer, Chief Innovation Officer, Chief Influence Office etc. The future of CIO is entrepreneur driven, situation oriented, value-added,she or he will take many paradoxical roles: both as business strategist and technology visionary,talent master and effective communicator,savvy business enabler and relentless cost cutter, and transform the business into "Digital Master"!

The future of CIO is digital strategist, global thought leader, and talent master: leading IT to enlighten the customers; enable business success via influence.

Sunday, June 28, 2026

Innovation

Innovation from a global perspective means building the systems, partnerships, and governance needed to compete, collaborate, and stay resilient in an interconnected world.

A useful way to frame an innovation mandate from global perspectives is: innovation should be treated as a strategic, cross-border differentiated capability, not just an internal R&D goal. Recent policy and management sources emphasize that countries and firms need to align innovation with competitiveness, security, open collaboration, and governance across global networks.


In global terms, an innovation mandate is the expectation that organizations or governments actively create conditions for new ideas to become scalable products, services, or policies. It also implies that innovation decisions should account for international competition, supply chains, standards, and the security implications of technology transitions.


Global perspectives that shape it


-Competitiveness: Nations are using innovation strategies to commercialize and industrialize technologies faster, so firms and governments must benchmark themselves against global peers.


-Open collaboration: Innovation increasingly happens through global innovation networks, partnerships, licensing, and shared R&D rather than within a single organization.


-Security and resilience: Policymakers are being urged to evaluate the security effects of innovation, not only its economic upside.


-Governance: Effective innovation depends on clear criteria, accountability, and leadership structures that define what success looks like


-Practical implication: For an engineering or technology organization, this means setting an innovation mandate around three questions: where do we need to lead globally, where should we collaborate openly, and where do we need safeguards because of security or strategic risk. That turns innovation from a vague aspiration into a decision framework.


Innovation from a global perspective means building the systems, partnerships, and governance needed to compete, collaborate, and stay resilient in an interconnected world.


Interdisciplinary Problem-Solving

 Build a multidisciplinary team by starting with the whole problem, staffing the full scenario with process management disciplines, giving the team decision authority, and keeping it focused on measurable outcomes.

Problem solving becomes more complex than ever in a hyper-connected and interdependent world. To build a multidisciplinary team for end-to-end problem-solving, start with the whole problem, then assemble the smallest set of people who can cover discovery, design, delivery, operations, and user needs.


Guidance on multidisciplinary teams emphasizes clear goals, diverse expertise, shared accountability, and access to specialist support when needed.


A strong team usually includes people who can cover the full problem flow: product or problem owner, engineering, design, domain expert, operations, data/analytics, and someone who represents the user or customer perspective. The key is not to maximize headcount, but to make sure every critical decision and implementation gap has a clear owner.


Practices to Set Up the Interdisciplinary Team for Problem-Solving

-Define the end-to-end outcome in one sentence, so everyone is solving the same problem.


-Identify the skills needed across the workflow, from user insight to delivery and support.


-Put decision-makers in the team so they can act quickly and stay accountable.


-Keep the structure flat enough for fast coordination, with clear responsibilities.


-Add outside specialists only when the team truly needs them, such as legal, policy, or deep technical expertise.


Working model: For end-to-end problem-solving, the team should own the problem from discovery through implementation and iteration, not just handoffs between departments. That means the team meets to solve problems, tests assumptions early, and regularly reviews whether the solution is actually working for users.


If the problem is improving a digital service, the team might include a service designer, software engineer, data analyst, operations lead, subject-matter expert, and user advocate. Together they can define the issue, design the service, build it, test it, and improve it without sending it through separate silos.


Build a multidisciplinary team by starting with the whole problem, staffing the full scenario with process management disciplines, giving the team decision authority, and keeping it focused on measurable outcomes.


Innovation Partnership

 The right innovation partner expands or complement your capability, reduces your blind spots, and helps you move faster from idea to impact.

In today’s complex business environment, innovation needs to become more collaborative across the boundaries. Finding the right partners for harnessing innovation means choosing collaborators whose strengths complement yours, whose values align, and who can help turn ideas into performance results.


The best partnerships are not about finding partners who fill your gaps and make it easier to move from concept to implementation.


What to look for

-Complementary strengths: Pick partners who bring capabilities you do not have, so the combined team can solve more of the problem end to end.


-Shared values: Alignment on work ethic, communication, and collaboration matters as much as technical fit.


-Clear purpose: Define what innovation outcome you want before evaluating anyone, whether it is product development, market expansion, or process improvement.


-Proof of execution: Look for partners with a track record of delivery, not just good ideas.


-Trust and transparency: Start with small projects so you can test how the relationship works in practice.


A practical selection method


-State the innovation problem and the result you want.


-List the capabilities your team lacks.


-Identify partners who supply those missing capabilities.


-Check values, communication style, and operating rhythm.


-Run a small initiative before committing to a larger collaboration.


Innovation partnerships succeed when each side contributes something distinct and valuable, rather than duplicating what the other already does. That is what turns a partnership into an innovation engine instead of just another vendor relationship.


A concise way to say it is: the right innovation partner expands or complement your capability, reduces your blind spots, and helps you move faster from idea to impact.


Impact of "Biology International Conference” 2026

 BIO International 2026 was the flagship biotech convention of the year, built around deal-making, scientific knowledge exchange, and cross-sector collaboration.

There were always so many international conferences held in San Diego, California, perhaps, the convention center here is one of the largest in the world. I headed to the Biology International conference 2026 last week. It was a major biotech gathering focused on networking, partnering, and translating science into public-health impact. 

It brought together biotech companies, pharma, investors, researchers, policymakers, and service providers to form partnerships and accelerate development. The event emphasized business development, innovation, and “improving lives,” so its value is more about connecting the people who turn research into therapies and products.

Keynote Presentation & Panel Discussions: The opening and keynote sessions of BIO 2026 were meant to set the tone for the convention by framing the industry around innovation, patient impact, and global collaboration. The panel discussions featured high-profile voices from biotech, public service, media, and patient advocacy, alongside sessions on major themes like AI, cell and gene therapy, oncology, and market growth. These sessions were a launch point for the conference’s larger goals: connecting leaders, highlighting emerging biotech priorities, and showing how science can translate into real-world health and business outcomes.

Program highlights: The Biology International Conference 2026 is designed as a cross-disciplinary forum where researchers, clinicians, industry scientists, and students share recent findings and practical approaches across modern biology. The program featured more than hundreds of sessions covering a broad range of topics, including AI and digital health, biomanufacturing, cell and gene therapy, diagnostics, oncology, infectious disease, regulatory innovation, reimbursement, and workforce leadership. 


Impact of Expos: The large expo in the conference was very impressive, with hundreds of booths and international pavilions, which underscores how large the partnering and expo component is. The experts and professionals came from all over the world gathered in California to brainstorm varying topics and problem-solving in the biological sectors and its global ecosystem. There were vendor presentation sections including: company presentations and Start-up / innovation pitching, partnering meetings scheduled through BIO Partnering for exhibitor/vendor interactions. I chatted with a few global vendors and presenters. They all introduced their products or services professionally and showed the optimistic attitude for the next phase growth of biology due to the emerging technology and across boundary collaboration.  

-Translational biology with Molecular & cellular mechanisms  (turning discoveries into diagnostics, therapies, and clinical workflows)

-Genomics, computational biology, -Microbiology, immunology, and host–pathogen interaction and AI (data-driven discovery, model building, and biological interpretation)

-Biotechnology and bioengineering (new platforms, assays, and scalable workflows)

-Ethics, reproducibility, and research governance (responsible science and effective collaboration)

The impact of the convention lies in the deals, collaborations, and knowledge-sharing it enables across biotech, pharma, academia, and government. Its main-stage programming also spotlights leaders at the intersection of science, technology, and purpose, reinforcing the event’s role as a major driver of industry direction.  

I think biology is one of the most important industries for us humans to constantly grow and renew ourselves. I impact each of us significantly. I would say we could bring even more broader and deeper topics to discuss, for inspiring innovation breakthroughs and unleashing collective human potential. 

In short, BIO International 2026 was the flagship biotech convention of the year, built around deal-making, scientific knowledge exchange, and cross-sector collaboration. Its main significance lies in how it supports the biotech economy and helps move discoveries toward real-world solutions. 


Real Understanding

 We have to understand things from different perspectives in order to solve problems holistically.

Real understanding begins the moment we stop trying to sound right and start trying to see clearly, listen emphatically and perceive objectively. That shift is significant , but it changes everything: we trade imitation for attention and articulation.


To understand something is not to repeat its definition, or to win an argument with its vocabulary. It is to grasp how its parts relate, what it depends on, and what would happen if those dependencies changed. Understanding has a kind of internal stability: when you move the idea to a new context, it bends rather than breaks. If it collapses into slogans when tested, it was never understanding—it was memorization.


This is why the most reliable learning feels unglamorous. You encounter confusion, then you reframe your questions and refine your answers. You tolerate partial answers long enough to notice their boundaries. You learn that “I don’t know yet” can be a productive state, not a failure. Knowledge arrives through friction: you think, you check, you revise. The mind becomes less certain in the shallow way and more fluent in the deep way—because it has earned its reputation for being insightful. .


In the end, real understanding is both confident and humble. It respects complexity without being defeated by it. It can be expressed simply because it has been worked thoroughly. And it leaves room for further learning, not because it lacks confidence, but because it recognizes that the world is larger than any single explanation. We have to understand things from different perspectives in order to solve problems holistically.


Don’t

 Don’t pretend to be someone you are not. Don’t you pretend to know everything,,,

Don’t you change your mind too frequently 

Don’t you think about the fact 

Don’t you scare about the truth

Don’t you waste time on trivial details

Don’t you addict to the past 

Don’t you worry about the future 

Don’t you care about the results 



Don’t pretend to be someone you are not

Don’t you pretend to know everything 

Don’t you uncomfortable to say no

Don’t you create silo, not listening to others’ point of view?

Don’t you know the world enough? 

Don’t you understand sequence consequences behind scenes 

Don’t you fear of the change 

Don’t you set limits on yourself 


Don’t you want to explore further 

Don’t you know the rule to play in modern societies 

Don’t you understand the world of difference 

Don’t leave it alone

Don’t just tear it down

Don’t get it wrong 

Don’t rush up

Don’t feel bad 

Don’t be scared 

Don’t take things granted 

Don’t take yourself too seriously.

Don’t ignore others viewpoints 

Don’t be too hard on yourself 


Impact of Los Angeles County Arboretum

 A notable highlight of the Arboretum is the combination of flower blossoms, water fountains, peacock performances, and plant landscapes.

The large metropolitan areas in LA have many great landmark sites worth visiting. Recently I went to the Los Angeles County Arboretum and Botanic Garden. It is a 100 plus acre botanical and historic site known for its global plant collections, rare and endangered species, and strong role as a public garden, education center, and event venue. 


The staff there were very friendly, greeting me at the gate. After I just entered the park, I heard some loud shouts. I followed them through. Unbelievably, I saw peacocks hanging around, ones sitting on the meadow where they had sunbathing; one standing on the platform, spreading up her beautiful wings, attracting many people around. Walking around the park was also delightful. Besides the colorful blossoms, I also saw a cute rabbit, ducks and birds enjoying their life in the garden. 


The Arboretum’s plant collections are broad enough to appeal to visitors of all sorts. Its listed collections include plants from Africa, Australia, the Canary Islands, and Madagascar, along with signature groups like aloe, magnolia, and plumeria. The Arboretum’s biggest impact is environmental and educational: it preserves and displays plants from many regions of the world while also teaching visitors about botanical diversity and garden design. That makes it important both for recreation and for horticultural awareness in Los Angeles County. 


Honestly speaking, I only walked through a small part of the park. A notable highlight of the Arboretum is the combination of flower blossoms, water fountains, peacock performances, and plant landscapes, which gives it a distinctly Southern California character with vibrant atmosphere and diverse taste. It was a memorable experience. 


Impact of San Francisco Botanic Garden

  It is one of San Francisco’s signature landmarks and a destination that strengthens the city’s identity as a place with major public gardens and parkland.

In every season during the year long, especially holidays, San Francisco Botanical Garden is one of the best visiting places for both locals and tourists. I visited there in different seasons, and enjoyed the quiet environment with so many different plants. 


 It is a 55-acre garden in Golden Gate Park that showcases more than 8,000 kinds of plants from around the world, making it one of the city’s major nature attractions. It blends landscaped collections, quiet walking areas, and seasonal displays that change throughout the year.


Impact: San Francisco Botanical Garden helps preserve species that are vulnerable in the wild by growing and propagating them in a controlled setting. The garden’s conservation work includes Magnolia collections, cloud forest plants, and the Global Conservation Consortium for Magnolias.

-Plant diversity: Thousands of  plant species from many regions and climate zones.

-Themed collections: Notable areas include the Garden of Fragrance, Moon Viewing Garden, Redwood Grove, and cloud-forest collections.

-Seasonal interest: There is always something in bloom, with magnolias, rhododendrons, native plants, and other displays peaking in different seasons.

-Unique experience: The garden’s setting in the cool, foggy climate helps support plants that might be hard to grow elsewhere.


Visitor Appeal: Its mix of open lawns, winding paths, shaded groves, and specialty plant collections makes it feel both like a park and a living museum. For many visitors, the standout draw is that it offers a different experience depending on the season, so repeat visits stay rewarding. The garden improves San Francisco’s urban landscape by offering habitat, cooling, and a large preserved plant collection in the middle of the city.


The garden’s impact is strongest in public recreation, education and sustainability. It is also one of San Francisco’s signature landmarks and a destination that strengthens the city’s identity as a place with major public gardens and parkland.


Influence of Central Park, New York City

Central Park is influential because it proved that a large, intentionally designed urban landscape could improve city life physically, socially, and economically.

Walking around one of the busiest cities in the world, Central Park’s impact is enormous: it helped define the modern urban park, serves as a major ecological and social landscape, and it is a gateway to different parts of New York city. 


Central Park was authorized in 1853 and designed as a landscaped public space to give New Yorkers a green escape from the city. Some of Central Park’s best-known highlights include Bethesda Fountain and Terrace, the Great Lawn, the Ramble, the Reservoir, Strawberry Fields, Conservatory Garden, and Belvedere Castle. The park’s lakes, bridges, meadows, and wooded areas are all part of its identity. That mix of natural scenery and iconic landmarks is what makes the park feel so unique for both tourists and locals in New York.


The Central Park is often described as New York’s “backyard,” but its importance goes far beyond recreation. It supports urban biodiversity, including more than 18,000 trees and habitat for over 200 bird species along the Atlantic Flyway. Socially and culturally, it is one of the city’s most democratic spaces, used daily for exercise, gatherings, performances, and quiet retreat.


Central Park is influential because it proved that a large, intentionally designed urban landscape could improve city life physically, socially, and economically. It also became a model for public parks across the United States, showing how landscape architecture could serve both beauty and public good. Today it becomes one of the most visited urban parks in the country, with about 42 million visits a year.


Influence of Grand Avenue, Los Angeles, California

 Grand Avenue matters because it is where historic downtown, postwar redevelopment, and contemporary cultural branding all meet.

Los Angeles is a grand area from many perspectives, economically, sociologically and culturally. Grand Avenue in Los Angeles is perhaps a great way to reflect the grandeur character of LA. 


It has evolved from a 19th-century residential street into one of downtown’s most important cultural corridors, and its influence today comes from the concentration of major arts institutions, civic buildings, and high-profile redevelopment around it. Its history also reflects a broader L.A. pattern: 


I went to the Grand Market in the early morning on the weekend, people enjoyed gourmet feed and relaxing there in the downtown area.

Historical arc: Grand Avenue began as “Charity Street” in early Los Angeles planning, with the name change to Grand Avenue finalized in the late 1880s. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the area along Grand held mansions, hotels, and a dense urban residential fabric before many of those buildings were converted or removed as downtown commercial development accelerated. By the 1950s and after, Grand Avenue became part of a deliberate effort to turn Bunker Hill and adjacent blocks into a financial and civic district, 


Cultural influence: Grand Avenue’s modern significance comes from the institutions clustered there: Walt Disney Concert Hall, the Music Center, MOCA, The Broad, Grand Park, and related cultural venues. 


Urban impact: Grand Avenue has also influenced how Los Angeles thinks about urban redevelopment. The street anchors major civic events and downtown symbolism; 


Grand Avenue matters because it is where historic downtown, postwar redevelopment, and contemporary cultural branding all meet. The street’s history is really the history of downtown L.A. itself—residential beginnings, demolition and reinvention, and an ongoing effort to make the corridor feel like a true urban center


Influence of Sunset Blvd, Los Angeles

Over time, those roads became part of the city’s identity as much as its transportation network; it records human history and the progressive trail of societal evolution.

 I took the public transportation to visit different places across the metropolitan Los Angeles. One day, my bus spent more than two hours running through the long, long  Sunset Boulevard 


Sunset Boulevard is one of Los Angeles’s signature roads: it began as a late-19th-century route that was formally opened in 1904, grew alongside Hollywood, and later became synonymous with entertainment, and the city’s westward expansion.


 Today it runs about 20 miles, from downtown Los Angeles toward west wood, from commercial area to residential corridor; from Beverly hill to Hollywood to botanical garden like university campus, hill up and down, capturing  different views of LA. 


Sunset Boulevard’s roots go back to the late 19th century, but the boulevard’s major opening came in the early 20th century when it became a practical link between downtown Los Angeles and the fast-growing western suburbs. Over time, it became tied to the rise of Hollywood and the film industry, many are familiar with the film Sunset Boulevard and its music. 


The Sunset Strip in West Hollywood is the best-known section, famous for nightlife, music venues, comedy clubs, and shopping. East of that, the boulevard continues through entertainment and residential corridors that connect Hollywood to the west side.


Sunset Boulevard helped shape Los Angeles as a city by linking downtown with emerging western neighborhoods and by channeling people, businesses, universities and studios through the center of the entertainment industry. Culturally, the boulevard became an icon of Los Angeles itself, representing film glamour, urban growth, academic achievement and the city’s shift from farmland to global metropolis. A classic visual of the Sunset Strip helps explain why the street feels so inseparable from Los Angeles identity.


In Los Angeles, Sunset Boulevard linked downtown with the city’s important economic hub became a key corridor for both mobility and development. That connectivity helped the film industry function as a place-making force, concentrating activity along a few highly visible routes. Over time, those roads became part of the city’s identity as much as its transportation network; it records human history and the progressive trail of societal evolution.


Holistic Change

 In practice, holistic change management means committing to the process of change—not just the event—through continuous assessment, agile, reinforcement, resilience and cultural integration.

Change is the new normal.
Real change and (existential) creativity is deprogramming old mindsets, letting go of "the voices from the past," reprogramming the collective minds with new perspectives, norms, and attitudes.


To succeed in change management, businesses also need a unified “one sight” focus, a dynamic balance between the inner and outer elements, they need to understand the relation and dynamics between consciousness (thinking), energy (emotions) and information deeply for managing change holistically. Holistic change is not a linear sequence but a confluence of values, attitudes, and beliefs that guide continuous evolution. Practical implementations often follow an integrated process:

High-level process flow

-Pre-work and visioning: Define a clear vision and mission that motivate change internally, not just from external pressure.


-Align goals across the whole organization: enterprise, business unit, department, and individual levels.


Assess the entire system


-Use a sociotechnological systems design approach to integrate people, processes, structures, and technology as modules of one holistic concept.


-Examine habits, routines, incentives, relationships, and cultural conditions that impact change.


Design the change

-Link personnel and structural measures to realize the vision. Use design thinking (empathy, ideation, prototyping) to create human-centered solutions. Ensure basic fit: no contradictions between reward systems, policies, or practices.


Implement with support and communication: Manage personal transitions and resistance, not just technical steps. Provide continuous communication, ongoing training, and reinforcement—not just a one-time launch. Use simulations, dialogue groups, and coaching to support people in transition.


Monitor, reinforce, and adapt: Establish regular feedback loops to measure progress and adjust as needed. Reinforce new behaviors through incentives, routines, and cultural integration so change becomes part of everyday work. Treat change as ongoing, not a project with an end date.

Human-centered practices

-Integrated approach: Combine behavioral sciences, design thinking, biomimicry, and mindfulness in change interventions.


-Aware and mindful: Bring emotional, social, and adversity intelligence; use stress-reduction techniques such as mindfulness and guided visualization.


-Human-centered design: Use empathy, brainstorming, and prototyping to create belonging and overcome fear of failure.


-Coaching and mentoring: Balance management with continuous coaching and peer mentoring to build leadership skills.

Systemic and structural practices

-Systemic alignment: Align change with the organization’s mission, vision, strategic priorities, and objectives.


-Policy deployment: Link goals across all levels and ensure consistency across reward systems and processes.


-Cross-functional teams: Create teams spanning disciplines, functions, and generations to enable cross-pollination.


-Dialogue groups: Establish regular conversation spaces for open feedback and collective problem-solving.

Data and sustainability practices

-Analytical approach: Gather and analyze data to understand direction, measure progress, and validate outcomes.


-Outcome-driven change: Ensure change is guided by clear, measurable outcomes, not just process compliance.


-Resilience via biomimicry: Use nature-inspired approaches to build resilient relationships and leadership practices.


-Cultural integration: Embed change into culture so it becomes a way of working, not a temporary initiative.

Communication and participation practices

-Communicative transition: Communicate clearly throughout the journey to reduce fear and increase openness.


-Behavioral simulations: Run conversational simulations to discover needs, set boundaries, and understand procedures.


-Participation from everyone: Ensure broad involvement in design and implementation, not just top-down directives.


In practice, holistic change management means committing to the process of change—not just the event—through continuous assessment, agile, reinforcement, resilience and cultural integration.


Impact of Orchid Garden, Singapore

 The garden is widely seen as one of the most photogenic parts of the Botanic Gardens, and it helps define its reputation as a world-class tropical garden.

Singapore always has a great reputation as a global garden city with sustainable environmental practices. Singapore botanical garden is the great garden of this garden city, that is worth visiting. 


And one of the best landscapes there is the Orchid Garden inside the Singapore Botanic Gardens. It has had a major impact as both a conservation site and a national symbol: it helped make orchids central to Singapore’s identity, research, and tourism. Its biggest highlights are the huge orchid collection, and the Tropical Montane Orchidetum, which together showcase rare species, hybrids, and award-winning displays. When I visited there this Spring season, it was a rainy day, actually the rainstorm cooled down the hot weather and refreshed the air, making the garden look more charming and quiet.


The National Orchid Garden itself opened in 1995 as a major showcase and conservation space for all sorts of plants and colorful flowers. The Orchid Garden helped make orchids part of Singapore’s public identity, reinforcing the Gardens’ role as a leading tropical botanical institute.  The garden’s standout feature is scale: it contains more than 1,000 species and thousands of hybrids, with some sources citing over 60,000 orchid plants on display.


 It’s an enjoyable experience to walk around the orchid garden on a rainy day. The garden is widely seen as one of the most photogenic parts of the Botanic Gardens, and it helps define its reputation as a world-class tropical garden. In short, it is where Singapore’s botanical science, national branding, and tourism all meet.


Impact of Perdana Botanical Garden, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

 What makes Perdana Botanical Gardens memorable is the artistic blend of history, ecology, and cultural themes.

Every time I visit a new city, I’d like to visit both the city center and local park or garden, to capture a balanced view of an urban city, skyscrapers on one side, and nature solitude on the other side.


Perdana Botanical Gardens in Kuala Lumpur is one of the city’s most important green spaces, with an impact that goes beyond leisure: it serves as a large urban park, a showcase for tropical plants, and a key part of KL’s tourism and heritage landscape.  The gardens are Kuala Lumpur’s first large-scale recreational park and date to 1888, which makes it one of the city’s oldest planned public green spaces. 


The lake is one of the park’s defining features and gives the site its former name, Lake Gardens. The canopy area, boardwalks, and themed planting zones make the gardens feel more like a sequence of landscapes than a single park.


After walking through the hustling and bustling streets in the city center, the gardens help to balance urban density with quiet  nature, walking space, and biodiversity.


Perdana Botanical Gardens is especially important for showcasing Malaysia’s tropical flora alongside introduced plants. Walking along the lakeside, I can see curated plant collections, garden signage, and specialized areas for herbs, aquatic plants, and other botanical themes. That mix gives the park educational value as well as visual appeal, making it entertaining as well.


I saw many people coming here for exercises. The park is popular for jogging, walking, picnics, and slow sightseeing, 


It’s a great experience to walk around the park. What makes Perdana Botanical Gardens memorable is the artistic blend of history, ecology, and cultural themes. It is both a landmark park and a living botanical showcase, which gives it a stronger identity than a standard urban garden. In Kuala Lumpur, it functions as one of the clearest examples of how a city park can shape identity, recreation, and conservation at the same time


Why Now, Why Us

This is our time, this is our call —Why now? Why us? We are the change agents in the world. 

The clock ticks loud in a city street,

Shadows stretch long where the old day fades.
Voices rise up from the quiet alley,
We're knocking hard on a locked-up gate.

The world's turned night to the day,

  the sunshine warms up the sky.
the light beam breaks through the darkness.
Every vision we convey, every line we drew,
Led us here, to what we can make.


Why now? 

Because the time won't wait.
Why us?

 Because we're the ones who face the challenges.
We stand at the edge of something new,
With the truth at our sight and the world to build.
Why now? Because the call is clear.
Why us? Because we're the ones who dare to create a new normal.
This is the moment, 

this is the spark of new ideas
Why now? Why us?

 It’s an imperative to -

bridge the world of differences.


We've been the ones who waited, watched,
Held the hope when the road was tough.
Now the air is thick with light and sound,
We're the ones who lift it up, not bound.

The past is heavy, 

but it's not the end,
It's the story that made -

us who we are
Everything breaks and everything bends,
We're the ones who continue to explore the world 


Why now? Because the time won't wait.
Why us? 

Because we're the ones who face the weight.
We stand at the edge of something new,
With the truth on our sides and the vision to build.
Why now? Because the call is clear.
Why us? Because we're the ones who dare to challenge conventional wisdom
This is the moment, this is the spark —
Why now? Why us? Lighting up the shadow of darkness.


When the night is long and the path is steep,
We remember why we promised to keep.
One more step, one more try,
One more dawn, one more light.


Why now? Because the stars align.
Why us? Because we're the ones who make the line.
We're the bridge between the old and new,
With our hands out wide and the world to see through.
Why now? Because the world is real.
Why us? Because we're the ones who know how to think and feel.
This is our time, this is our call —
Why now? Why us? We are the change agents in the world.


Why now? Why us?
The question is thought provocative, the answer's here

Why now? Why us?
Let's believe in ourselves with value and trust, co-solve problems to advance human world.