With the new JUNG UNIQUE x Melon Breakers collection, switches transcend their utilitarian role to become visual guides that shape mood and intuition. Here, technology merges effortlessly with design, transforming classrooms, hotel suites, and public spaces into environments that communicate through color and geometry.
We use switches every day without a second thought, but what if they could do more than turn on the light? JUNG’s UNIQUE concept takes that idea further, inviting designers to personalize switches, push-buttons, and sockets using the JUNG Graphic Tool. Every detail, color, engraving, typography, becomes a subtle cue that turns everyday interaction into a tactile design experience.

Collaborating with bold thinkers like Ippolito Fleitz Group, Marie van Eijk, GRAFT, and Komo, JUNG now partners with Spanish creative studio Melon Breakers. Known for blending strategy, storytelling, and visual culture, the studio reimagines technology as a fluent visual language.

The Language of the Switch
Spaces speak to us constantly, through light, proportions, and materials. JUNG and Melon Breakers take that conversation one layer deeper. For designers Cathy Figueiredo and María Lillo Felis, color and form aren’t decoration but communication tools. They direct our gestures and subtly influence how we move and feel within a room. This collection transforms each switch into a readable sign, a small intervention that makes an outsized impact on spatial awareness.

A Tangram of Meaning
Inspired by the universal geometry of the tangram, the collection translates function into a visual alphabet. Simple, structured, instantly recognizable. Built around JUNG’s iconic LS 990 frame, stylized symbols mark different functions such as lighting, temperature, or ventilation, each enhanced by carefully chosen hues.



Scalable. Versatile. Expressive.
Conceived initially for educational environments, this modular collection effortlessly extends to offices, libraries, hospitality, and private interiors. JUNG UNIQUE x Melon Breakers demonstrates how design, technology, and emotion can align into one refined visual system, where even the smallest touchpoint becomes part of an architectural dialogue.




