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What began as a way of creating, became a way of living—
the torch passed on, from father to son.
Before the Navy, sixteen-year-old Peter was already a Scout.
Wilderness training and pioneering were his passions. From them, he learned two simple truths:
Environments don’t change for you, so you must learn to adapt. And true stability isn’t about brute force; it’s about finding the right balance with nature.
With these ideas, he used knots, simple materials, and physics to build whatever was needed—making the impossible possible.
His signature works, the “Great Roc Gate” and “Pavilion in the Air,” are the best examples—structures held up by experience and precise judgment, not just strength.
Over the years, he led many scouts through the mountains. He eventually became a respected leader and the Group Scout Leader of the 8th Tsuen Wan Group.
At twenty, Peter joined the Royal Navy.
From 1973 to 1996, he served until retirement as Chief Petty Officer (Marine Engineering Artificer – Hull).
This was more than just a rank. It represented the highest technical authority and the Power of Command in marine engineering.
As a Hull Artificer, he was a recognized “Fully Skilled Tradesman.” From heavy metal welding and coppersmithing, to precise shipwright work, he held the ship’s most critical line of defense—structural integrity.
In that world, he supervised repair teams, enforced Internal Security, and ensured that every task met the most rigorous standards.
Because he knew deep down, that every detail in his hands held the safety of his entire crew. That commitment to “absolute safety” was carved into his very bones.
If people rely on it Do it right
No “almost” No shortcuts
Smallest details hold the line.
Finest margins build the trust.
Back on land, he continued building and repairing the home that belonged to him.
Not to show craft,
but to hold life up, and to protect his family.
To him, a home was never just an “object” you buy.
It was something he fastened together with his own hands —
every material held tight,
filled with love and responsibility for the people inside.
Thomas did not learn these values from textbooks.
He learned them through daily life — watching how one person carries responsibility:
quietly, continuously, without needing to show it.
Before founding Mount Dimension, his background in making and spatial thinking shaped what he cared about more:
how to find patterns and balance in disordered space,
and how to let design respond to different challenges in real environments.
For Thomas, good gear is not about “having every function.”
It is about “solving the problem in front of you,”
so that what remains — every part left behind — can be relied on.
Mount Dimension was not born from trends. It comes from real experience—repeated setups, adapting to environments, and facing challenges in the wild. Every design starts with a question: How do we create the most reliable result with a simple structure?
Hong Kong is tight in space and fast in rhythm, yet mountains and sea are always close.
This contrast shaped how we think: pack small, set up fast, and stay steady.
That is why our design language places more weight on:
staying clear within limits, and staying reliable within constant change.
Our work is shaped by the city.
But our sense of “what can be trusted” came from someone who lived it —
steadily, quietly, for a lifetime.
In the final stage of his life, Parkinson’s disease slowed Peter Wong’s steps, but never weakened his will.
He lived the Scout motto
This was not just a slogan, but his attitude toward life — he never took things lightly, and insisted on doing everything to the very best.
At 65, he formally concluded his years as a Scout leader. He continued to support Scouting in another way, spending his final years striving to nurture the next generation.
That was a quiet handover: To pass on the torch, and let the spirit continue.
He passed away in December 2025, aged 72.
What he left for those who came after him was a spirit: resilience, integrity, and the courage to pioneer.
He never spoke lightly of “giving up” — he simply moved forward with steady calm.
And for those still walking on, his influence will always remain in everyone’s heart.
When we face hardship and choose to persist, choose to do what is right, and even in the darkest stretch of road, still bravely take the next step.
Dedicated to Peter Wong
Our pioneer, and a great father.
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