ikea sultan mattress hong kong

ikea sultan mattress hong kong

ikea sultan mattress hogbo

Ikea Sultan Mattress Hong Kong

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Skip to main content Skip to accessibility help More than 10 in stock Standard delivery within 5 working days Collect+ from a local shop from More information on international delivery Returns are free -Weifong Industries Sdn. Bhd. was incorporated in year 1969 and with almost 46 years of manufacturing experience, we are known as the leading manufacturer of natural latex foam mattresses and bedding products in Malaysia. The company is located at its own property at Lot 60, Batu 11, Jalan Cheras, 43000 Kajang, Selangor and occupies a land of area of 10,000 square metres. The company manufactures its product with the Dunlop technology process and its latest European automatic foaming machine and automated line. All products are proudly manufactured using 100% pure natural, high quality latex from only Malaysia which is renowned for its world class quality. Our products are made in conformance to international specifications and had matched and passed various test standards such as certification from ECO Umweltinstitute, Germany, Institutute Umweltchemie Bremen GmbH, Germany and the world renown Malaysia Rubber Board.




We have also developed our own Fire Retardant natural latex foam, which had been tested and passed by FIRA. With the ever-increasing international exposure of our products, participation in international trade shows worldwide, emphasis on continuous research and development is the key to our continuous growth and success. Before each mattress is given all the finishing touches, it has to be pre-washed through a series of water sprays and squeeze rolls. The removal, by washing of certain residual substances improves the quality and hygiene of the product. Only the highest quality mattresses go through this complicated process. All Getha products pass through this stringent quality control before delivery to your doorstep. Getha latex block is designed with honeycomb-like ventilation holes to ensure proper flow of air while you sleep. This obviously helps your body to breathe easily, this reducing motion disturbance. A good ventilating mattress not only provides you relaxing sleep, but it will also help prevent allergies.




All Getha products are environmentally friendly and biodegradable because CFC is not used in the production process. Due to its open-cell structure, unique only to pure natural latex, Getha products are breathable and resistant to fungus and mildew. High degree of heat dispersion Bodily heat is easily dispersed while sleeping on Getha mattresses. This is because the structure of latex cells is open and interconnected, unlike the conventional foam properties. No other material can match natural latex in giving your body the ideal pressure relief and correct postural alignment. Thanks to latex’s high resilience and elasticity you will have both support and comfort. You can be rest assured that all Getha products are made from 100% natural latex as certified by the European ECO standard test. Even the slightest addition of a substitute in the form of petrochemical component would surface in the ECO test. As each point of the latex surface reacts to weight and pressure independently, you and your partner will experience restful slumber every night.




Durable and long lasting Comfort and support remains consistent throughout all your years of sleeping on a Getha mattress. Latex is the most naturally durable cushioning material available.He's famed for his Dubai palaces, but John Elliott is planning a new life in France...He has designed and planned the world's most expensive hotels. But inside John Elliott's £2.25 million home on the edge of Putney Heath there are no crystal chandeliers, marble and gold bathrooms or any other signs of the opulence he is normally associated with. John was architect of the Emirates Palace Hotel in Abu Dhabi, estimated to have cost £2 billion when it opened in 2004. But while dedicating his career to designing seven-star hotels that fetch £8,000 a night from the world's richest guests, he insists he has been equally satisfied restoring and extending the simpler, cleaner lines of his Thirties West London house. When John, 73, first laid eyes on the home he named Moonside, it was in dire need of repair, but he leapt at the chance to rescue this early example of modern design.




Modern man: John Elliott's house, Moonside, was built in 1935 by Thomas Wallis, an architect who designed the Tate Gallery The property was built in 1935 by Thomas Wallis, an architect who designed the Tate Gallery and the Hoover factory, just as the Modern Movement began to influence residential UK architecture. Now, after 18 years, John, with his wife Erica, 56, and daughters Kelsey, a 26-year-old interior designer, and Yolande, 25, a fashion model, is selling up to move to France. He retired earlier this year from his role as senior vice-president of Wimberly Allison Tong & Goo (WATG), one of the world's largest hotel design groups, although he is still in high demand working freelance in the United Arab Emirates and Africa. 'I loved the responsibility of improving this house while at the same time preserving the original vision,' says John. 'We have lived here for 18 years and the location, next to acres of open heath, is terrific. But now my daughters are old enough to do their own thing and, because my work is worldwide, I can live anywhere.'




He and his wife plan to buy a house in the South of France. his long career, John has been responsible for designing the exclusive hotel accommodation at Jumeirah Beach Residence in Dubai and a palace for the Sultan of Brunei. Before Moonside, John lived in Hong Kong for seven years, but in 1991 he was invited to open a London branch of WATG so he moved back to this country and a five-bedroom house in Poole, Dorset. Moving on: John with wife Erica and daughters Yolande, left, and KelseyUnable to sell his Poole house for 18 months when the previous property recession kicked in, John quickly tired of the long commute to London and began looking for a home in the capital. A friend in Putney Heath alerted him to a house being sold under probate in a cul-de-sac filled with similar flat-roofed and white-rendered Thirties homes. 'I bought it for a bargain £235,000,' says John, 'but the roof leaked, the bathrooms needed replacing and the whole house needed rewiring and replumbing.




'I also felt the kitchen was in the wrong place and the integral garage was a waste, so there was a lot to do.' He spent an estimated £400,000, adding a rear dining area and a fourth bedroom above it, both looking on to a moderate-size garden. Then at the front he added a flat-roofed porch and a new single-storey double garage, planting exotic ferns and palm trees behind restored boundary walls. The integrated garage was converted into a downstairs annexe, with a bedroom, bathroom and kitchenette, and John moved the main kitchen to the other side of the house to utilise the inviting French windows for the perfect informal dining space. Golden opportunity: Abu Dhabi's Emirates Palace was one of John's projects Upstairs, he created a small study and utility room as well as a stunning en suite bathroom for the master bedroom. 'The Modern Movement was about making everything clean and simple,' says John. 'They loved flat roofs and cantilevered lintels so they could make windows go round corners, but everything was very geometric and that's the brief I had to adhere to.'




Everywhere you look there are signs of good design, especially in hidden full-length wall cupboards offering a cunningly concealed downstairs toilet and storage to compensate for the lack of loft. The kitchen may be from IKEA and the floors Amtico, but the Brazilian granite worktop and careful selection of floor patterns show John's careful approach. The most striking feature of the house is the centrepiece staircase at the end of the long hallway. The spiral steel steps have a glass-block exterior wall following their curves and fill the room with light. 'In the Thirties they might have tried building a staircase like this in concrete because they had just discovered the speed the medium offered,' says John. 'But that would have blocked out most of the light and it's far better to have open gaps between each step.' John initially intended to retire eight years ago, but WATG was busier than ever at the start of the last decade so he stayed. Bedrooms: Five, one in a downstairs annexe. Bathrooms: Three, one en suite, and one cloakroom.

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