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  • A better world by design

    Announcement, Event, Social Design

    Here is some information about a conference that is completely organized by students of Brown and RISD. Tell me how it was if you have the chance to get there.

    A Better World by Design is a three-day internationally acclaimed conference in Providence, RI that connects students, professionals, and individuals from a variety of disciplines in order to build a global community of socially conscious and passionate innovators. Presenters share engaging stories, workshops teach creative skills, and discussions reframe perspectives. A Better World by Design is an immersive experience, one that deepens our understanding of the power of design, technology, and enterprise to reshape our communities and sustain our environment.

    Panels include topics like Arts + Design Organizations for Social Change, Ethics in Design, Future Urban Transport, Urban Arts and Activism etc. There are workshops with subjects like DIY Biology, Waste for Life or Designing Social Media. And of course there is a lot of opportunity to get into contact with others at the several “social events”.

    Posted September 21, 2010 by Marco Barooah-Siebertz

    Responses (0)

    Sharing design knowledge at Design Boost

    Creative Places and Spaces, Event, Sustainablity

    Design Boost is a highly interesting platform that “envisions a holistic approach as a condition for sustainable design”. To fulfil this target the platform’s idea builds upon sharing knowledge by publishing media (magazines, books and videos), organizing events (talks, shows), building a community and offering consulting services.

    Here is a documentation video of the last Design Boost event “Made in [Arnhem]” with an interesting, yet effective way to document an event by structuring the video with questions around the different themes: How can design understand cultures? How transform a commodity to an experience? Do we need another chair? How do me mind the gap? What comes after IKEA?

    Now I cannot say that the answers are really satisfying nor are they new. For example I think it seems clear that “there are too many things we don’t need” and that it is “better to design better quality”. “When all parents are designers, that would leave to a better world” – that also needs more explanation.

    Most interesting for me was the questions “What comes after IKEA?”. The answer was that after consumers became makers they now should become designers, said Tim Vermeulen. An interesting topic that needs much more work and debate I think.

    Either it is the wrong questions that are asked or just some difficulty in the designers’ world that does not allow to bring up new ideas. Maybe it was just too short to put it in a single video document. Still the basic concept of Design Boost seems appealing to me as it consequently gathers designers and urges them to sit together and talk about problems and probably even solutions. It is for sure no coincident that the Scandinavians, the Swedes in this case, cultivate this kind of collaborative and sense-making approach.

    Posted September 17, 2010 by Marco Barooah-Siebertz

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    DESIGN 21 »Crafting Excellence« Competition

    competition

    There are always interesting competitions to be found at the DESIGN 21 Social Design Network. This time they called to enter a new logo for the UNESCO Award of Excellence for Handicrafts.

    The UNESCO “Award of Excellence for Handicrafts” aims to encourage artisans to produce handicrafts using traditional skills, patterns and themes in an innovative way, in order to ensure the continuity and sustainability of these traditions and skills.

    An interesting institution like this I could not stop myself and design a logo for the competition. It should display the detailedness, precision and sleight of hand a craftsman has to fulfil. So you see the three stars that stand for excellence and were brought there by a calm hand and a pair of tweezers.

    By the way: if you like it, you can vote for my draft. Click on the VOTE button and click to page 20 and you’ll find it. Unfortunately one has to register at DESIGN 21 first. But to anyone interested in social design this is the right platform anyhow.

    Posted September 16, 2010 by Marco Barooah-Siebertz

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    German politician: “Nuclear power is eco-friendly”

    Annoying, Sustainablity

    It is really astonishing how intensively the German government rules past its own citizens. A survey of the ZDF, one of the biggest German TV stations, showed that 61% of the people asked were against longer run-times of nuclear plants. But the government led by a coalition of the conservative and liberal party prefers making great gifts to the energy providers and gives nuclear power a bright future again.

    Unbelievable, but in 2008 the Secretary General of the conservative party (CDU), Pofalla, even said, that “for the CDU nuclear energy is eco-energy”. Confront this brainless politician now with the situation in the nuclear dump in Asse/Germany and the problems with the nuclear waste that no one knows how to solve. I am not sure, if this man, who unfortunately is one of the leaders in Germany right now, will ever understand that sustainability and nuclear power cannot go together.

    Posted September 10, 2010 by Marco Barooah-Siebertz

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    One month left to enter the Buckminster Fuller Challenge

    Announcement, Design Research, Experimental Design, Sustainablity, Visions, competition

    Only one month is left to prepare and submit applications to the Buckminster Fuller Challenge, the premier international prize program that awards $100,000 to support the development and implementation of a solution that has significant potential to solve humanity’s most pressing problems.

    The Buckminster Fuller Challenge from Buckminster Fuller Institute on Vimeo.

    Jury
    Each year systems thinkers and design pioneers across a wide spectrum of human endeavor are invited from all over the world to be on the Jury and select a winner of the Buckminster Fuller Challenge. Past jury members have included Janine Benyus, Sir Nicholas Grimshaw, Helena Norberg-Hodge, John Thackara, Hazel Henderson, Danny Hillis, Alan Kay, Hunter Lovins, Bill Browning, José Zaglul, William McDonough, Adam Bly, Greg Watson and Vandana Shiva.

    Entries
    Past entries include visionary strategies from a radical solution to human transportation in the world’s largest cities to a strategy to dramatically increase crop yields and economic development in remote African villages. While the entries cover a broad range of topics, the common thread among them is a highly integrated approach to design — one that is simultaneously comprehensive, anticipatory and aligned with nature’s fundamental principles. This focus on an integrated design strategy is what distinguishes the Challenge and the innovators who have submitted their work from other prize programs.

    The deadline for entries is 5pm (Eastern Standard Time) on Monday, October 4, 2010. For the call for entries, instructions for how to enter, reference materials, and much more, visit http://challenge.bfi.org

    Posted September 6, 2010 by Marco Barooah-Siebertz

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