Junior Studio Final Critique
Please join us today, April 30th at 1pm, when Juniors present their bike cargo projects! Details below.
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@iduarts
Junior Studio Final Critique
Please join us today, April 30th at 1pm, when Juniors present their bike cargo projects! Details below.
URBAN REGENERATION FORUM 2: Resilience Through a Regenerative Lens
Wednesday, April 11 is Urban Regeneration Forum 2, an event focused on sustainability discourse. It is located at Walk Auditorium, Ritter Hall at Temple University. A panel from across several "nested scales" of planning in our region will help us to see how the regenerative lens applied to resilience/resiliency programs unlocks greater will and brighter futures! CHRISTINE KNAPP Director of Sustainability, City of Philadelphia BRETT FUSCO Manager, Office of Long-Range Planning, Delaware Valley Regional Planning Commission (DVRPC) FELIX TORRES-COLON Executive Director, NKCDC THOMAS FLAHERTY Deputy Director for Planning and Policy, Energy Coordinating Agency (ECA)
Keynote Speaker Jim Newman will explore the application of REGENERATION to the concept of RESILIENCE/Y for our region. JIM NEWMAN is founder and Principal at Linnean Solutions. He helped found the Massachusetts Chapter of the USGBC and held the position of Chair of the Board of the Chapter for two years. Jim is a founding Board member of a the Resilient Design Institute. Created by Alex Wilson of BuildingGreen, the organization pursues research and education on resilience in the built environment. Jim is also a Board member of CLEAR, the owner of the LENSES regenerative development framework. Previously, Jim worked as the Director of Strategy at BuildingGreen.
Makers Meetup: Great Craftsmanship and Artisanry in Philadelphia
Wednesday April 11th is the 20th Philly Maker Meetup. The event is free and open to everyone at Quorum at the Science Center (3711 Market Street). Food and drink are provided. Read more and RSVP here: https://www.meetup.com/Makers-Meetup/events/248770896/ The four companies presenting are:
Mason Dixon Made - www.masondixonmade.com Bario Neal - www.bario-neal.com Edgewood Made - www.edgewoodmade.com Hamid Holloman - www.hamidholloman.com
Each company will present their work and then we will have a group Q&A. The showcase (meet and greet) opens at 5. The first presentation will start at 6:30.
Junior Monica DeDomenico ‘19 Receives Edna Andrade International Travel Scholarship
Junior Monica DeDomenico ‘19 has been awarded the Edna Andrade International Travel Scholarship to study in London and Vienna this summer.
Monica will meet designers and design studios such as Mischer’Traxler Studio, architect Gregor Eichinger, Bauchplan, Chmara-Rosinke, EOOS, Traupmann Architects, and Das Mobel.
Monica says that this trip will build upon her “interest in human-centered design, architecture, urban space planning, sustainable design, designing for different cultures, and transportation design.” The cultural differences she experiences will be benefit her because “European design has an entirely different perspective regarding the “why” behind what we make”.
Mike McAllister Talks Industrial Design at Perkiomen Valley High School
Today, Associate Professor and Interim Program Director Mike McAllister spoke with students at Perkiomen Valley High School about industrial design and the Industrial Design program at the University of the Arts.
Justin Bernard to Participate in Design Dialogues: Makers + Designers
Lecturer, shop supervisor, and founder of StudioRon Justin Bernard will participate in an event called Design Dialogues: Makers + Designers on February 22 at 6pm at NextFab on 4th street.
Justin will discuss a recent project that he worked on with a local architecture office Bohlin Cywinski Jackson.
Hope to see you there!
Intro to Industrial Design Takes Field Trip to Old City
Intro to Industrial Design took a field trip to Old City to see a variety of ways Industrial Design manifests itself in the world. We visited The Center for Art in Wood, Art in the Age, and United by Blue.
These places offered an opportunity to talk about material usage, mass production vs. the handmade, and the types of experiences each of these locations designed for their visitor.
Junior Designing Shoes for an Independent Study
Industrial Design Junior Griffin Linsalata '19 is designing shoes as part of an independent study. After developing a number of sneakers, he's beginning to explore dress shoes (prototype pictured in center).
Working with 3D structure in Intro to Industrial Design
Today, Intro to Industrial Design explored building with triangle based 3-D structures using paper straws. When one team was asked how they decided what the structure should look like, they said: "We don't decide at all. We go wherever the straws take us."
Triangles evenly spread force through their 3 sides without changing shape, making them a sound form for building. Squares, on the other hand, become a rhombus when force is applied to them.
Students experimented with a range of ways to combine triangles, and discovered repeatable logic while still creating organic and varied forms. Since each student worked with one color, we were able to trace the steps made to build their structure, and observe how they interacted with the other members of their team.
At the conclusion of the activity, we merged each team’s construction into one giant self-supporting sculpture.
FINAL work in Furniture Design
The CRAFT & DIGITAL in FURNITURE DESIGN elective wrapped up in December. It was an experimental class we ran in conjunction with the Wood Craft majors. So far I’ve only written about the CNC Shaving Horse we produced in the first project.
For the 2nd project we joined with the Wood Craft majors to build a chair/stool from a tree. Ideally we won’t use any power tools! Just hand tools. We started by splitting out larger pieces for legs and thinner pieces for rungs from a freshly cut tree using a mallet and froe and hatchet as needed.
Our tools:
Logged marked out for legs and rungs:
Devante taking a massive swing at it:
Here goes Isabella:
Even Connor gave it a go from his knee scooter:
After a long morning the crew had gotten their frustrations out and we had a nice pile of split wood. (Shane and Dan not in photo):
In subsequent weeks we worked the split wood down to size using Drawknives:
Once we got the rungs to size we had to dry them in a simple cardboard box kiln:
After drying the rungs the tenons had to be shaped to size and the sides scraped down:
After final shaping of the legs the stools were ready for assembly. Using a brace and bit we had to drill the mortises by hand:
Once the frames were assembled we had to weave our seats and voilà we had our finished handmade products:
With the amazing and truly brilliant faculty. Mike McAllister (ID) left front and Don Miller (WOOD) right front :
And here are the beautiful chairs that the wood majors built:
and a couple more beauty shots:
Many thanks to Don Miller who went out of his way to help us neophytes.
And congratulations to the participating ID students:
Maria-Elena Alberto, Dan Bier, Devante Cordero, Isabelle Frascella, Casey Gwardyak, Shane Mastronardi, and Connor McAllister.
Also many thanks to the WOOD majors:
Nick Flaherty, Addie Métivier, Will McDonald, and Kenny Cheng.
The END:
IDES219 Visualizing Design Concepts I Fall 2017 Course Samples
Here are some samples of the various design drawing and communication exercises from the Fall 2017 design drawing techniques course for ID Sophomores and 1st semester MDes graduate product design students. Enjoy!
IDES201 Sophomore Studio: Producture Micro Architecture Project Fall 2017
Here are MORE design process and final solutions for the DESIGN BUILD focused Sophomore Fall Semester studio project. Taking tremendous inspiration from designer Ken Isaacs, Victor Papanek, and many other modular design heroes, the team of 7 students working with ID instructor Tony Guido set forth to reimagine and build new studio workstations that will be used and evolve over the next 3 years in the UArts ID Studio sequence.
New NEA Report Makes the Case That Design Boosts Business
A new report by the National Endowment for the Arts entitled "Rural Arts, Design & Innovation in America: Research Findings from the Rural Establishment Innovation Survey (REIS)"(link is external) helps make the case that design boosts business. The report's accompanying research brief, "Innovation and Design Use by Small Manufacturers(link is external)," finds:
Business innovation rises sharply with design use. Among US small manufacturers that invest in design, 83.7 are substantive innovators, a designation of the REIS that recognizes businesses that encourage new practices and products.
Businesses that have fully integrated design within their practices report expanded offerings and access to new markets.
80 percent of design-integrated businesses report growth in market share or having entered new markets. By contrast, 47 percent of businesses that do not systematically use design realized those outcomes.
See the rest of the findings, and read the full report here.
Learn more about the University of the Arts Industrial Design program here.
Juniors Present Design of Learning Tools in Local Public School
On Tuesday, Industrial Design Juniors presented their work developing learning tools for a local public school. Working in felt, they developed tools that improve writing ability, reading ability, address safety concerns, and encourage creativity.
Pictured below is work from Griffin Linsalata’19, Monica Dedomenico ‘19, Misael Siegert ‘19, Kyla Chang ‘19, and Jose Carpena ‘19.
Juniors Finalize Interactive Applications in Design Communications
Juniors in Design Communications have been identifying and solving the communications issues that real SEPTA users face. After interviewing a range of SEPTA riders, each student built a series of user personas to synthesize pain points and needs. Then, they researched ways that other transit authorities addressed similar challenges, and designed new mobile applications and touchscreen software that specifically addressed the needs captured in their personas.
As “product design” increasingly includes digital products, our ID students learn to apply their human-centered methodologies to a different and dynamic medium.
Pictured below is work from Misael Siegert ‘19, Monica Dedomenico ‘19, Kyla Chang ‘19, Jose Carpena ‘19, and Han Wen Chang ‘19.
Learn more about the The University of the Arts Industrial Design program at https://www.uarts.edu/academics/industrial-design
Sophomores Finalize Nomadic Furniture for Sophomore Studio
Students in Sophomore Studio are taking inspiration from Victor Papanek to construct lightweight, environmentally sensitive furniture for their studio space.
The studio furniture these Sophomores build will serve them in the spring semester, and move with them in their junior and senior years. As their needs evolve, the furniture will too.
And when you have the opportunity to add a swing to your workspace, why wouldn’t you?
Learn more about The University of the Arts Industrial Design program here: https://www.uarts.edu/academics/industrial-design