Design for the People, the Environment, for the Future!
This week in class we had both a presentation on color as well as one on design in relation to the environment. However, I was most inspired by the videos we watched from TED.com.
Janine Benyus on Biomimicry brought forth a simple yet extremely complex idea. She discussed using nature and the environment around also to develop new designs and technology that are both more cost efficient and safe to the environment. It makes sense when you think about how long nature has been around and had time to evolve to make their function the best that it can be. One example she gave was modeling plumbing in high rise buildings, or any building really, that would act as a tree's roots and branches act. If we could some how fully understand the way they function, we could quite possibly develop a similar method to draw water up to the high level floors. I found this fascinating and it definitely something I would like to see designed.
Aside from looking at to nature for answers I was just as inspired by Jane Chen and Michael Pritchard. Both designers saw a major issue in society as to the lack of basic needs being available to not just well developed countries like the United States but to up and coming nations who are currently struggling. Simple things like fresh water or an incubator for premature infants, something that happens everyday in America. Here we are able to provide $20,000 dollar incubators to most hospitals as well as direct plumbing providing clean drinkable water. These designers recognized that most people in the world lacked such luxuries and decided to do something about it. Chen developed an affordable, reusable incubator using a special wax that can hold heat for hours at a time. Pritchard created a water bottle with the ability to turn the nastiest water into something same and drinkable with a filter and a few shakes of the bottle. The technology was around, someone just had to apply it directly to an issue and these designers did so. Inpirational!










