TU Delft at Dutch Design Week
This year's Dutch Design Week 2024 (19 - 27 October) features a range of work from TU Delft staff and students. Find out what’s happening below, mark it in your diaries, and see you there!
Join the 3rd edition of the Design and AI Symposium (22 and 23 October) and explore questions like: How does AI really affect the work we do as designers? What is the impact of AI on education? On equality? And how can we use AI to our advantage?
Explore 4TU.Design United's DDW exhibition, "Changing Gears". Their annual DDW programme featuring the latest in design research from the Netherland’s four technical universities and can be experience in person and online. This year's theme, Changing Gears, explores how design can drive the pace of change. Some societal challenges require a speedy response, while others require us to slow down.
Take part in one of ClickNL's Design Innovation Sessions. This year's programme will span five days and cover five different themes. The sessions aim to explore the big challenges and opportunities for the creative industry.
Or experience one of the other many exhibitions, events, and more being organised by IDE staff and students at Dutch Design Week. From mini-symposiums about sensorily literacy to panel discussions about 'Design for Repair', there is something for everyone.
Where to see our researchers and students at DDW '24
Design and AI symposium 2024
22 & 23 October 2024 | Eindhoven University of Technology
Embedding the Magic and the Real
Almost everyday for the last couple of years we are being surprised by the hype and the latest magical innovations of artificial intelligence.
Initially this AI magic seemed far away from the reality of most design practitioners and researchers. The magic was not yet to be designed, or in overly shiny, or extremely dark fictions and scenarios.
However with experience, improved performance, and availability of tools the magic of AI is now becoming more firmly and deeply embedded into the reality of everyday design.
Join us at Dutch Design Week for two days of keynote presentations, talks, and workshops. Explore questions like: How does AI really affect the work we do as designers? What is the impact of AI on education? On equality? And how can we use AI to our advantage?
Speakers
The speakers for this year's symposium appear either in keynote sessions or the industry perspectives session on the second day. The keynotes are spread over the two days and lead into the break-out sessions.
4TU.Design United Expo & Dialogues
19 - 27 October 2024 | Klokgebouw, Eindhoven
4TU.Design United has been hard at work curating a stellar, physical and digital, programme that will give visitors the opportunity to see and experience top design research from the four Dutch technical universities. With the theme Changing Gears, they explore how design can drive the pace of change. Some societal challenges require a speedy response, while others require us to slow down. Dutch design researchers are setting the change in motion.
This year programme will focus on five themes:
- Living Environments - This theme seeks to explore the meaning of livingness in design practice.
- Thriving Planets - The theme explores how design research and practices can foster deeper connections and attunement, encouraging more holistic approaches to nurturing a thriving planet.
- Digital Future - This theme explores the evolution of Digital Future through a selection of diverse and highly interactive artifacts that examines the skills, agencies and concerns that are and will become crucial as the Digital Future evolves.
- Health & Wellbeing - This theme explores how thoughtful design and new technologies can enhance health and foster people's well-being.
- Equal Society - This theme fosters an environment to conduct an in-depth exploration into the lived experiences and perspectives of the actual people whom designers create their work for.
You can visit the 4TU.DU Expo in the Klokgebouw (19-27 October) or join one of the Dialogues in the Natlab from 21-25 October.
TU Delft & IDE researchers and projects to check out
Design United.DIALOGUES
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Questioning what it means to design with nature or when artifacts or materials feel alive as they try to mimic nature
NATLAB | 21 OCTOBER | 10:00-13:30
Organised by: Daniëlle Ooms (WUR), Federico Andreotti (WUR), Daniel Saakes (UT), Miguel Bruns (TUE)
Featuring: Lecture by Timon Adriaansen (Human-AI Co-Performance for Community-based Climate Adaptation)
Designers shape the environments in which humans and non-humans live, both by giving form to the artifacts that constitute our environments, or by facilitating the process in which environments develop. Through technological developments, the divide between culture (what is designed/ created by humans) and nature has become blurry. Nature is designed to meet human’s requirements and artifacts are designed to mimic nature. Environments thus are both alive because of their nature, or appear alive through the behaviors that are designed into them. The theme Living Environments seeks to explore the meaning of livingness in the practice of design. What does it mean to design with nature? When does an artifact or material feel alive? It covers various topics ranging from shape-changing soft-robots or smart textiles with autonomous behavior, design with bio-based and living material composites, to collaborative community practices shaping the environments humans and non-humans live in.
Design United.EXPO
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AnimaTo: Not Your Usual Tea Towel
KLOKGEBOUW | 19 - 27 OCTOBER | 11:00 - 18:00
Project by: Alice Buso, Holly McQuillan, Kaspar Jansen, Elvin Karana
Textiles surround us in our living spaces, but they often go unnoticed. But what if textiles could change over time, adapting to our needs and routines? A new range of active materials can animate textiles, making them change over time. For example, imagine garments that adjust to your body size, or that grow along with your children. In this project we rethink how we design textiles, envisioning a future where textiles serve multiple purposes, fostering deeper connections and longer-lasting products.
What if you could transform your tea towel into your new favourite scarf?
Design United.E-MAGAZINE
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Expressive Mechanisms: From Petri-dish to Performativity
Digital Exhibition
Project by: Amy Winters, Amar Mohindra, Renzo Jansema, Venkat Kalpathy Venkiteswaran, Maaike Bleeker, Marco Rozendaal
Imagine a world where materials and objects adapt and transform as if alive. In this realm, sensing, actuation, computation, and communication blend into ecologies of materials, artefacts, humans, and nonhumans. With Expressive Mechanisms, we explore how soft robotic technologies can animate expressive forms, creating novel interactions through a performative lens. Magnetic actuation lets objects shift with ethereal responsiveness, displaying lifelike behaviours. We challenge robotic design, exploring the boundaries between the familiar and the alien.
Can we turn magnetic soft robots into performative experiences?
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Entangled Intelligence: AI-Collaborations for More-than-Human Communities in Climate Adaptation
Digital Exhibition
Project by: Timon Adriaanssen, Dave Murray-Rust, Roy Bendor, Roni Bulent Ozel
Human exceptionalism has caused us to believe that we are separated from and superior to nature. This perceived separation has made us misuse natural resources for selfish gains; tipping the natural balance and triggering the climate to develop in unprecedented ways. Although major corporations and their use of technologies are largely to blame for climate change, this problematic perception is also noticeable on a local scale. Communities are being forced to prepare for the changing climate, but they often lack the knowledge and resources to initiate adaptation measures. To act more sustainably, we need to rethink how we relate to our natural environment and how we use technology.
Who do you consider when working towards a climate-resilient community?
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Citizens meet Climate: Empowering Citizens in Climate Action
Digital Exhibition
Project by: Juliana Gonçalves, Virginia Facciotto, Johanna Zehntner, Carissa Champlin, Geertje Slingerland
Digital platforms have become part of climate engagement strategy portfolios and have a great potential to reach larger numbers of citizens. However, most existing platforms for climate action fail to provide understandable and relatable climate data and lack accessibility and navigation intuitiveness. Moreover, they do not provide space for citizen users to share experiences and ideas about climate impacts and/or actions.
Climate change is real, but what can I do about it?
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Mycelium Skins: Designing Assistive Wearables with Fungal Materials
Digital Exhibition
Project by: Jierui Fang, Stefano Parisi, Elvin Karana
Novel fungal materials can be used as leather alternatives with a broad range of applications to the human form. Imitating conventional textile behaviour, these applications, however, usually retain the same characteristics throughout the breadth of the material, a departure from the dynamic living organism it was created from. Mycelium Skins aimed to bridge this gap by endowing a singular fungal textile with multiple properties, serving the dual function of highlighting its organic origins and reducing material complexity often required to achieve such versatility in a single material.
For an overview of the day's programme and to explore all the projects being showcased, please visit the 4TU.Design United's official website.
Design United.DIALOGUES
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NATLAB | 22 OCTOBER | 10:00-13:30
Organised by: Yuta Ikeya, Ege Kökel, Katharine Legun, Oscar Tomico, Dulaj Perera
Featuring: Project by Isa Jorritsma, Jotte de Koning, Zhuochao Peng (Dear Future)
In the Thriving Planet dialogue session, we organize collections of indoor & outdoor activities varying from a sensitizing walk for noticing ecological networks of the living and nonliving, a board game for coping with eco-anxiety, and an interactive installation to learn the ecological impact of using generative AI.
Design United.E-MAGAZINE
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Dear Future
Digital Exhibition
Project by: Isa Jorritsma, Jotte de Koning, Zhuochao Peng
Recent research by Hickman (2021) reveals that more than half of the world's young people are extremely worried about climate change. This eco-anxiety is characterised by negative emotions due to the awareness of growing climate risks and environmental threats. When someone experiences eco-anxiety, it affects their mental health, often causing issues with sleep, work or socialising. There's a lack of interventions to help young people manage eco-anxiety and be integrated in their daily lives. In collaboration with the Ministry of Health, Welfare, and Sport, we developed a design intervention to help Dutch youngsters aged 15-21 cope with eco-anxiety in their daily lives.
For an overview of the day's programme and to explore all the projects being showcased, please visit the 4TU.Design United's official website.
Design United.DIALOGUES
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Mini-exhibition & Panel discussion
NATLAB | 23 OCTOBER | 11:30 - 14:30
Organised by: Janet Huang (TUE), Jesse Josua Benjamin (TUE), Sage Cammers-Goodwin (UT), Davide Parrilli (TUD)
Featuring: Projects by Mahan Mehrvarz, Jerry de Vos, Aadjan Van Der Helm, Martin Havranek (Prompting Realities) and Romée Postma (Absurdist Chatbots)The Digital Future has arrived but continues to evolve, constantly shaped by the imagination and innovation of today’s designers. This theme explores the transformation of the Digital Future through a curated selection of diverse, interactive artifacts. These projects explore the critical skills, human and non-human agencies, and pressing concerns that are shaping our world—elements that are not only vital today but will become even more essential as we move forward into the next phase of the Digital Future. The mini-exhibition and participatory panel discussion blend experiential learning with forward-thinking design, offering a platform for dialogue and exploration.
Design United.EXPO
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Prompting Realities
KLOKGEBOUW | 19 - 27 OCTOBER | 11:00 - 18:00
Project by: Mahan Mehrvarz, Jerry de Vos, Aadjan Van Der Helm, Martin Havranek
Prompting Realities aims to create a tangible gateway to a future where LLMs mediate between people and products. The project leverages recent LLM developments to stretch the imagination, envisioning a scenario where “iterative ChatGPT-style” interactions move beyond screen-based outcomes and enter the realm of physical reality. This shift highlights many possibilities, including blurring the boundary between design and use, and empowering users with greater agency in the design and engineering of their everyday products.
Can AI upgrade your relationships with your products?
Design United.E-MAGAZINE
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Absurdist Chatbots
Digital Exhibition
Project by: Romée Postma
In an era dominated by technological solutionism, AI is often seen as a quick fix for complex problems. To accelerate the adoption of AI, leading industries and policymakers consider the development of trustworthy AI a crucial prerequisite. Inspired by the surrealist philosophy of pataphysics, this project employs a novel, absurdist critical design to question the pursuit of trustworthy AI and its current solutions, specifically in the context of generative chatbots.
Can absurdist chatbots change the way we design AI?
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SenseCab - A circular solution for medical wearable sensors
Digital Exhibition
Project by: Anna Statius Muller, Boris Kastelein, Olaf Bouwens, Ids Grupstra, Jamil Badloe, Josje Smulders
Medical wearable sensors (MWS) are crucial for monitoring both high-risk individuals and post-surgery patients. By reducing workload, MWS can help counter the effect of rising healthcare staff shortages. However, MWS are mostly discarded after a single use, wasting valuable electronic components with critical raw materials and high energy production costs. These components could be reused to cut e-waste.
Our goal is to enable the reuse of MWS to support a circular healthcare system, minimizing e-waste and logistical issues at hospital wards. How can we make reusability in healthcare more feasible?
Design United.COLUMN
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Column by: Dave Murray-Rust
Designing for the future has an allure - why design for the way things are now when we can be bold, experiment with, and paint pictures of worlds just on the verge of becoming? There's a thrill to making something new, probing the edges of possibility by asking not "How might we?" but "What might be?". So, why is this important?
For an overview of the day's programme and to explore all the projects being showcased, please visit the 4TU.Design United's official website.
Design United.DIALOGUES
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Guided meditations, Designer presentations & Dialogues
NATLAB | 24 OCTOBER | 10:00-13:30
Organised by: Haian Xue (TU Delft), Naomi van Stralen (UTwente), Svetlana Mironcika (TU/e), Tingting Wang (TU Delft)
Featuring: Project by Timothy Houtman, Keyue Bao (The Mapping of Me: Crafting Sustainable Health Practices)
At this event, people with creative minds can explore, from differing perspectives, how thoughtful design and emerging technologies can enhance health and foster well-being. Participants engage in activities that center the body as the core of human experience, share relevant design and research projects, and discuss the diverse values that shape our understanding of well-being. Through these discussions and interactions, we aim to reveal how design can cultivate harmony at the individual, community, and systemic levels, which ultimately leads to people leading healthier and more fulfilling lives. Whether you are a designer, health professional, community leader, systems thinker, or simply interested in the intersection of these fields, this event provides a unique opportunity to learn, share, and grow in a collaborative environment that celebrates the power of design to create a more harmonious world.
Design United.EXPO
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Stimulating Therapeutic Engagement for Neurodivergent Children Through a Robotic Ball
KLOKGEBOUW | 19 - 27 OCTOBER | 11:00 - 18:00
Project by: Kumsal Kurt
Artefacts mediate the interaction between therapists’ goals and children’s engagement during sessions but when these artefacts lack meaning for the children, maintaining their attention becomes challenging. How can artefacts align therapists' goals with children's intrinsic motivation for play?
In this study, we explored the potential of Fizzy, a spherical robot, in promoting engagement between therapists and neurodivergent children within special education settings. This goal is particularly valuable, as engagement and motivation are often challenging to maintain for neurodivergent individuals.
Design United.E-MAGAZINE
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Let’s Talk Menopause
Digital Exhibition
Project by: Alejandra Gomez Ortega, Renee Noortman, Daisy O’Neill, Svetlana Mironcika, Carmen Heuvelmans
The transition into menopause is a phase in life that not only brings physical changes but also influences a person's social, sexual, and mental experiences. Unfortunately, it is often regarded as a taboo topic and therefore it isn’t much talked about, which leaves many people unprepared for the changes they go through and without the support they need. In the Netherlands, different generations tend to live separately, so we don’t often see or learn from each other's experiences with menopause. This project aims to help mothers, daughters, and others talk about the often hidden and unspoken experiences of menopause by engaging in creative activities together.
What does menopause really feel like?
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CapriXpress: eHealth Support for Patients Before Cardiac Rehab
Digital Exhibition
Project by: Jasper Faber, Jos Kraal, Nienke ter Hoeve, Isra Al-Dhahir, Linda Breeman, Niels Chavannes, Andrea Evers, Hans Bussmann, Rita van den Berg-Emons, Valentijn Visch
Socioeconomic position (SEP) significantly impacts health outcomes, with individuals in lower SEPs experiencing a seven-year reduction in lifespan due to chronic illnesses like cardiac disease. Cardiac rehabilitation (CR) reduces mortality following a cardiac event, but there are pronounced differences in the effectiveness of and adherence to CR among low SEP patients, particularly during the waiting period following their discharge from hospital when patients are most receptive to lifestyle advice. However, support typically begins eight weeks later when CR starts and people's motivation for CR participation and lifestyle changes decrease, especially among low SEP patients. To better utilize this "teachable window," it is crucial to offer motivational support during this period.
Should healthcare be responsible for guiding patients during care gaps?
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Connecting Personal Health and Local High-tech Food Production in Cities
Digital Exhibition
Project by: Miranda Meuwissen, Max Koppenberg, Oscar Sottie, Caroline Figueroa, Kathleen Guan, Anand Gavai, Donika Xhani, Cristina Zepeda, Sophia Renner, Renner, Maral Mahdad, Maaike Dijkstra
To accelerate food system transformations, local and contextualised solutions are needed. Current physical and digital technologies are mostly developed in silos and with leading market players. They are therefore not connected to local consumer food and health demands, data sovereignty and local context. Our project introduces ground-breaking designs at odds with the current situation. Creating sustainable business models requires rethinking stakeholders' vested interests. For the first time, data platform architectures put consumers in charge of their data.
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Redesign of the HeartEye Portable ECG Device for Home Use
Digital Exhibition
Project by: Lucas Habets, Prof. dr. ir. Jan-Carel Diehl, Prof. dr. ir. Maaike Kleinsmann, Tjebbe Tauber, Heleen Willemsen
Cardiovascular diseases are the leading global cause of death, with coronary artery disease (CAD) accounting for a third of deaths in individuals aged over 35 in the United States. While electrocardiography (ECG) has been a crucial diagnostic tool for over a century, traditional 12-lead ECG systems are confined to hospitals due to their size, cost, and complexity. This limits frequent ECGs, which have been shown to greatly reduce mortality. HeartEye has developed technology to create clinical-grade 12-lead ECGs in a compact form. However, the current design is limited for use by medical professionals in hospitals. The challenge for this project was to redesign the HeartEye device for home use, increasing its accessibility for, often elderly, patients managing CAD by themselves in their own homes.
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Shaman in the Office: Design speculations on the future of psychedelic microdosing in the workplace
Digital Exhibition
Project by: Gül Onat
Psychedelic research has gained prominence in the scientific and mainstream media, signalling a 'psychedelic renaissance'. Substances such as LSD, MDMA, and psilocybin show significant therapeutic potential for mental health problems, including PTSD, depression, addiction, and anxiety. With medical approval for MDMA and psilocybin expected soon, especially in the US, interest in these substances is growing.
More recently, the concept of microdosing - taking small, regular doses of psychedelics with a specific intention - has gained attention as a new tool for self-improvement, personal growth, and enhanced well-being. Becoming popular in Silicon Valley corporate culture as a 'productivity hack', microdosing is praised for subtle improvements in mood, focus, and creativity, and its popularisation has resulted in significant online activity and public support.
Despite this growing interest, there is still a lack of evidence on the short- or long-term effects of microdosing. The potential ethical implications of increased, socially accepted use remain unclear, and there is uncertainty about regulation due to unforeseen risks and political conflicts.
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The Mapping of Me: Crafting Sustainable Health Practices
Digital Exhibition
Project by: Timothy Houtman, Keyue Bao
Adolescence is a time of rapid social, emotional, and physical change. New friendships, environments, and experiences often compete with behaviours that support well-being. Although many adolescents understand what’s healthy and value their well-being, taking consistent action is difficult when the benefits aren’t immediately visible.
So how can we help adolescents develop health practices that adapt to their evolving lives? Knowing what’s good for us is only part of the solution. Health education often tells us what to do but rarely shows us how to implement it. Our goal was to create a tool for health education that helps adolescents align their health behaviours with their changing environments, giving them the resources to create their own health behaviour strategies.
Are we teaching young people well-being or just informing them?
Design United.COLUMN
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Editorial by: Tingting Wang, Naomi van Stralen, Svetlana Mironcika, Haian Xue
As the world becomes increasingly complex, design presents innovative solutions to enhance people's mental, social, and physical well-being. We invite visitors to explore how thoughtful design and new technologies can enhance health and foster well-being in people’s lives. This year's projects reflect a broad spectrum of topics and highlight how design can contribute to individual, community, and societal health and well-being. Together, they demonstrate the potential of design to create positive change. -
Philosophical perspectives on harmony in designing for wellbeing
Column by: Derek Lomas
A ritual central to science is the PhD defence. At Leiden University, the oldest university in the Netherlands, this ceremony unfolds in an ornate auditorium where stained glass windows cast coloured light onto centuries-old wood panels. Then picture a procession of senior scholars, each adorned in black robes and peculiar hats as if plucked from a medieval painting.
Recently, I witnessed my friend Ahnjili ZhuParris's defence, an AI engineer with a flair for the artistic. I'd first encountered Ahnjili at the "AI and Experience Design" conference in Amsterdam, where she showcased her provocative AI artworks. Her "fashion police" drones, using computer vision to identify "fashion crimes," were particularly unsettling.
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Editorial by: Pieter Desmet
What makes people truly happy? This question has gained new significance in a world that’s rethinking the limits of materialism. As economic expansion continues to raise social and environmental concerns, designers are looking for a deeper sense of purpose. Many have embraced a modern form of humanism as a guide to creating designs that foster human capabilities. This philosophy, rooted in Socratic thought, advanced by Abraham Maslow, and reinvigorated by the positive psychology movement, adapts a holistic view on human existence, emphasizing the potential for human self-actualization—the flourishing of individuals and communities.
For an overview of the day's programme and to explore all the projects being showcased, please visit the 4TU.Design United's official website.
Design United.DIALOGUES
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How can design support more equitable societies?
NATLAB | 25 OCTOBER | 10:00-11:30
Organised by: Laurens Kolks (TUD), Jairo da Costa (UT), Angeliki Balayannis (WUR)
Featuring: Projects Susanna Osinga, Irene Fierloos, Betsie Loeffen, Milene Guerreiro Goncalves, Mieke van der Bijl-Brouwer (Rethinking Youth Participation in Policymaking); Gijs van Leeuwen, Abhigyan Singh (Voicing the Underrepresented Voices of Bijlmer’s Energy Transition); and Stella Boess (The Inclusive Design Experience - Misgivings and Paths)
On the morning of Friday 25 October at the Equity Dialogues live event, we welcome visitors to actively engage with the different projects* in formats ranging from live demonstrations to video installations, and from playing a serious game to joining in a moderated panel discussion. Together, our collection of projects unveils a variety of perspectives on the roles design can play regarding an “Equal Society,” or perhaps even better: how design can support more equitable societies. Instead of imagining a single homogenous society where all are equal, we investigate opportunities for moving towards societies where the needs of human and nonhuman stakeholders– in all their diversity – are met in harmonious and durable ways.
Design United.EXPO
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Do You See What I See
KLOKGEBOUW | 19 - 27 OCTOBER | 11:00 - 18:00
Project by: Kuangyi Xing, Lidwine Spoormans, Darinka Czischke, Ana Pereira Roders, Wessel de Jonge, Alessandra Soro
While many studies research how and when stakeholders are or should be involved in the process, less is known about the specific interests of participating stakeholders. Who are these stakeholders? More importantly, what do they value in their living environment? Which groups can be identified? To what extent do individuals in a group agree on their evaluation of these qualities?
Design United.E-MAGAZINE
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Voicing the Underrepresented Voices of Bijlmer’s Energy Transition
Digital Exhibition
Project by: Gijs van Leeuwen, Abhigyan Singh
Our project takes place in Amsterdam South-East, in a neighbourhood with rich cultural diversity but also significant socio-economic challenges, including high rates of energy poverty. The challenge is to democratically and inclusively organise the local energy transition as well as unburden people from the technical complexities.
To achieve this, we and local partners explored whether a local energy cooperative could be established. This is an organisation where local residents have collective ownership over solar energy generation. All members can participate in collective decision-making, for example about the distribution of revenues. Key to the success of this project was to get as many people involved as possible.
Would you rather be unburdened, or participate pro-actively in local energy transition?
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Rethinking Youth Participation in Policymaking
Digital Exhibition
Project by: Susanna Osinga, Irene Fierloos, Betsie Loeffen, Milene Guerreiro Goncalves, Mieke van der Bijl-Brouwer
Youth participation is increasingly important in Dutch municipalities, for example, in Rotterdam. Despite the growing number of tools, podcasts, and events promoting engagement, it remains challenging to involve young voices in policy-making. Can we approach this differently?
In this project, we used the Frame Innovation method, a design approach that redefines problems to uncover innovative solutions. By "reframing" issues, unique insights can emerge that might otherwise have been overlooked. The goal was to reframe the problem to reveal new perspectives and solutions.
How can we bridge the gap between municipalities and youngsters?
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The Inclusive Design Experience - Misgivings and Paths
Digital Exhibition
Project by: Stella Boess
With the coming introduction of the European Disability Act, what are the paths to address it and contribute to an equal society? This presentation presents learnings based on projects and insights from the past five years of the Inclusive Design lab at IDE TU Delft. The Inclusive Design Lab is a collaboration between IDE TU Delft and the NGO Visio and runs student projects with societal and industry stakeholders. Inclusive Design is about the way we think about the things we see around us rather than a method. A common approach in design is disability simulation, but it may not always increase inclusivity.
Can you design using only words?
Design United.COLUMN
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The Equity Dialogues: How can design support more equitable societies?
Editorial by: Laurens Kolks
During this year’s edition of the Dutch Design Week, we will conduct an in-depth exploration into the lived experiences and perspectives of the people who designers create their work for. We look into complex contexts that feature multiple stakeholders with divergent values and interests, seeking to disclose and amplify a variety of perspectives and voices often underrepresented when it comes to shaping design discourse and practice. We do so by providing a platform for the words, imagery, metaphors and stories of those people who are most affected by the very societal issues and problems that designers are frequently expected to address or solve. By presenting projects that use various forms of storytelling as a way to share lived experiences, we investigate the different roles design(ers) can play in supporting more equitable societies. As such, we seek to challenge designer-user power asymmetries and promote inclusiveness.
For an overview of the day's programme and to explore all the projects being showcased, please visit the 4TU.Design United's official website.
Design Innovation Sessions by ClickNL
21 - 25 October 2024 | Eindhoven
At this year's Dutch Design Week, CLICKNL will host the Design Innovation Sessions from 21 - 25 October at the NatLab in Eindhoven. Come and listen to an inspiring programme and join a network lunch. What are the big challenges and opportunities for the creative industry? The sessions take place from 11 AM to 1:30 PM, including lunch. The sessions are part of the Mission Days - curated shows for a professional audience, at Dutch Design Week.
Like other years, each session will focus on a different social theme:
- Living Environment - How do you design an urban living environment that accommodates housing, work, and mobility without losing sight of humanity and ensuring sustainable interaction with the planet?
- Thriving Planet - While consumers are being encouraged to buy more, researchers and designers are joining forces to tackle one of the most polluting sectors. The fashion and textile industry is full of challenges.
- Digital Future - In the future, learning, informing, and experiencing will take place in new ways. We are designing for new forms of immersive content, in which we submerge ourselves. What is happening now, and what is on the horizon?
- Health & Well-being - Youth are the future, and mental resilience learned at a young age is invaluable—for both society and the individual.
- Equal Society - Too often, it is assumed that what is designed is accessible to everyone in the same way. This assumption leaves large groups excluded for various reasons. How can we ensure that design is truly inclusive?
The sessions are currently full, but you can still sign up to be put on a session waiting list here.
TU Delft & IDE researchers and projects to check out
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Design Innovation Sessions 2024: Health & Well-being
NATLAB | 24 OCTOBER | 11:00-13:00
During the Design Innovation Session on Health & Well-Being, IDE PhD candidate and design researcher Thomas van Arkel's project from Redesigning Psychiatry will be featured. His project focuses on developing resilience in young children.
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Design Innovation Sessions 2024: Health & Well-being
NATLAB | 24 OCTOBER | 11:00-13:00
During the Design Innovation Session on Health & Well-Being, Lotte Jacobse, a senior designer and researcher at Reframing Studio, will be there to talk about the Redesigning Psychiatry innovation network. Lotte, who is an IDE almnus, is one of the designers within the network.
More exhibitions and research at DDW
19 - 27 October 2024 | Eindhoven
In addition to what has already been mentioned above, there are also other exhibitions, events, and more being organised by IDE staff and students during this year's Dutch Design Week. Find out more below.
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EINDHOVEN | 22 OCTOBER | 15:30 - 19:00
During Dutch Design Week, KIA CE, Cooloo, Techniek Nederland, and The Substitute is organising a meeting around ‘Design for Repair’. Within the circular economy, repair is an important strategy. Design plays a crucial role in this. During the meeting, we will use a number of inspiring ‘design to repair’ projects to show what is already possible today. Together with designers, researchers and pioneers, we will then explore what we can already do tomorrow to get to the next level of repairability.
IDE Professor Ruth Mugge will speak at this event. Her talk will be centred around tackling fixaphobia.
(This even is in Dutch) -
A mini symposium organised by the Pictorial Research Lab
SINTLUCAS, EINDHOVEN | 23 OCTOBER | 15:00 - 17:00
"[Looking beyond] Visual literacy" is a mini-symposium organised by IDE's Pictorial Research Lab and Catelijne van Middelkoop (co-director of the Delft Design Lab). The event takes place on Wednesday 23 October (15:00 – 17:00) at SintLucas, Torenallee 75, Eindhoven.
About the mini-symposium
To what extent are we (still) sensorily literate enough to truly experience and build upon what is happening around us? Guest moderator Marsha Simon engages in a discussion about multilingualism and opportunities for multi sensory design education in the AI era, based on contributions from Lilian Stolk (The Hmm, ‘Het zonderwoorden-boek’), Miriam Rasch (Research Station WdKA, ‘Luisteroefeningen’), Catelijne van Middelkoop (When Images Remain, ‘De Laatste Makers’), and Anke Adriaans (English Teacher at creative vocational school SintLucas).
The mini-symposium is part of the week-long DDW event, "Transition Atelier The Last Makers". -
Workshop: Unleashing the Potential of Spatial Computing
NEXT NATURE MUSEUM | 23 & 26 OCTOBER | MULTIPLE TIMES
In this workshop, we’ll explore the gap between technological promises and reality using a dialectical approach. Drawing from UX design, Yeonju Jeon (IDE DfI almnus) has expanded this method to include tools like replacement, supplement, opposition, and synthesis for innovative problem-solving.
Expect to analyze technology’s limitations, develop ideas using gamified “wild cards,” and envision future solutions for spatial computing.
Register now—spots are limited and pre-registration is required!
[There are four workshops being offered: 23 October at 12:00, 23 October at 15:00, 26 October at 13:00, 26 October at 16:00] -
KLOKGEBOUW, EINDHOVEN | 19 - 27 OCTOBER | 11:00 - 18:00
Milou Voorwinden (Studio Milou Voorwinden) is innovating the existing fashion and textile industry by developing 3D weaving techniques. She creates a 'fold-out' fabric, which comes right off the loom as a complete garment, such as a pair of trousers or a bag. This on-demand approach results in zero-waste.
Milou's project is part of this year's Secrid Talent Podium at Dutch Design Week. She was one of 7 innovating designers chosen to show how design can transform industries from producing ever more to ever better.