Month: November 2018

  • The challenges of smart city mobilities

    The challenges of smart city mobilities

    Smart urbanisation is one of the main approaches for cities around the world to realise their social, environmental and economic goals.  Applying the latest ‘smart IT ‘to augment transport, energy, communication and other urban systems and services that underpin everyday life in cities is seen increasingly as necessary and desirable.  However, research shows that there […]

  • Joining designerly dots

    Joining designerly dots

    This is a post by Stephen Potter, Professor Emeritus at Design and Innovation This Thursday a one-off return of the BBC programme Tomorrow’s World is appearing on BBC4. As a kid, in the 1960s this programme really stimulated my interest in design and technology. Each week a set of potentially life-changing gizmos and gadgets were demonstrated […]

  • Beyond Buzzwords: the language of collaborative design

    Beyond Buzzwords: the language of collaborative design

    In collaboration with our strategic partners, The Glass-House Community Led Design, we recently organised and delivered an event to explore key terms used to describe collaborative design activity: co-design, co-production, participation and community-led design. These terms are used by some people interchangeably, while others assign specific meaning and kinds of practices to each one. To […]

  • The MAC Belfast: building and thinking

    The MAC Belfast: building and thinking

    Belfast’s contemporary art gallery, the Metropolitan Arts Centre, affectionately known as The MAC, designed by Hackett Hall McKnight, is an interesting building, opened in 2012 it sits on a site that is strangely shaped, wedged between existing buildings but this gives the building a dynamic feel. There are two parts to the building, auditoria for […]

  • The Make Up Dept – design thinking for the film industry

    The Make Up Dept – design thinking for the film industry

    On the “Late Night Studio Tour” at Belfast design week, Pamela Smyth, founder of The Make Up Dept, talked with passion and honesty about her work. Her company specialises in designing the make-up for film and television production, and in particular wounds, disfigurements and character creation. This work has taken Pamela all over the world […]

  • CALLAN – textile design at Belfast design week

    CALLAN – textile design at Belfast design week

    Mary Callan introduced us to her Textile design label CALLAN at the Belfast Design Week Portview studio tour. She has demonstrated and compared two techniques she uses – Jacquard weaving and Intarsia knitting. Jacquard waving has an important place in the development of Computing. It inspired the developments in writing computer programmes. For weaving, you punch […]

  • McGonigle McGrath design process

    McGonigle McGrath design process

    As part of a tour around design studios in Belfast’s Portview Trade Centre, we visited the award-winning Architecture studio,  McGonigle McGrath. Kieran McGonigle explained to us how they work, what principles they follow and what a typical design process entails for them. Kieran highlighted two aspects, in particular, sketching and model making, that inform their […]

  • Design dreams of the material world – but is it sympathetic?

    Design dreams of the material world – but is it sympathetic?

    Have a listen to BBC Radio 4’s two-part series, The Sympathy of Things in which the architectural collective  ‘Assemble’ – winners of the Turner Prize – explore the designed and manufactured world, arguing that just as mass production has disrupted and changed our relationship to the material world, so digital technologies will also disrupt these relationships […]

  • Designing in an uncertain future

    Designing in an uncertain future

    Designers want to generate products that meet their users’ needs and that delight them for a long time. Some products, like trains or aircraft, have life spans of many decades. However, components or subsystem can endure for much longer as they are used across many product generations. Something that is designed now might well be […]