A blog about design at the OU.

  • Designing in partnership

    Designing in partnership

    This blog was co-authored by Abbie Jackson, Anna Ward-Stancheva, Georgy Holden, Leo Rees-Evans, Mar Reyes, Nicole Lotz and Rebekah Manston, all Design and Innovation students at the Open University. On June 25th 2020, the third annual exhibition of work of OU design students was launched. Every year, we invite students to design the exhibition together […]

  • An ecological turn

    An ecological turn

    As is the usual way of things for me, it was a couple of days before the abstract deadline that I clocked this conference in Bologna next January: The Ecological Turn. Design, architecture and aesthetics beyond “Anthropocene”. A key question they ask and describe is: ‘How does the ecological thinking affect architects, designers and the […]

  • Site selection criteria for urban innovation experiments – towards  a guidance note for practitioners

    Site selection criteria for urban innovation experiments – towards a guidance note for practitioners

    Selecting a site for the demonstration of innovative technologies in urban settings is not usually straightforward, even after a specific city has been chosen. A city is not a place but a constellation of places and each place has its own socio-technical dynamics, networks and interactions. Outcomes will be different when the same  urban experiment […]

  • GAME, co-designed by clients at Psychosis Therapy Project, at PDC 2020

    GAME, co-designed by clients at Psychosis Therapy Project, at PDC 2020

    The Participatory Design Conference, which was going to be held in Colombia, happened online this year. Although I am sad to have missed the opportunity to work with local communities and run the situated action in Manizales, Colombia, the organizers did a great job to create interactive sessions and exhibitions in virtual spaces. Through virtual […]

  • Design and Culture

    Design and Culture

    Design and Culture This journal Design and Culture might we worth a look. There are a multitude of questions about how Design plays out in topical issues of Culture and cultures. Art is sometimes enshrined as the embodiment of Culture; reposing timeless and universal. Another ‘culture’ relative to time, place and people, fights for space […]

  • Fieldwork is fun! Update

    Fieldwork is fun! Update

    This is a quick update on my previous post now that the OU research competition is over. The previous one talked about how I made the video (which you can read here). https://www.open.ac.uk/blogs/design/fieldwork-is-fun/ ‎It was great fun to make and it was really pleasing that it won the multimedia community choice category in the recent competition: http://www.open.ac.uk/research/news/ou-postgraduate-research-poster-competition-2020. […]

  • Round like a circle in a spiral, like a wheel within a wheel….

    Round like a circle in a spiral, like a wheel within a wheel….

    There’s a lot circulating around about how we might emerge from Covid-19 by using its disruptions to embrace sustainability. Now it seems that Boris is proposing a big car scrappage scheme to subsidise electric vehicles, together with encouraging bikes and making electric scooters legal. But social and economic transformations involve a few more wheels within […]

  • About the privilege of learning through mistakes

    About the privilege of learning through mistakes

    This blog post is about how I learn from making mistakes. We tell our first-year design students that it is essential not to dismay when they make mistakes. In fact, making a mistake and reflecting on why this mistake happened (and possibly how to avoid it next time) is the best that can happen to […]

  • ‘UK Makerspace – make things, do stuff and knit the community together’

    ‘UK Makerspace – make things, do stuff and knit the community together’

    Over a decade ago the term Makerspace, Hackerspace or Fablab would have been a relatively unknown term by the general populous. If the terms were understood then perhaps they would be thought of as niche or even geeky. Today the term Makerspace, Hackerspace or Fablab are more commonly known and to date there are over […]