About Greengaged

Greengaged is a not for profit organisation founded in 2008 by Sophie Thomas from thomas.matthews, Sarah Johnson from Re Design and Anne Chick from The Sustainable Design Research Centre at Kingston University.

Greengaged aims to advance the design industry’s capacity to respond positively to key environmental challenges such as climate change. This is done by offering thought leadership, creating spaces for dialogue, and opportunities for knowledge sharing - within the industry and beyond.

Sophie Thomas

Sophie runs the communication design agency thomas.matthews, a trail-blazer in innovative sustainable design, which she co-founded in 1998. She is an ambassador for the cause through her lecturing and in her role as trustee to the Design Council and has co-founded the designer’s resource Three Trees Don’t Make A Forest.

Sarah Johnson

Sarah runs the social enterprise [re]design an organisation that propagates sustainable actions through design. [re]design promote products and projects that are friendly to people and planet, and partner with a wide range of organisations to pioneer sustainable innovation.

Anne Chick

Anne is Director of the Sustainable Design Research Centre and heads up the new MA on Design for Development at Kingston University. She has been an academic pioneer in sustainability for over fifteen years and her sustainable design research, knowledge transfer and educational work are acknowledged worldwide.

Kate Andrews

With an array of socially focused clients under her belt, Kate is an independent communications designer and consultant. In 2008, Kate set up and led the digital communications for greengaged and has since joined the team to assist its invaluable online presence. Kate is currently studying an MA in Design Writing Criticism at London College of Communication.

About Us
Greengaged | 8 Disney Street, London | 020 7403 4281 | email

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A Design Challenge Like No Other

Posted by Kate Andrews on Sep 25, 2008 at 04:12 PM | 0 comments

Early on Monday morning, Greengaged’s penultimate day kicked off with an informative discussion about the future of design education. Speakers included Tracy Bhamra (Loughborough University), Ian Capewell (Practical Action), and Emma Dewberry (Open University).

First to speak was Emma Dewberry, Senior Lecturer in Design for Sustainability at the Open University. After a brief introduction to her work, Dewberry discussed the relevance of a quote from John Maynard Keynes (December 12, 1935);

“The ideas which are here expressed so laboriously are extremely simple and should be obvious. The difficulty lies, not in the new ideas, but in escaping from the old ones, which ramify, for those brought up as most of us have been, into every corner of our minds.”

Noting the Design Council’s 2005 report “Design and Sustainability – A Scoping Report”, Dewberry detailed how it evidenced the perceptions of, motivations to and barriers from sustainable design practice. The report, she explained, expressed that designers felt a sense of disempowerment in regard to the ecology. Discussing the drivers and barriers toward EcoDesign, Dewberry explained that previously clients have been most responsive to sustainability when legislation demands it or when they wanted to gain competitive advantage. The intangibility and accountability of EcoDesign has however held people back, she explained.

Discussing what EcoDesign looks like today, Dewberry showed examples from ‘The Total Beauty of Sustainable Products’ by Edwin Datshefski (2001) and ‘Redesign – Sustainability in New British design. A British Council Exhibition.’ (2001).

‘We’ (educators) are not really challenging what design can do and what the boundaries of ‘design’ actually are, or could be. We are still just producing more stuff”, Dewberry expressed. “A core shift in thinking, requires change from the entire design industry” she continued. The shift she explains needs to be from EcoDesign to Sustainable Innovation, i.e. from a focus on outcomes to a focus on process.

Discussing how we can embrace the design curricula, she stated “Design curricula is challenged within the emerging context of ecological limits and social equity.” Dewberry then presented a quotation from David Orr (1994) who explained,“This is a design challenge like no other. It is not about making greener widgets but how to make decent communities that fit their place with elegant frugality.”

In a final statement, Dewberry discussed the concept of hope and hopelessness, and how we must be aware of the value that designers have to inspire people to happily make different decisions. With that, Emma noted Stefan Sagmeister’s TED speech “Yes, design can make you happy” and his “Life Instructions” (pictured above).

Dewberry closed her discussion to introduce the new U101 1st level undergraduate course in Design Thinking, which you can find out more about at the blog DesignThinking.typepad.com.

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