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Good Design Research: Homegrown creatives solve problems through design

The DesignSingapore Council has released an initiative showcasing cross-disciplinary design solutions addressing sustainability as part of the Good Design Research program.

Good Design Research: Homegrown creatives solve problems through design

Singapore is a country renowned for design innovation, ranked as the most sustainable city in Asia and fourth in the world by the 2018 Sustainable Cities Index. In looking for ways to continually improve and innovate, the DesignSingapore Council launched the Good Design Research initiative in 2020 to support and allow space for transformative, sustainable solutions.

The initiative provides designers with sponsorship, mentorship and industry support to empower them to design impactful solutions to challenges that face cities and society within three key areas: environment, communities and culture, and people and organisations.

Good Design Research - Forest&Whale_Wendy Chua (L), Gustavo Maggio (R)_Cr-Don Wong
Forest & Whale (L-R) Wendy Chua and Gustavo Maggio, photo by Don Wong

Following two open calls, DesignSingapore Council has selected 17 projects that exemplify impactful design, tackle complex global challenges and benefit people, businesses and the environment. The designers of these projects will now present their research findings, solutions and prototypes in an 11-month rotating physical showcase as well as a series of online workshops and webinars hosted by National Design Centre in Singapore.

The first project to be featured is Reuse Lab by multi-disciplinary design studio Forest & Whale, which looks at the waste of disposable food packaging and plastics. Hawker centres and street food stalls are a way of life in Singapore. However, large volumes of waste are caused by the disposable containers used.

Good Design Research - Reuse clamshell 1a_Cr-Reuse Lab
Clamshell reusable takeaway container by Reuse Lab, photo courtesy Reuse Lab

Reuse Lab has created three concepts for the exhibition: KopiCup, its local version of a reusable coffee cup inspired by the iconic kopitiam milk tin; Borrow and Return, a reusable clam-shell container inspired by the Styrofoam versions favoured by hawkers; and a Hybrid takeaway model comprising a compostable brown paper liner and a reusable container.

Good Design Research - Reuse Lab KopiCup 7_Cr-Dju-Lian Chng
Reusable coffee cup by Reuse Lab, photo by Dju Lian Chng

Another pop-up run by Roger&Sons presents an idea for how to salvage trees that will be felled for urban development. More than 13,000 trees will be cut down in Singapore over the next 13 years but there is no plan for how to use these trees. Roger&Sons sought to understand better local wood, to develop sustainable and eco-friendly processes to rehabilitate abandoned logs and stabilise the wood from warping, allowing them to be used to create furniture or objects.

Good Design Research - Morgan Yeo from Roger&Sons, photo by Don Wong
Morgan Yeo from Roger&Sons, photo by Don Wong
Good Design Research - Roger&Sons Mandai_170623-12_Cr-RogerandSons
Logs from felled trees collected by Roger&Sons, photo courtesy of Roger&Sons

Also looking at the timber industry, the design studio Produce Workshop will unveil a new sustainable material for the construction industry. Produce Workshop has used regionally sourced timbers to develop a new Mass Engineered Timber (MET) material prototype with a lighter carbon footprint than its imported counterparts.

Good Design Research - Produce Workshop_Pan Yi Cheng_Cr-Don Wong
Pan Yi Cheng from Produce Workshop, photo by Don Wong
Good Design Research - standing on mockup_Cr-Produce Workshop
Produce Workshop’s Mass Engineered Timber (MET) material prototype, photo courtesy of Produce Workshop

More projects will continue to take over the exhibition space over the next year.

“The projects under Good Design Research not only demonstrate great diversity, they understand the role and the potential for research to explore better, human-centred solutions for the many challenges we face today. Living in these VUCA (volatile, uncertain, complex, and ambiguous) times, there’s a greater urgency to design more thoughtfully for positive impact and reveal new possibilities for a better world by design,” says Mark Wee, Executive Director of DesignSingapore Council.

For more information visit designsingapore.org

Related: Tan Wei Xiang combats isolation with his creation for Discovered

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