£100,000 awarded to companies helping the elderly to live more independently


Dezeen Wire:
 a meals-on-wheels service that brings home cooked food to elderly residents is one of three projects that will share £100,000 awarded by the UK government’s Small Business Research Initiative (SBRI) to the winners of a competition that called for innovative ideas to help elderly citizens live more independent lives.

The competition was organised by the Technology Strategy Board and the Design Council and the three winning companies will use the development contracts to continue refining and testing their services with the elderly community.

The Design Council’s Chief Design Officer Mat Hunter said: “These next generation services will help us maintain our quality of life as we age. All three teams show how understanding real, human needs inspires better solutions and we believe that this design-led approach will encourage the wider economy to embrace this emerging business opportunity. We look forward to seeing these compelling concepts brought to life and to market.”

See previous announcements from the Design Council on Dezeen Wire.

Here is some more information from the Design Council:


New projects will develop innovative services to help older adults live independently for longer

Three innovative small companies have each been awarded government contracts worth £100,000 to develop new services that aim to help older adults live independently for longer through adopting better approaches to food and nutrition.

The awards follow the companies’ success in the ‘Independence Matters – Home and Away’ competition for development contracts, a joint programme between the Technology Strategy Board (www.innovateuk.org) and the Design Council (www.designcouncil.org.uk). The contracts, awarded through the Small Business Research Initiative (SBRI), will enable the three companies to work with designers to develop human-centred service solutions that help to ensure the independence of adults in older age, and which are ready to be scaled-up and rolled out to the commercial market.

The companies awarded the funding are:

FutureGov (London): Casserole is a modern twist on the meals on wheels service which will connect food enthusiasts in the community to cook an extra plate or two of home-made food for people in their area who would benefit from it.  Casserole aims to connect communities one good shared meal at a time.”

Sidekick Ventures (London): League of Meals is a tool to digitise older adults’ home recipes, share them with a private network, and enable them and others to organise social meal events to enjoy home-cooking.

VISION Culture CIC (Worcester): Improving Nutrition in Older People will test and develop a service that will improve the knowledge and skills of older people in order to maintain their long-term well-being in a less clinical manner.

Commenting on the contract awards, Jackie Marshall-Cyrus, the Technology Strategy Board’s Lead Specialist for Assisted Living, said: “Much of the current service provision around nutrition encourages older adults to rely on others.

Rather than seeking to maintain their own skills and independence, it takes away the opportunity they have to continue to do what they can for themselves, or to address their changing nutritional needs and tastes.  These three exciting service development projects will offer a way to reverse this, through providing good nutrition and good nutritional advice, enabling older adults to continue to interact with food in the way they wish to, and enhance social interaction.”

Mat Hunter, Design Council’s Chief Design Officer added: “These next-generation services will help us maintain our quality of life as we age.  All three teams show how understanding real, human needs inspires better solutions and we believe that this design-led approach will encourage the wider economy to embrace this emerging business opportunity. We look forward to seeing these compelling concepts brought to life and to market.”

The ‘Independence Matters – Home and Away’ funding competition was launched in February 2011 and followed extensive research by the Design Council to identify key areas in which innovations could make the most difference in helping older people to live independently.  Nutrition and independent living are strongly linked and the ability to continue to prepare and eat food into older age as you always have done is a fundamental part of maintaining your sense of identity, quality of life and independence.  Access to good nutrition not only ensures healthy living (warding off both obesity and malnutrition) but also, as eating is an inherently social activity, it helps to maintain emotional and mental well-being.

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“David Chipperfield to curate 2012 Venice Biennale”- The Guardian


Dezeen Wire:
David Chipperfield is to curate the 2012 Venice Architecture Biennale, becoming the first British architect to take on the role – The Guardian

The official announcement has been delayed because of Chipperfield’s reservations over working with Giulio Malgara, who was expected to become the director of the biennale and is a friend of Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi. Following Berlusconi’s decision to stand down it is expected that current director Paolo Baratta will retain the role as biennale director.

See more stories about David Chipperfield on Dezeen.

Populous scraps plans for air conditioned stadium at 2022 Qatar World Cup


Dezeen Wire:
 sports architecture firm Populous claims that original plans to air condition a stadium they are designing for the 2022 Football World Cup are too expensive and “notoriously unsustainable” when used in desert environments – The Independent

Populous director John Barrow says they are now considering other options for creating a comfortable climate inside the Sports City stadium and is encouraging the Qatari government to alter its building schedule to give new technologies time to develop.

You can see our previous story on the 2012 London Olympic stadium, also by Populous, and all our stadium stories here.

Kieran Long says Heathrow’s plastic transport pods are “not just a whizzy novelty”


Dezeen Wire:
 in his latest article for the Evening Standard architecture and design critic Kieran Long describes a network of noiseless transport pods launched in September to carry passengers from Heathrow airport‘s business car park to Terminal 5 as “the future we were supposed to have.”

Long says the £30 million Rapid Personal Transit system, created by transport specialists Ultra PRT and engineers Arup, offers a “brief but safe moment of isolation” and “is an expression of the minor psychological irritations of business travellers” but adds that the concept has potential to be applied in larger urban scenarios.

See all of our transport stories including a self-driving electric passenger vehicle and more articles by Kieran Long.

“Design and invention can power us out of recession”- James Dyson


Dezeen Wire:
industrial designer James Dyson has called on engineers and designers to develop the new ideas needed to revitalise the UK economy – The Guardian

Dyson says that only tangible engineering can address issues such as global warming and population growth, stating: “The allure of digital should not distract us from the bigger challenges.” He adds that the government must “focus on investment in ideas,” urging them to support design education and creative businesses.

We published the winner of the 2011 James Dyson Award for innovative student engineering projects on Monday and you can see more stories about James Dyson here.

ACID seeks evidence of copying in design

 

Dezeen Wire: UK industry body Anti Copying in Design (ACID) is calling on designers to share their experiences of intellectual property infringement to help support its submission to the government’s review of design law.

ACID is asking designers to complete a simple survey (see below) that will form part of its evidence to the Intellectual Property Office, which is seeking the views of the design community so it can draw up proposals for changes in the law governing intellectual property and design policy.

See our story from earlier today for more details of the government’s call for evidence.

The following text is from ACID:


To strengthen main submissions and recommendations, ACID is reaching out for your help.  UK creatives, or companies doing business within the UK, can help by sending your case study evidence.  This is a unique opportunity and it will only happen with a collaborative effort.  The case studies need to be received by the end of the day on Thursday November 10, 2011.

If you wish to participate, kindly send your response to the below questions to jennifer@acid.uk.com.

 Company name (optional, name will not be published)

 Company name of infringer (optional, name will not be published)

 Images of product & lookalike product (if available – please send as jpg/pdf)

 Brief description of infringement (no more than 250 words)

 Did you take legal action? (brief details)

 Design sector/s (jewellery, furniture etc.)

 Team size (how many people work with you?)

 Do you register your designs with the IPO/EU?

 Have you registered your Trade Mark?

 How many times have you been copied?

 How much have you lost through copying? (monetary/financial loss)

 Do you export? (which countries?)

 What 3 IP design policy changes do you think would support designers and discourage copyists?

 Do you think Copying is Blatant or Inadvertent?

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Government seeks designers’ views on copyright


Dezeen Wire:
 UK designers have two more days to take part in a government survey aimed at improving intellectual property laws.

The survey, part of a call for evidence by the Intellectual Property Office (IPO), will form part of a government review of law covering design in the UK and follows the Hargreaves Review – an independent report published in May this year which looked at how the IP framework supports growth and innovation.

There are concerns that UK designers’ work is not as well protected as that of designers in other countries. The IPO says: “There are questions about the extent to which the design industry is properly supported by the Intellectual Property Framework”.

Anti Copying in Design (ACID), an organisation that raises awareness of copying and helps designers prevent having their ideas stolen, is urging designers to take part in the survey. It told its members: “We need your own examples of copying issues – real, hard evidence to support the case for policy improvements”.

Design contributes an estimated £33 billion to the UK economy, or 2.4% of GDP.

Designers have until 11 November to complete the 10-minute survey or respond to the IPO’s call for evidence.

See also: UK prime minister’s wife sparks debate over replica furniture

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Philippe Starck: ‘I’d rather save lives than be a designer’- The Independent


Dezeen Wire: 
designer Philippe Starck says that not being able to save lives and tackle key global issues in his work leaves him feeling “impotent”- The Independent

The designer has created a new photobooth that meets his aims of designing democratic and affordable products. Starck claims they offer a solution for those who can’t afford a camera, adding that photos help us to “exist.” He also laments the modern propensity for vandalism that threatens the booths, saying: “Twenty years ago it was possible to design something pretty and people to respect it. Not now.”

Alice Rawsthorn on Saul Bass: “The man who made the title sequence into a film star”


Dezeen Wire:
in her latest article for The New York Times, design critic Alice Rawsthorn analyses the career of influential graphic designer and filmmaker Saul Bass.

Rawsthorn explains that the designer’s bold style “reflected his fascination with constructivism, modernism and surrealism,” adding that his work with some of the most important directors in history ”transformed what were once cursory lists of the cast and crew into thrilling complements to the movies.”

See more articles by Alice Rawsthorn here.

James Dyson 2011 Award winner announced


Dezeen Wire:
a system that extracts moisture from air like a desert-dwelling beetle has won this year’s James Dyson Award for students working on innovative engineering solutions.

Airdrop by Edward Linnacre

Edward Linacre from Swinburne University of Technology in Melbourne chose to tackle the problem of providing water to crops in arid regions following droughts that affected Australia earlier this year.

Airdrop by Edward Linnacre

Airdrop pumps air through underground pipes, lowering the temperature to the condensation point and the resulting water is moved around to nourish the roots of the plants.

Airdrop by Edward Linnacre

The James Dyson Award is an international student competition organised by the James Dyson Foundation with a simple brief: “Design something that solves a problem.” Linacre receives a £10,000 prize that he says he will use to develop the concept and his university department also receives £10,000.

See our previous story on the UK winner Kwick Screen by Michael Korn, which was also announced as a runner up for the overall award.

Here are some more details from the award organisers:


James Dyson Award winner 2011: Airdrop overcomes drought, with inspiration from a beetle.

Engineering, not magic: the 2011 winner of the James Dyson Award extracts water from thin air. Airdrop is a low cost, self powered, and easy to install solution to the problems of growing crops in arid regions.

Inspired by Australia’s worst drought in a century, Edward Linacre from Swinburne University of Technology in Melbourne, turned to nature to find ways of capturing moisture from air. Edward studied the Namib beetle, an ingenious species which lives in one of the driest places on earth. With half an inch of rain per year, the beetle can only survive by consuming the dew it collects on the hydrophilic skin of its back in the early mornings.

Airdrop borrows this concept, working on the principle that even the driest air contains water molecules which can be extracted by lowering the air’s temperature to the point of condensation. It pumps air through a network of underground pipes, to cool it to the point at which the water condenses. Delivering water directly to the roots of plants.

James Dyson said, “Biomimicry is a powerful weapon in an engineer’s armoury.  Airdrop shows how simple, natural principles like the condensation of water, can be applied to good effect through skilled design and robust engineering. Young designers and engineers like Edward will develop the simple, effective technology of the future – they will tackle the world’s biggest problems and improve lives in the process.”

Edward’s research suggests that 11.5 millilitres of water can be harvested from every cubic meter of air in the driest of deserts. Further iterations of his design will increase the yield of Airdrop.  He said, “winning the award’s £10,000 prize will mean I can develop and test the Airdrop system.  It has the potential to help farmers around the world and I’m up for the challenge of rolling it out”. A further £10,000 has also be awarded to Edward’s university department to support other young engineers keen to follow in his footsteps.

Runners Up:

Kwick Screen (UK)

A portable, retractable room divider developed by Michael Korn, a student at the Royal College of Art in London. The KwickScreen allows healthcare professionals to make the best use of available space; giving maximum privacy, dignity and protection to patients.   Michael explored the use bistable materials such as slap on bracelets and tape measures, and like Edward drew inspiration from concepts found in nature, including the Venus fly trap and a frog’s tongue.

Blindspot (Singapore)

An aide for the visually handicapped, helping them travel around unfamiliar surroundings, developed by Se Lui Chew from the National University of Singapore. Blindspot informs the user of nearby friends using information from geographical-based social apps such as Foursquare, and communicates with them via a Bluetooth earpiece connected to the cane. The cane guides the user to their friend using a horizontally rolling ball on the cane handle which points in the direction they should walk.

Highly Commended:

Amo Arm (Canada)

Michal Prywata from Ryerson University, Canada, developed Amo Arm to overcome the invasive muscle re-innervation surgery required for amputees. It can be strapped on and is controlled using brain signals, avoiding major surgery and the long rehabilitation period after.

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