Changing the world through design
The July 6 issue of The Economist begs to differ. It includes a column on IDEO, a major American design consultancy that is helping the Singaporean government to streamline its process for handling work-permit applications. The column concludes by musing that “since public agencies have generated so few good ideas of their own, a bit of outside help would appear to be worth trying.” The piece delves into the shift from product design to “social design,” a field in which IDEO is deeply involved.
In Change by Design: How Design Thinking Transforms Organizations and Inspires Innovation, IDEO CEO Tim Brown offers a concise and comprehensive definition of social design: redesigning processes and services to transform the social world.
Taipei has made strides toward incorporating design thinking into its planning in recent years, and this year applied to the International Council of Societies of Industrial Design (Icsid) to be designated World Design Capital 2016. The bid, themed “The Adaptive City,” emphasizes how the city government is working with designers to improve the city and enhance its quality of life.
Liou Wei-gong, commissioner of the city’s Department of Cultural Affairs, points out that the World Design Capital designation isn’t a measure of a city’s design prowess but of its use of design to resolve urban development issues. Previous designees include Turin, Italy; Seoul, South Korea; Helsinki, Finland; and Cape Town, South Africa.