DI210-15 Future Labs (Future Lives and Environments)
Introductory description
This module is is the first section, equivalent to 15CATS, of the full deep dive into world building and a holistic practice-led enquiry into how society and its systems are designed. In this 10-week journey students will be researching, analysing and designing their own future city. From culture to political systems, to policies and regulation, to services and infrastructure, students will be developing their understanding of how the world around us is designed and constructed and how much of a role design plays in the totality of life in the social, natural and built environments. This module is underpinned by complexity science, systems thinking and systemic design theories and practices and will enable students to develop their skills in systems analysis, analysis of pain points and areas of leverage in a systems as well as discover anthropological and eco-centric links to the design of everyday life. These explorations will be captured through designerly methods and will involve students being inducted on wood workshop and fabrication equipment to produce physical designs of future city scapes, artefacts, products and maquettes.
Module aims
Aims of this modules are to develop students sense-making capabilities through design methods and practices by fostering their design mindset and skillset in contexts of designing for a sustainable and regenerative future. By challenging them to research and think about to which extent the systems around them are designed or emerging, student will develop an understanding of how design interventions can produce systems change and which factors need to be mapped and addressed to enable such shifts.
Outline syllabus
This is an indicative module outline only to give an indication of the sort of topics that may be covered. Actual sessions held may differ.
Introduction to the brief. The Future City. Group allocation and introduction to system analysis.
Design research stages, induction to fabrication labs and workshops.
CRIT and group tutorials - focus on systems, services and artefacts.
Narrative building - from the Present City to the City f the Future - where lies desirability?
Final Pitch and CRIT with Live Assessment - Showcase of Cities.
Learning outcomes
By the end of the module, students should be able to:
- To demonstrate an understanding of how systems are constructed.
- To demonstrate an understanding of how systems are constructed.
- To creatively and narratively express future thinking of sustainable future systems through artefact and design concept.
- To work collaboratively on an interdisciplinary basis to form a holistic understanding of pain points and leverage areas in a system.
- To demonstrate fluency in building and telling of systems narratives.
- To demonstrate versatility in Design research methods.
Indicative reading list
https://rl.talis.com/3/warwick/lists/355D16BF-F6E3-B5F2-C861-771BBB68F39A.html?lang=en&login=1
View reading list on Talis Aspire
Research element
As mentioned in the section above, this module will be brief based and will therefore require students undertaking research as part of their design process. this will entail an ethical consideration as part of the design commitment which will be addressed in the introduction of the brief.
Interdisciplinary
DSI is an interdisciplinary programme which engages systemic levels of interdisciplinary practice in its research and design process. students will be exploring and working with other students, practitioners and community members from diverse backgrounds and endeavours.
International
Contributors, authors and partners in this module will be international to ensure a holistic and pluralist approach to complex designing. This is also a vital part of our EDIAB strategy as a course.
Subject specific skills
As part of this 15CATS module, students will be undertaking a deep dive into system complexity and discovering how society is constructed, which role culture, ideology, politics and tradition play in the development and emergence of new system dynamics. In this research students will be discovering why and how mismatches in subsystems such as education or healthcare occur in order to develop strategies and interventions for social and environmental impact.
In the first part of the module students will be briefed to research their current city of residence as a case study in order to propose a Future City concept, including systems structure narratives and infrastructure. Students will be learning design methods of research such as visual ethnography, site study and psychogeography. These skills will culminate in the ability to analyse and synthesise systems and their narratives as well as propose multi-solving concepts in forms of design solutions and interventions.
Transferable skills
Design Ethnography.
Story Telling.
Site study reserach.
Psychogeography.
Group work and co-design.
Systems Thinking
Systems Mapping.
Multi-Solving.
Fabrication with diverse materials (cardboard, wood, acrylic or metal)
Woodwork and prototyping.
Study time
Type | Required |
---|---|
Lectures | 5 sessions of 1 hour (4%) |
Seminars | 5 sessions of 1 hour 30 minutes (6%) |
Tutorials | 5 sessions of 3 hours (13%) |
Practical classes | 3 sessions of 3 hours (8%) |
Fieldwork | 3 sessions of 5 hours (13%) |
Assessment | 60 hours (54%) |
Total | 111.5 hours |
Private study description
Students will be working in groups asynchronously on their group brief as well as individually in their own time towards a presentation and critical research analysis, and design proposal portfolio.
Costs
No further costs have been identified for this module.
You must pass all assessment components to pass the module.
Assessment group A
Weighting | Study time | Eligible for self-certification | |
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Assessment component |
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Future City - Portfolio and Presentation. | 80% | 40 hours | Yes (extension) |
This coursework will be a live brief response to imagining a desirable and sustainable future city. The work will contain research, analysis, design problem statement, design process and prototyping as well as a full design pitch with a maquette and artefacts to complement the proposal. |
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Reassessment component is the same |
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Assessment component |
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Critical Research Analysis | 20% | 20 hours | Yes (extension) |
This coursework will be a critical reflective piece about the learning journey of designing the Future City brief. It will be templated and divided between critical review and reflective writing. |
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Reassessment component is the same |
Feedback on assessment
Live assessment and written rubric.
There is currently no information about the courses for which this module is core or optional.