Democratic Design

October 5th, 2009 by admin

Michael Kohn will present the practice’s  latest thinking on democratic design at the the Be2Camp event on Wednesday 7th October at Olympia, London.

In particular he will talk about Slider’s  recent projects and technologies under development, and how these align with a emerging possible democratisation of architectural services delivery, and  also a growing expectation of society in general.

http://be2camp.ning.com/events/be2campworkingbuildings2009-1


Every Project has an underlying Design Democracy

August 27th, 2009 by Michael Kohn

Democratic design means different things to different people. To furniture giant Ikea, democratic design means offering affordable designed products to people of all incomes. To others, especially in urban design, democratic design is empowering communities to design their own urban parks and space. The suggestion here is that the public realm is literally designed by the public. In our eyes, democratic design is a much broader term. It can be understood as simply a measure of inclusivity, engagement, access and impact that stakeholders are offered upon a design process. Every project therefore has an innate or implied design democracy underpinning the design process, and some projects inevitably appear more democratic than others. At the basic level therefore, a project’s design democracy should be well considered and managed to de-risk a project and deliver maximum return on investment. There is a type of design democracy or level of implementation that will be right for a particular project, return most value and for some projects, democratic design approaches will be indispensable. Collaborative, inclusive and participatory design approaches can all be part of implementing a design democracy within a project. These are all vunerable to mere tick box approaches, especially where public consultation programmes are seen as just another project deliverable and there is no real continuity established between design progress and end user feedback. Collaboration and engagement for built environment projects require genuine support, management and continuous measure to ensure that there is a real return on the investment and design remains user centric. Effective design democracy management involves the consideration of the type of democracy to be implemented for a particular project, and a detailed appreciation of the underlying architecture of the collaboration and feedback exchange between project consultants, stakeholders and end users. Projects without any end user impact on the design process risk rejection by these end users. This is so often the case with built environment projects, where end users can often be excluded from the design process, especially in speculative development. The larger and more obvious project risk of course lies in alienation of local communities and objections are then inevitably raised at planning stages. So the risk to a client of ignoring or getting their design democracy wrong is considerable. We think it is better to de-risk projects by establishing a smart and deliberate design democracy. Clients should take charge of the design democracy at the earliest stage of projects and reap the benefits possible by opening up dialogue and engagement to locals, end users as well as enhancing the collaboration of their consultant team.


Welcome to the new website

August 26th, 2009 by admin

The SliderWeb team has been busy this summer building our new website, we hope you like it, but please tell us either way.

In a move to be a little more web 2.0, we have now introduced this blog, and have made a resolution to keep it up to date with all our news and thoughts which also appears on the front page. Our developers have implemented a couple of neat little tricks to pull in RSS feeds from our other services websites. In particular, we have linked into our blog at ESP-sim.org so this blog will be kept up to date with our campaign to enable development opportunity for all, and you will see our new ArchIVE research project which explores the workflow from architecture to virtual environments up until 2013. In due course you can also read about our progress on StickyWorld which will be released as public beta early 2010.

So by subscribing to this blog, we hope you will get a good overview of the multiple strands of thinking, design orientated, cultural and technical, which drive our business forward into new territories, and we welcome your feedback and comments.


Its official. UK homes are too small!?

August 24th, 2009 by Michael Kohn

People concerned about the poor or non existent space standards of UK’s new housing would be interested in CABE’s latest research report

“Space in new homes:what residents think”

The report points out that UK new housing has very poor space standards, including low levels of storage, food preparation areas, sufficient space for furniture or space in which to socialise. Basically CABE point out that “there is mismatch between the space needed by residents for everyday activities, and the space provided by the market”.

Well there is no new news there but at least it is good to see what everyone has known for so long being bourne out by official research. The real question is what should everyone do about this problem? As is CABE’s remit, it will be lobbying all of the existing players to promote the value and social importance of space in the home and critically they will issue a recommendation to local authorities to introduce minimum space standards via their planning departments.

The battle will no doubt move to the question of what is the minimum, and how do you effectively measure it, and what are the measurements for affordability. In fact what is the space standard threshold that improves space provision yet still allows for profitable private development to continue.

We will no doubt see the emergence of new space standard conforming pattern books developed by local authorities in answering these questions, and informing their partnering developers of the type of space and design standards they are after. This will be no bad thing, but unless there is a closed feedback loop established which openly invites authentic end user engagement in establishing these pattern books, such space standard could just be a paper exercise which only serve to slow the delivery of new homes in the UK. More on ‘people pattern books’ to follow….