Weeknotes Weeks 218-219

With two and a half weeks of travel behind us, and just a few more days left on our HDL tour, the most common question Justin and I have been asked is, "are you ready to kill each other?" On the contrary, we're lucky to travel well together. This kind of trip would be impossible otherwise.

Justin is tired.
Justin is tired.

Bryan is tired.
Bryan is tired.

Today is London, fresh off the plane from Dubai. Later today we will give a talk to the MA Design Futures students at Goldsmiths University. I'm especially looking forward to this, as I hope we can spark a discussion about the boundaries of the applicability of design fiction. HDL has been an attempt to push beyond the fictive and that's one of the things we're most proud about.

Dubai was a quick stop, but we enjoyed a couple of morning sessions hosted by Noah Raford in the Prime Minister's Office. The conversation there was focused on improvement of services, the importance of synthesis (and thus design ability), and prototyping towards solutions. Many thanks to Noah for putting these discussions together. Although it's more recognized for deep spending on hard infrastructure, it was impressive to see the amount of attention being poured into the soft infrastructure in Dubai as well.


Noah and Justin survey Dubai from the PM's offices.
Noah and Justin survey Dubai from the PM's offices.

We also managed to zip down to Masdar City, which has long been part of our discussions around Low2No. We've seen Low2No as an alternative model to Masdar, one that's more appropriate for cities with legacies of built form, legislation, and financial regimes that cannot be swept aside. Seeing Masdar in person was enlightening. It's hard for such a hugely ambitious project to ever meet the hype, and there's certainly plenty of room for Masdar to grow into the reputation that it has created for itself. Still, what is happening there now may end up being more interesting than the original Foster master plan. As the planning adjusts to a smaller scope and a smaller budget, perhaps something more modest and more replicable will emerge?

Driverless Personal Rapid Transport unit at Masdar City.
Driverless Personal Rapid Transport unit at Masdar City.



It makes sense to start with small steps, but maybe this is a bit too small?
It makes sense to start with small steps, but maybe this is a bit too small?

Generative art 'guestbook' at Masdar.
Generative art 'guestbook' at Masdar.


We arrived to Dubai via Hong Kong, where Justin and I stopped over to meet with Cees de Bont and Alvin Yip of Hong Kong Polytechnic University School of Design. They shared insights about the current state of design in China that have evolved since our last visit there in 2009, including a growing recognition of the role for designers in social innovation. In fact the Jockey Club, which makes a substantial purse off of track betting, has endowed the Design Institute for Social Innovation. They are just booting up now, but we will pay close attention. It was encouraging to hear about these plans, as it makes the HDL closure easier. HDL is fading out, but the ideas and the practices of strategic design certainly are not.

HKPU's new School of Design building is almost ready. And it's massive!
HKPU's new School of Design building is almost ready. And it's massive!

Hong Kong is currently in love with <a href="http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887323716304578482032215544650.html">a giant rubber ducky</a>.
Hong Kong is currently in love with a giant rubber ducky.

Before Hong Kong it was Tokyo. Justin describes it thusly:

After an overnight from Sydney, we landed on beautiful spring morning in Tokyo. The privilege of arriving at Haneda Airport, close to the center, is that some of the scale, complexity and diverse functions of Tokyo are revealed. From the air, Japan’s industrial base, which is mostly absent in Hong Kong, seems robust, busily making small things very well.


We were invited by the University of Tokyo i.School to give a talk to students, staff and like-minded practitioners on strategic design and our projects at Tokyo Midtown Design Hub. Our gracious hosts Fumiko Ichikawa and Hiroshi Tamura had teed up an engaging facilitated workshop following the talk where the audience was asked to define “what is strategic design” (which we probably didn’t help them with during our talk!) and how could the approach be used to aid in tsunami recovery. With this group the idea of building a rigorous and active feedback loop between understanding the nature of the challenge systemically, and acting to make change via proposals and projects, clearly resonated.

Groups sharing their ideas about strategic design after our talk. Photo: Hiroshi Tamura
Groups sharing their ideas about strategic design after our talk. Photo: Hiroshi Tamura

Similarly, during a workshop we ran at the i.school on the following day with Tokyo’s leading social innovators, the need to better connect thinking and doing was a popular topic. I was struck by how the tsunami had cracked open the opportunity for individuals to rethink and possibly begin to take on Japan’s structural challenges such as the widespread expectation lifelong employment with a single large employer or the lack of funding for smaller enterprises. The social entrepreneurs in the room seemed well equipped to compel Japan to remake itself as a more resilient society after the crisis.

Photo: Hiroshi Tamura
Photo: Hiroshi Tamura

Photo: Hiroshi Tamura
Photo: Hiroshi Tamura

Photo: Hiroshi Tamura
Photo: Hiroshi Tamura

On our last day in Tokyo, we had the pleasure of visiting ETIC, which has been working for two decades to ignite entrepreneurship among Japan’s youth. Their experience during that time suggests that Japan’s entrepreneurs are heading in the right direction as they are now more professional and impact oriented than ever.

We also visited the Nippon Foundation, which like Sitra, has a broad mandate to spur innovation nationally. Impact, measurement, outcomes, etc. are all ideas that are in the water in their organization as well. 

Tokyo was a wonderful stop on our tour. On the one hand, their highly sophisticated culture has produced incredible gains for society, but on the other the dominate cultures of decision making seem opaque and unbendable to many. But events like the tsunami are providing a way in for social innovators like the ones we met at the i.school. 

Before that? Australia.

While Justin and I have been traveling, Marco was also on the road with a stop in Amsterdam at a Labs summit and a stop in London at the Institute for Government. Written up here and tweeted here.

Best part of a long flight is that you can write emails without receiving any. It's pure inbox upside.
Best part of a long flight is that you can write emails without receiving any. It's pure inbox upside.

Amidst all of this, Legible Practises is going to press. No pictures yet of the printing process, but here's a glimpse of what it will look like:

Editing the final draft of the book.
Editing the final draft of the book.

Copies will be available at HDL 2013.
Copies will be available at HDL 2013.

3 comments

Great update. I was delighted to see the generative art "guestbook" after seeing Joshua Davis at the 99U conference a couple weeks ago. Do you know if he is behind this work? Also, I will have to get in touch with the groups you met with in Japan for my next trip back~ what exciting activity! :) Safe travels.

Satsuko, it was a Joshua Davis project, yes. Good eye. And here's the people you need to meet in Tokyo: RE:Public. They're into some very exciting things across Japan.

Jealous! But well done, looks awesome.