Design
Design For Sustainability
This guide helps you get your bearings in Design For Sustainability before you start exploring the interactive timeline, framework graph, and concept maps.
Before You Dive In
- Design For Sustainability is not just making artifacts; it is a field of methods for framing problems and coordinating action.
- Rough timeline: industrial modernist design programs (early-mid 20th c.) -> human-centered and participatory methods (1960s-2000s) -> systemic, speculative, and sustainability-oriented design (2000-present).
- Start with the tension between optimization (efficiency/usability) and critique (values/politics/futures).
- In Noosaga, compare frameworks by unit of design: object, interaction, service, organization, or socio-technical system.
Key Terms to Know
Design thinkingIterative approach emphasizing reframing, prototyping, and user-centered testing.
Participatory designDesign framework where affected communities co-create goals and outcomes.
Speculative designPractice using design artifacts to probe possible futures and ethical tensions.
Service designDesign of end-to-end service interactions across people, processes, and platforms.
Design ethicsFrameworks for handling responsibility, harm, bias, and long-term social effects.
Common Confusions
Reducing design to visual styling; methods and problem framing are the core intellectual work.
Treating user-centered design as value-neutral; it encodes assumptions about whose needs matter.
Assuming sustainable design is only material selection; governance, behavior, and systems effects are central.
Recommended Reading
The Sciences of the Artificial— Herbert A. Simon
1969Design for the Real World— Victor Papanek
1971Speculative Everything— Anthony Dunne & Fiona Raby
2013How to Use the Interactive View
1
Explore the timeline
Open the interactive view and scan the framework timeline. Which frameworks came first? Which ones overlap? Where are the big transitions?
2
Read the articles
Click into individual frameworks to read what each one claims, where it came from, and how it relates to its neighbors.
3
Check the concept map
See how the key ideas within a framework connect. This is useful for figuring out what to learn first and what depends on what.
4
Test yourself
Take the quiz for any framework you've read about. It's a quick way to find out whether you actually understood the core ideas or just skimmed them.