With Great Design Comes Great Responsibility: Antenna 2020 Looks to the Future

Initiated by Design Indaba and Dutch Design Week, antenna takes the pulse of the new design.

antenna: Round-up video 2017 (2017) by Design IndabaOriginal Source: Design Indaba

antenna has become a core part of the Dutch Design Week (DDW) offering. The project, which brings to the stage a cohort of the best global graduates, has two distinct aims. Firstly, to find design solutions to the most pressing problems faced by our world and secondly to provide a platform to young designers who are developing ideas that could hugely impact the way we live.Curated by leading design platform Design Indaba, the 10 antenna participants will present projects that tackle the challenges we face across multiple sectors. Each responds to at least one of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) set out by the United Nations (UN) to transform the world.

Antenna 2020 (2020) by Design IndabaOriginal Source: Design Indaba

Anna Koppmann and Esmée Willemsen use traditional phase changing material to print a curtain that absorbs and releases heat by changing from a solid to liquid state as the room temperature changes. This technique of cooling and heating has been used for centuries.

Antenna 2020 (2020) by Design IndabaDesign Indaba

RCA graduate Ricky Stoch uses simple scratch card technology to help make the lives of patients taking chronic medications easier, ensuring their treatment is as effective as it can be.

Antenna 2020 (2020) by Design IndabaDesign Indaba

RISD’s Fengjiao Ge looks at how to reimagine garment waste as a resource.

Antenna 2020 (2020) by Design IndabaOriginal Source: Design Indaba

Coltrane McDowell develops narratives around smell in Nairobi and looks at the potential of the city’s informal distilleries to make essential oils instead of liquor.

Antenna 2020 (2020) by Design IndabaDesign Indaba

Designer and inventor Kosuke Takahashi has created a font that enables visually impaired and sighted people to read from the same page and connect with each other.

Antenna 2020 (2020) by Design IndabaOriginal Source: Design Indaba

Danielle Begnaud’s Brain Bridges – her final project at Pratt University – encourages children to co-design toys with basic objects they already have at home.

Antenna 2020 (2020) by Design IndabaOriginal Source: Design Indaba

New York-based Victoria Ayo has created a platform that aims to provide equal maternity care to black mothers. Birth Reborn draws on the healing power of community connection and ancestral knowledge, made accessible through a thoughtfully designed app.

Antenna 2020 (2020) by Design IndabaDesign Indaba

South African architecture student Joshil Naran combines social awareness and theory to challenge perceptions of home by exploring interventions for dwellings in a suburb of Johannesburg.

antenna: Round-up video 2017, Design Indaba, 2017, Original Source: Design Indaba
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Solveiga Pakštaitė’s innovative graduation project looks to address the shortfalls of freshness indicators for supermarket food. Mimica is a temperature-responsive label that gives an accurate indication of when food is perishing, preventing huge amounts of food waste caused by over conservative best-before dates.

antenna: Round-up video 2017, Design Indaba, 2017, Original Source: Design Indaba
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Canadian designer Xavier Ouellet looks to natural mangrove forests for inspiration for how to prevent coastal erosion by creating floating marine structures that diffuse the current before it hits the shore.

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The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
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