This document appears to be a presentation on architectural programming and systems design. It discusses architectural programming as a bridge between management and architecture. It provides an overview of the history and basic process of architectural programming. It outlines several principles of architectural programming including separation of problem and solution spaces, integration through co-creation and participation, collection and structuring of information, and visual communication. It also discusses applying architectural programming and systems thinking to innovation, education, and urban planning contexts. The document is meant to raise awareness of architectural programming and its role in defining problems and designing innovative solutions.
Systemic Design Principles & Methods (Royal College of Art)Peter Jones
For a guest lecture for Qian Sun and the RCA Service Design program, April 29, 2015, Talk based on the 10 shared design principles for complex social systems, related to the 2014 paper: https://ocad.academia.edu/PeterJones and http://designdialogues.com/publications/
DRIVE 2017 | 25 October - VALUE CREATION - Business Innovation CLICKNL
Design Roadmapping; Future Visioning for Organisational Innovation
Design roadmapping – future visioning carried out by strategic designers – shapes manager’s perceptions of the ‘imaginable’; in ways that have concrete implications for decision-making and for the allocation of resources on innovation. This lecture investigates the role of vision imagination, creation and realization in design roadmapping for design innovation in organizations.
Speaker: Dr. ir. Lianne W.L. Simonse
Open Innovation for the Internet of Things
Successful open product platforms for the Internet of Things can benefit from the creativity of the crowd. At the same time, it is challenging for platform owners to, for example, maintain control over the user experience. In this talk, Susan illustrates her latest academic research with a case study of the Philips Hue.
Speaker: Susan Hilbolling
Energy efficiency business models: Fit to serve?
Most new business propositions are formed around a product-service combination. In energy efficiency, however, business models are still mainly product solutions, as shown in recent research by Duneworks and Ideate. Such ‘unfit’ business models might be the cause for a slow market uptake; in this talk Renske illustrates how to change that.
Speakers: Renske Bouwknegt, Ruth Mourik
Business Model Innovation by 3D Print Entrepreneurs
The business models of 3D print entrepreneurs consist of activities related to the creation, distribution, retention and consumption of value, but also of information exchange within their communities. In this study, Peter sheds light on how 3D print entrepreneurs share and exchange goods, services and knowledge as peers.
Speaker: Peter Troxler
An agenda for Systemic Design - An emerging research and educational track in systems sciences and design.
Peter Jones talk at ISSS 2014
Movements in Design & Systems Thinking
Education Movements
RSD3 Symposium
Systemic Design Research
Relationship to Systems Community
Systemic Design Principles & Methods (Royal College of Art)Peter Jones
For a guest lecture for Qian Sun and the RCA Service Design program, April 29, 2015, Talk based on the 10 shared design principles for complex social systems, related to the 2014 paper: https://ocad.academia.edu/PeterJones and http://designdialogues.com/publications/
DRIVE 2017 | 25 October - VALUE CREATION - Business Innovation CLICKNL
Design Roadmapping; Future Visioning for Organisational Innovation
Design roadmapping – future visioning carried out by strategic designers – shapes manager’s perceptions of the ‘imaginable’; in ways that have concrete implications for decision-making and for the allocation of resources on innovation. This lecture investigates the role of vision imagination, creation and realization in design roadmapping for design innovation in organizations.
Speaker: Dr. ir. Lianne W.L. Simonse
Open Innovation for the Internet of Things
Successful open product platforms for the Internet of Things can benefit from the creativity of the crowd. At the same time, it is challenging for platform owners to, for example, maintain control over the user experience. In this talk, Susan illustrates her latest academic research with a case study of the Philips Hue.
Speaker: Susan Hilbolling
Energy efficiency business models: Fit to serve?
Most new business propositions are formed around a product-service combination. In energy efficiency, however, business models are still mainly product solutions, as shown in recent research by Duneworks and Ideate. Such ‘unfit’ business models might be the cause for a slow market uptake; in this talk Renske illustrates how to change that.
Speakers: Renske Bouwknegt, Ruth Mourik
Business Model Innovation by 3D Print Entrepreneurs
The business models of 3D print entrepreneurs consist of activities related to the creation, distribution, retention and consumption of value, but also of information exchange within their communities. In this study, Peter sheds light on how 3D print entrepreneurs share and exchange goods, services and knowledge as peers.
Speaker: Peter Troxler
An agenda for Systemic Design - An emerging research and educational track in systems sciences and design.
Peter Jones talk at ISSS 2014
Movements in Design & Systems Thinking
Education Movements
RSD3 Symposium
Systemic Design Research
Relationship to Systems Community
Doing Co-design: What, why, with whom and howPenny Hagen
Talk presented by Penny Hagen and Natalie Rowland for UX Australia 2013 in Melbourne.
In co-design those impacted by the proposed design are actively involved as partners in the design process. Co-design is being used in government, community and health sectors to extend traditional consultation methods and increase program reach and impact. Co-design approaches are also being used by corporates to engage internal stakeholders and customers, identify new service opportunities and improve existing ones. But what is it, why do it and how?
When ‘doing’ co-design, the role of the designer becomes one of facilitator: enabling participation, designing the right triggers, questions and scaffolds in which meaningful and effective participation can occur. Getting this right can be challenging and raise a few interesting questions along the way.
In this presentation we will share our approach to co-design developed over the last eight years working with a range of organisations in Australia and New Zealand. The presentation will draw upon case studies such as the design of HIV testing services with Australian men, the design of service strategies and mental health programs with young people and mental health professionals and an organisational wide co-design training for program for librarians, aimed at preparing them to become co-designers themselves.
The presentation will cover the key principles and framework we apply in designing co-design workshops, favourite activities for involving and priming groups of people for productive participation as well as tips and considerations for doing co-design in dynamic, sensitive and political situations.
We will also explore questions raised by co-design such as:
How creative can ‘users’ be?
What level of influence do ‘users’ have?
What happens to the expertise of the ‘designer’?
How far can we/should we take it?
How do you know when you (or the organisation you are working with) are ready adopt a co-design approach?
A perspective on the evolving field of design and suggestion of "design leading" as a future aspirational practice and answer to the question "What comes after Design Thinking?".
Innovation, Inspiration and ambition : The sky is the limitremco_lenstra
Imagine if you would apply 3 Horizons thinking to all three area's that make up a successful product or service : Technology, society and business. The sky would be the limit! So think Big, Create your preferred future, and start from reality! What's holding you back? Innovation meets entrepreneurship at Antwerp Management School by Remco Lenstra
Design in Research: How do you use design to support and shape R&D? October 1...Mike Kuniavsky
[This is an updated version of an earlier presentation with some of the images, but none of the content, removed] Corporate Research and Development is evolving, and it increasingly incorporates user experience design, design research, and service design into the earliest stages. The historical separation between basic research, applied research and productization erodes as research horizons shorten, technology diffuses more rapidly, and companies want to take bigger risks sooner. When this changing market is coupled with rapidly changing technology that blurs the boundaries between hardware, software, materials and processes, the role of design fundamentally changes. Design influences technology research earlier in the creation of a novel technology, whether it’s a new application of artificial intelligence, or a new material. In this PARC Forum, Mike Kuniavsky and other members of PARC’s Innovation Services Group will present how they participate in early-stage research and development, and discuss the methods they developed when working alongside PARC’s researchers in developing printed sensors, AI-enabled IoT services, and deep learning computer vision products. We will show how we systematically explore the impact of technologies before they exist and how we try to look beyond hype and our own excitement to see how a new technology can actually solve business and human problems.
Over the last couple of years I've talked a lot on Design Thinking, Design in general and Service Design.
This presentation is my incomplete story on the topic, with storyline.
Hope you like it, love your comments...
Working at the Edge: Developing a Cross-disciplinary Research AgendaArosha Bandara
Slides from a seminar delivered to the School of Computing & Communications on the opportunities of cross-disciplinary research and strategies for overcoming some of the challenges.
Doing Co-design: What, why, with whom and howPenny Hagen
Talk presented by Penny Hagen and Natalie Rowland for UX Australia 2013 in Melbourne.
In co-design those impacted by the proposed design are actively involved as partners in the design process. Co-design is being used in government, community and health sectors to extend traditional consultation methods and increase program reach and impact. Co-design approaches are also being used by corporates to engage internal stakeholders and customers, identify new service opportunities and improve existing ones. But what is it, why do it and how?
When ‘doing’ co-design, the role of the designer becomes one of facilitator: enabling participation, designing the right triggers, questions and scaffolds in which meaningful and effective participation can occur. Getting this right can be challenging and raise a few interesting questions along the way.
In this presentation we will share our approach to co-design developed over the last eight years working with a range of organisations in Australia and New Zealand. The presentation will draw upon case studies such as the design of HIV testing services with Australian men, the design of service strategies and mental health programs with young people and mental health professionals and an organisational wide co-design training for program for librarians, aimed at preparing them to become co-designers themselves.
The presentation will cover the key principles and framework we apply in designing co-design workshops, favourite activities for involving and priming groups of people for productive participation as well as tips and considerations for doing co-design in dynamic, sensitive and political situations.
We will also explore questions raised by co-design such as:
How creative can ‘users’ be?
What level of influence do ‘users’ have?
What happens to the expertise of the ‘designer’?
How far can we/should we take it?
How do you know when you (or the organisation you are working with) are ready adopt a co-design approach?
A perspective on the evolving field of design and suggestion of "design leading" as a future aspirational practice and answer to the question "What comes after Design Thinking?".
Innovation, Inspiration and ambition : The sky is the limitremco_lenstra
Imagine if you would apply 3 Horizons thinking to all three area's that make up a successful product or service : Technology, society and business. The sky would be the limit! So think Big, Create your preferred future, and start from reality! What's holding you back? Innovation meets entrepreneurship at Antwerp Management School by Remco Lenstra
Design in Research: How do you use design to support and shape R&D? October 1...Mike Kuniavsky
[This is an updated version of an earlier presentation with some of the images, but none of the content, removed] Corporate Research and Development is evolving, and it increasingly incorporates user experience design, design research, and service design into the earliest stages. The historical separation between basic research, applied research and productization erodes as research horizons shorten, technology diffuses more rapidly, and companies want to take bigger risks sooner. When this changing market is coupled with rapidly changing technology that blurs the boundaries between hardware, software, materials and processes, the role of design fundamentally changes. Design influences technology research earlier in the creation of a novel technology, whether it’s a new application of artificial intelligence, or a new material. In this PARC Forum, Mike Kuniavsky and other members of PARC’s Innovation Services Group will present how they participate in early-stage research and development, and discuss the methods they developed when working alongside PARC’s researchers in developing printed sensors, AI-enabled IoT services, and deep learning computer vision products. We will show how we systematically explore the impact of technologies before they exist and how we try to look beyond hype and our own excitement to see how a new technology can actually solve business and human problems.
Over the last couple of years I've talked a lot on Design Thinking, Design in general and Service Design.
This presentation is my incomplete story on the topic, with storyline.
Hope you like it, love your comments...
Working at the Edge: Developing a Cross-disciplinary Research AgendaArosha Bandara
Slides from a seminar delivered to the School of Computing & Communications on the opportunities of cross-disciplinary research and strategies for overcoming some of the challenges.
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171019 chantzaras architecture as systems design and innovation design discipline
1. Dipl.-Ing. Architekt, Dipl.-Kfm.
Christos Chantzaras
TUM Chair of Architectural Informatics
Prof. Dr. Frank Petzold
ARCHITECTUREas
&INNOVATIONDESIGN
SYSTEMS DESIGNDiscipline