Monday, December 08, 2014

Ideas hub

Creativity engages everyone, embraces everything, and happens everywhere - without borders. Thus ideas are not just generated in offices, on college campuses, or within the walls of studios. On the contrary, it is the ideas that are brought in that make the office, the campus, and the studio a hub for creativity and innovation.

Monday, November 17, 2014

Reading for ideas

Designers are visual thinkers who typically generate, develop and communicate ideas with the help of analogue and digital tools, from freehand sketches and words to sketch modelling and computing. But ideas also come out of reading books (fiction, non-fiction, and poetry). And so reading texts, and illustrations that may go with texts, becomes a form of exploration, of ideas, places and people that opens up new opportunities for designers. Reading, then, not only help designers generate new ideas but also develop and communicate ideas as narratives.

Friday, October 17, 2014

Visualising the dream

Sometimes design ideas appear in dreams or daydreams, produced by the subconscious mind. But whatever their source, ideas need to be visualised and acted upon, or they risk remaining fantasies never to be realised. To exemplify, this month saw the opening of a new museum in Paris designed by architect Frank Gehry, and commissioned by Bernard Arnault, head of Louis Vuitton. Shaped like a massive glass cloud, the building, nicknamed the iceberg, is a metal and wood structure with 3,600 glass panels. Says Gehry: 'This project is a dream , so the first idea was to create a dream. I wanted to create a dream for Bernard, who has dreamed all of this. The idea of creating a glass building that is transparent, ephemeral, and like a cloud is difficult to achieve in architecture'. The museum took eight years to realise, from initial sketches and 60 physical scale models, to complex structural engineering design and construction.

Monday, September 29, 2014

Are ideators introverts?

Ideators are often seen as sensitive people, and a lot of the words used to describe that sensitivity are used to describe introversion as well, for example, needing time alone, more reflective, more independent, and more refined. Indeed, introverts are often thought of as ideas people who are inventive through individual creative work without needing hype-filled brainstorming sessions to bounce ideas back and forth. Yet ideation is a continuum of introversion and extroversion, from idea generation to idea communication, and so ideators need to be flexible capable of switching between the inner world of ideas and images, and the outer world of people and things.

Saturday, August 30, 2014

Tools of desire

While ideas often appear in a flash, the ubiquitous "Aha" moment, the realisation of ideas takes more patience, wisdom, and maturity. To make ideas happen, and when this calls for a collaborative approach, the idea has to be communicated effectively. It is here ideation tools, and whether in forms of words, sketches or models, in analogue or digital modes, or combinations thereof, prove central to forward the idea to a desirable outcome.

Tuesday, July 29, 2014

Act now

Simon Woodroffe, the Yo! Sushi founder, says: 'You cannot really be successful without putting in an enormous amount of work. And you can’t do that just from the desire to get richer. You need to have an idea that you want to change your world.' As an entrepreneur, Woodroffe is an ardent believer in self-appraisal, and prefers giving individual employees money to develop an idea on a hunch, both to encourage creativity and to speed up the process. He continues: 'As soon as you start a debate, it becomes a committee. Committees have a rather clever way of stopping anything happening'. This is unthinkable in Woodroffe’s world, where the whole idea is to make things happen; to confront fear of failure and move past it. Whatever the issue faced by a business or individual, he is adamant that the best time to act is now. Source: The Times; Power in Partnership.

Sunday, July 13, 2014

Constructive ideas

The plan to demolish and rebuild each of the four stacks of London's Battersea Power Station seems straightforward enough: To duplicate exactly the original design and construction of the chimneys. But the process of deconstruction and reconstruction of the 103-metre tall stacks have called for fresh ideas. First, the southwest chimney will be scanned, with the resulting 3D model used to rebuild all four chimneys. Then the stacks will be destroyed by a self-climbing rig which will start at the top and work its way down using four concrete crushers to demolish the structure by breaking off six-inch sections and sending the debris down a funnel inside the chimney. Finally, the rebuild of the chimneys will use a rig carrying a reconfigurable mould to cast the new chimneys' 1.22m-tall sections in situ.