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<p>iGEM Pasteur Paris team integrates industrial designers from ENSCI-les Ateliers. Industrial design is a creative discipline that aims to produce innovative solutions in order to solve contemporary issues in various fields : health, well-being, energy, mobility, habitat, food, etc. When designing new products or services, designers apply a user centric approach that integrates several notions such as usages, ergonomics, industrial processes, technologies, social, cultural, environmental and economical aspects. Taking into account all these parameters allows designers to conceive solutions that address the targeted issues in a relevant way, and that benefit to the user. </p> | <p>iGEM Pasteur Paris team integrates industrial designers from ENSCI-les Ateliers. Industrial design is a creative discipline that aims to produce innovative solutions in order to solve contemporary issues in various fields : health, well-being, energy, mobility, habitat, food, etc. When designing new products or services, designers apply a user centric approach that integrates several notions such as usages, ergonomics, industrial processes, technologies, social, cultural, environmental and economical aspects. Taking into account all these parameters allows designers to conceive solutions that address the targeted issues in a relevant way, and that benefit to the user. </p> | ||
<p>Nowadays, industrial design is evolving. To address problems in a more and more complex and accurate way, industrial designers are getting closer to science by working with scientists and by settling in the labs. Our team is a good example of these new ways to co-create tomorrow’s innovations. </p> | <p>Nowadays, industrial design is evolving. To address problems in a more and more complex and accurate way, industrial designers are getting closer to science by working with scientists and by settling in the labs. Our team is a good example of these new ways to co-create tomorrow’s innovations. </p> | ||
− | <p>Despite promising opportunities offered by these new cooperations, designers and scientists do not have the same cultures, languages, tools, etc., that prevents these collaborations from reaching their full potential. To overcome these issues, we shared and thought design tools and methodologies | + | <p>Despite promising opportunities offered by these new cooperations, designers and scientists do not have the same cultures, languages, tools, etc., that prevents these collaborations from reaching their full potential. To overcome these issues, we shared and thought design tools and methodologies with our team mates in order to build a common ground for understanding and co-creation. Once done, we followed the subsequent process :</p> |
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<span class="closeCross"><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2018/6/67/T--Pasteur_Paris--CloseCross.svg"></span> | <span class="closeCross"><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2018/6/67/T--Pasteur_Paris--CloseCross.svg"></span> | ||
<div class="block full"> | <div class="block full"> | ||
− | <p>The first step of our innovation process consisted | + | <p>The first step of our innovation process consisted of an immersion phase. For a better understanding of our subject, we had to:<br> |
− | - | + | -document the state of the art, recording and analyzing existing or inspiring initiatives, actors, and institutions;<br> |
-meet diverse experts, from associations (ADEPA, <b>Figure 1</b>) to industries (I.CERAM, <b>Figure 4</b>), going through national institutes (CERAH, <b>Figure 3</b>), or hospitals (Georges Pompidou hospital, <b>Figure 2</b>);<br> | -meet diverse experts, from associations (ADEPA, <b>Figure 1</b>) to industries (I.CERAM, <b>Figure 4</b>), going through national institutes (CERAH, <b>Figure 3</b>), or hospitals (Georges Pompidou hospital, <b>Figure 2</b>);<br> | ||
-identify specific literature and technical documents regarding existing prosthesis;<br> | -identify specific literature and technical documents regarding existing prosthesis;<br> |
Revision as of 00:24, 17 October 2018
There are many kinds of design approaches : « space designers » create new places to live in, « sound designers » create new experiences to hear, « food designers » create new tastes, « graphic designers » create new signs and symbols to see, and « digital designers » create new interfaces to navigate into the digital world.
iGEM Pasteur Paris team integrates industrial designers from ENSCI-les Ateliers. Industrial design is a creative discipline that aims to produce innovative solutions in order to solve contemporary issues in various fields : health, well-being, energy, mobility, habitat, food, etc. When designing new products or services, designers apply a user centric approach that integrates several notions such as usages, ergonomics, industrial processes, technologies, social, cultural, environmental and economical aspects. Taking into account all these parameters allows designers to conceive solutions that address the targeted issues in a relevant way, and that benefit to the user.
Nowadays, industrial design is evolving. To address problems in a more and more complex and accurate way, industrial designers are getting closer to science by working with scientists and by settling in the labs. Our team is a good example of these new ways to co-create tomorrow’s innovations.
Despite promising opportunities offered by these new cooperations, designers and scientists do not have the same cultures, languages, tools, etc., that prevents these collaborations from reaching their full potential. To overcome these issues, we shared and thought design tools and methodologies with our team mates in order to build a common ground for understanding and co-creation. Once done, we followed the subsequent process :