Department 21

Department 21 was launched in 2009 by a group of students at the Royal College of Art in London, with the aim of artists, designers and architects coming together to do interdisciplinary projects. I think they’ve recently disbanded.

http://www.department21.net/?page_id=1919
“Emerging from an institutional context in which individual authorship and outcome-driven projects are the dominant frames for creative production, the project is the result of a need for new, collaborative forms of exchange between students from different disciplines: it is a means to get in touch with other peoples’ practices (and in this way question one’s own practice), as well as being a platform to support collaboration beyond specialties.”

“Particular to Department 21 is the emphasis on a physical space within which ideas can grow and serendipitous encounters occur. With a belief that the physical and social design of a learning space has an impact on the learning that happens within it, Department 21 has sought to work with a variety of spaces, both within and outside the Royal College of Art, to encourage different forms of social interaction and dialogue and participation. For each location the project inhabits (alternatively shared common space, occupancy of the college’s galleries during exhibitions, outdoor events etc.), the question of design comes first.

Recognising the impact that structures have on how we interact and learn, and using the inter-disciplinary knowledge of the group, Department 21 has created a purpose-built moveable working space, to enable the activities of learning, teaching and collaborating to flex to fit a wide variety of spatial environments.”

This is the moveable furniture they have created to facilitate their various events and meetings:

 

Arranging Your Desk

On March 10, 2008, How Magazine ran a feature titled Make Your Creativity More Productive Around the Office. It focused on Behance, the online portfolio site and their approach to office space. I like the simple idea of keeping stuff up on the wall and keeping the desk clear. The notion of balancing order with chaos. And the simple idea of lining your wall with fiber board (homosote) to make a large pin up area.

Above: Chief of Design Matias Corea at work. He tends to keep his wall full and his desk clear, what he describes as a “proper balance of chaos and clarity.”

 

Chief of Design Matias Corea’s desk, with his “Action Pile” to the far left.

The famous “Done Wall” that is a testimony to ideas happening as a result of action steps being captured, processed, and completed.

Creative workspaces

On this blog of design studio Eighty One, I found an assortment of creative office interiors.

http://www.eightyonedesign.co.uk/how-would-you-improve-your-graphic-design-studio-or-office/
Accessed 6/12/12

Google offices:
Office as set design, as adventure

Top left: Google office in Zurich, Switzerland, designed by Camenzind Evolution, Ltd.

Lego offices
Cartoon Network offices:
A bit of childhood nostalgia in your cubicle
Selas Cano, Spanish architecture office:
Melding with nature

Groupthink by Jonah Lehrer

Here’s the pdf of the article: groupthink_lehrer

Groupthink, by Jonah Lehrer, Article in the New Yorker, Jan 30, 2012  pp. 22 — 27

“The most creative spaces are those which hurl us together. It is the human friction that makes the sparks.” (27)

Article in this week’s New Yorker discusses ways of encouraging creativity in the workplace. Citing scientific studies, Lehrer argues that brainstorming does not work because its cardinal “rule” of reserving criticism is prescribed, and therefore unrealistic. Creativity is messy, he says, and it thrives in the tense reality of human relations. Data has shown that brainstorming sessions are not nearly as productive as we have come to think. People are more effective, in fact, when they work alone as well as together, but mostly if they cross paths with other creatives in unexpected ways.

Brainstorming was invented by Alex Osborn, an ad exec. Osborn defined it in Chapter 33 of his book “Your Creative Power,” published in 1948, as “using the brain to storm a creative problem—and doing so in commando fashion, with each stormer attacking the same objective.” It presupposed an absence of criticism and negative feedback. This, Lehrer says, doesn’t always work, as group dynamics cannot be prescribed. Instead, “…when the composition of the group is right—enough people with different perspectives running into one another in unpredictable ways—the group dynamic will take care of itself.” (27)

Further, Lehrer writes about the importance of the “place” of creativity. The cubicle paradigm has led to isolation, depriving people of productive, cross-disciplinary encounters. He writes about how when Steve Jobs was building Pixar’s headquarters, he purposefully placed office space around a central atrium where people would be forced to walk to to get to their mailboxes, conferences and bathrooms. He did this to encourage chance meetings in corridors.

His biggest point is the importance of flexible workspace that, through its very architecture, encourages a meeting of the minds. A prime example is “Building 20” on the MIT campus, built as a temporary structure for WWII radar research. Meant to be demolished at the end of the war, through a set of circumstances the building was left standing and over the years housed a hodge-podge of departments. Since it wasn’t pristine, its tenants were free to tear down and build walls, and even floors. They could customize their spaces as they saw fit. Over the years the building has given seen some the most creative output this country has produced — Noam Chomsky’s linguistics, the Bose speaker company founded by grad student Amar Bose, and a slew of engineering discoveries.

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This is right up our alley for the SPACE chapter. It’s great to read scientific confirmation that schools need to have flexible spaces and that departments should be housed in such a way to encourage cross-disciplinary chance encounters. It also makes me wonder how to make such “chance encounters” happen within the structure of a class.

notes from BERKELEY and STANFORD

STANFORD

interesting problems lie between the disciplines
students don’t come in thinking information is divided, they wonder why we compartmentalize it
building our way into the future
constantly redesigning curriculum
design is not fully realized until it is engaged
problem based learning
if you are not getting in trouble you are not doing anything interesting
make something real happen
what can we do with social media to change things
space creates behavior, allows students to self author
building is thinking
you start with empathy and the direction of the world

 

 

BEREKELEY

modular space inspires freedom- fixed, flexible, fluid
collaborative space for faculty to work
ideo rules for diverging
no matter what major you are you respond to good design
when you are highly educated you are stripped of collaboration- students are ready to collaborate
experiential learning
Sara Beckmann
have a purpose room
what is our shared intellectual model? We are all having separate conversations about design and process.
Pact underwear an example of successful collaboration out of Berkeley
teaching to build community, respect and patience

 

d school at Stanford

“In a time when there is hunger for innovation everywhere, we think our primary responsibility is to help prepare a generation of students to rise with the challenges of our times. We define what it means to be a d.school student broadly, and we support “students” of design thinking who range from kindergarteners to senior executives. Our deliberate mash-up of industry, academia and the big world beyond campus is a key to our continuing evolution.”

dschool.stanford.edu

Would be interesting to look at how colleges and universities teach interdisciplinary courses.