Ideation Techniques: Affinity Mapping

Engineers, scientists, and designers all gather data and then try to make sense of it later. We have equations and models to help us simulate this data. But we also have a problem – these tools were designed for numerical data, and not all data is solely quantitative. Affinity mapping is an abductive reasoning process that enables people to make sense of large amounts of subjective, qualitative, or observational data.

Good Design: Going-to-the-Sun Road

The advent of the automobile presented an interesting design problem for Glacier National Park: how could visitors travel easily to and from each attraction in the park? This road would need to cut through these sharp, rocky mountains through an easy route made for the everyday automobile.

Hidden Engineering: The Design Secrets of Ancient Empires

Water is a force of life and a force of change that every civilization in the history of the world has had to deal with. My work as a licensed professional water engineer includes predicting and controlling flooding. Erosion control is an important part of my work and the basis of why many ancient sites still survive today. Ancient engineers understood the world they lived in and innovated in powerful ways to survive in harmony with the elements.

Origami Design: A Fuzzy Boundary Between Art and Science

Origami is an ancient Japanese art form which had its roots over a thousand years ago in ancient Japan. Only in the last century’s intellectual revolution has it transformed into a more scientific and fully developed art form. We can see origami under scrutiny as an art form, and as a scientific and mathematical method of design. In any design, it is important to see from both angles.

Good Design: The Fanny Pack

Often, fashion fails to address the need for functionality, particularly women’s fashion. Our pants don’t have pockets. Most of our purses are big and unwieldy. The smaller ones simply don’t have enough room. Handbags are a horrible idea altogether because the entire premise is that they require the constant use of your hand. Cue the fanny pack.

Innovation, Sustainability, and Design for HVAC Systems

A lot of energy is needed to power the HVAC systems that keep people comfortable. Although not every building is actively cooled, buildings are responsible for 40% of all U.S. energy consumption and emissions, and space heating and cooling accounts for 53.1% of building energy usage. What can we do to make HVAC design more sustainable, and how can we be more sustainability conscious in our own design work?