Design Museum Awards, London, Categories, Architecture
Design Museum Design Awards, London, UK
Architectural Prize, London, England
26 Jan 2012
Design Museum Design Awards 2012
This year’s Design Museum Design Awards has been likened to the Oscars of the design world. Showcasing the highlights of the year, the categories include: Architecture, Digital, Fashion, Furniture, Graphics, Transport and Product, with the winners being announced in April.
Behind any design, never mind the potentially award-winning ones, there is inspiration. Design is influenced and inspired by the world around us, the issues that plague it and those who inhabit it. But what can the nominees teach us? Below are the cogitations of two architects and one product designer.
Sergison Bates designed a care home in Belgium, and is based in the UK. He contemplates the dangers of comfort on his website, saying it leads to a loss of sensation. He says that comfort is considered as a series of insulating layers, and as such, can cut us off from the world. Bates’ work provides these layers of protection, but he claims that these layers do not anaesthetise, they sharpen the senses.

photograph : Stefan Mueller
He says:
“The comfort is the comfort that comes from the recognition of the half-remembered dream, not from forgetting who or where we are.” Bates questions what comfort means to the modern world, stating that comfort once was referred to as a state of mind, whereas now it is a lot more focused on the physical body: “To be 'comfortless' was a state of sorrowfulness and melancholy, not of physical disequilibrium.”
The Iron Market in Haiti, designed by John McAslan and Partners, is also nominated under the architectural category. Their website underpins the importance of the wider perspective in relation to design – and give prominence to the city: “We believe that cities are about connections, transport, communications, public spaces and joy.”

image : Hufton & Crow
They also say that they are not easily influenced by fashion, but by extensive research, led by functionality. McAsian is testament to architecture as part of the changing world – grounded, objective and brave. If we are to take any of this on board within our own lives, it is not to be swayed by trends in fashion – furnish your home with what it needs to function – rather than mindlessly filling it with unimportant trends and upgrading your home insurance.
Lastly, but with no less to say, is Jasper Morrison, a product designer from London. On his website, he writes about how he feels uncomfortable within his industry, due to design permeating into everyday situations. He voices his worry about the assumptions of design being ‘inaccessible, overpriced and out of tune with the mass market’ becoming true.
He says that the goal to serve industry and making things easier and better to live with, has been side-tracked, describing it as ‘polluted’. This is because, he says, of glossy lifestyle magazines and marketing departments making it a competition for design to be noticeable.
He says that the most striking of beauty can be found in everyday situations. Morrison says that he is disinterested by luxury as it excludes other things and was designed to make people feel superior to others.
He says: “As a teenager I was travelling on a train one day, somewhere in France or Italy, and an old man got out his lunch and offered me a glass of wine and a piece of bread and cheese. That’s the kind of spirit design should offer, not conversation pieces for the dining table.”
For more information on the Design Museum Design Awards, visit http://designmuseum.org/exhibitions/future-exhibitions
Design Museum Architecture Award 2013
• Architecture: TOUR BOIS-LE-PRÊTRE, PARIS - Designed by Frédéric Druot, Anne Lacaton and Jean-Philippe Vassal
The Design Museum announces the seven category winners for the annual Designs of the Year Awards. The awards celebrate the best of international design from the last 12 months. The overall winner for the Design of The Year 2013 will be announced on Wednesday 16 April at an awards evening held at The Angler, South Place Hotel, London.
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Sir Terence Conran Design Museum Exhibition
The Way We Live Now, a season of events, celebrating Sir Terence Conran’s 80th birthday, will be launched with an evening at Tate Modern on Tuesday 20 September 2011, featuring a panel discussion with Stephen Bayley, Christopher Frayling and Fiona MacCarthy.
Sir Terence Conran celebrated his 80th birthday on 4 October this year. A major retrospective exhibition exploring his unique impact on contemporary life in Britain is on show at the Design Museum until 4 March 2012. Through his own design work, and also through his entrepreneurial flair, Conran has transformed the British way of life. The Way We Live Now examines Conran’s impact and legacy, whilst also showing his design approach and inspirations. The exhibition traces his career from post-war austerity through to the new sensibility of the Festival of Britain in the 1950s, the birth of the Independent Group and the Pop Culture of the 1960s, to the design boom of the 1980s and on to the present day. The exhibition is curated by Stafford Cliff and Deyan Sudjic.
Sir Terence Conran:

photograph : Neil Wilder, John Parkinson Agency
Design Museum London
Design Museum - Links
Design Museum architects : Conran & Partners
Design Museum Building, Shad Thames, Bermondsey, southeast London
1989
Design: Conran Roche - now Conran & Partners

photos © Luke Hayes
Design Museum Building
Urban Africa - A photographic journey by David Adjaye
Design Museum David Adjaye Exhibition
David Chipperfield Architects Exhibition
Design Museum David Chipperfield Exhibition
Future Systems Exhibition

Design Museum Jan Kaplicky Exhibition
London Architect
London Buildings
Design Awards - Selection
AIA New York Design Awards
Brit Insurance Design Awards
Designing Places Awards
Good Design Award
Grand Designs Awards
Lighting Design Awards
RIBA Awards
Roses Design Awards
Spotlight Rice Design Alliance Prize
Stirling Prize
Student Health Design Award
Saatchi Gallery London
Allford Hall Monaghan Morris

image © Timothy Soar
London Art Galleries
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Design Museum Design Awards - page: adrian welch / isabelle lomholt
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