Resumen:
|
[EN] The contamination between design and theory of systems as a field of development of new
design processes is nowadays consolidated. However, the issue concerning the
methodology to apply in teaching systemic design ...[+]
[EN] The contamination between design and theory of systems as a field of development of new
design processes is nowadays consolidated. However, the issue concerning the
methodology to apply in teaching systemic design remains an open question.
The approach adopted in the Master Degree in Systemic Design at Politecnico di Torino is
based on the assumption that the teaching method must itself be systemic. Alongside
designers, the degree course has involved from the very beginning experts from different
disciplines (i.e. chemistry, physics, mechanics, history, economy and management) as
teachers, in order to create a multidisciplinary environment for the development of projects.
Born as master degree in academic year 2002-03 at Politecnico di Torino (Italy) from the
close collaboration with Gunter Pauli, the course has changed name and form but not the
content, until it reached the current title (a.y. 2015-16): master degree “Aurelio Peccei” in
Systemic Design.
The Open Systems course has enabled students, in early years, to experiment the design of
production processes. This was the case of the systemic project done with NN Europe, a
company engaged in manufacturing ball bearings, in which the output management allows
a positive economic impact. Over the years the course has shifted its focus from the
production process of a single product to the wider company context. In 2010, the approach
has been applied to the agricultural enterprise Ortofruit: starting from agricultural
production, the students have defined the production system and the relationships with the
market. Systemic Design, during this course, has experienced the transition from the design
of industrial processes that are closely linked to the territory, and then enhance local
resources, to the design of the whole territorial system.
The work done by the students of the course in recent years has led to the definition of
scenarios about fields usually distant from the traditional design world. For example, the
definition of the economic model, the corporate model that is built around relationships on
cooperation with different disciplines.
This transition, from the product to the entire territorial system, allows the exploration of
new contexts, but it also puts the designer in a complex and challenging position in
according with complex theories.
[-]
|