〰️Distributed Design?

An introduction to the concept of Distributed Design

CONTEXT

The emergence of Industry 4.0, the global shift away from fossil fuels, the climate crisis, overconsumption and wealth centralisation have all raised questions about the nature and culture of the products we buy. Distributed Design explores alternatives to mass production and the linear consumption models of Industrialisation. It focuses on the movement of data (bits not atoms), the use of local material supply chains and digital fabrication, as an alternative way of moving materials and goods from producer to consumer.

HISTORY

Distributed Design is an outcome of the intersection of two global trends: the Maker Movement and the digitisation of the discipline of design. This convergence has lead to the rise of a new market, in which creative individuals have access to digital tools that allow them to design, produce and fabricate products themselves and easily connect to a global network of collaborators.

BENEFITS

Distributed Design promotes sustainable production and consumption. It examines supply chains, product distribution and fabrication and re-orients the designer towards β€˜zero kilometre supply chains, open-source distribution and the circular economy.

Bringing transparency to the design and manufacture process and allowing access to processes through co-design and customisation can provide consumers with more control over their final products by allowing them a voice in the production process. Working with open design paradigms and innovative business models radically changes power structures.

We promote an an ecosystemic approach to both online and offline tools which can connect designers, makers, manufacturers, and markets. We promote platforms and toolkits that help designers to go from idea to prototype, and from prototype to products and markets.

IN A NUTSHELL

Distributed Design changes the entire nature of the way that goods are manufactured and transported.

Centralised design and manufactureDistributed Design

Manufactured in several countries on the opposite side of the world from the consumer

Manufactured within several miles of the consumer

Manufactured by people who are often poorly treated

Manufactured by local makers

Delivered to the consumer through extensive logistics chain e.g. Amazon

Delivered to the consumer by cargo bike, local post or personal collection

Intellectual property is owned by a central company

Open-source design

Profit goes to shareholders of large companies

Profit distributed across smaller organisations and individuals

Top down instruction from the top of the system

Collaboration between nodes in the system

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