This project explores how the circular economy and ‘open’ design-thinking can empower communities and offer a practical solution to local waste problems whilst catalysing a range of development opportunities.
The project is a collaboration between Community21 / University of Brighton led by Nick Gant and Dr Ryan Woodard, The Dreamcatcher Foundation with funding from the Utopia Foundation and included input from design researchers Tanya Dean and Stefano Santilli and Designer Colin Jenkinson.
University students, staff and communities develop relationships and co-learn and co-design ways to take waste out of the environment and transform it into valuable assets for the community.
Key questions explore the potential of remote communications and methods in remotely located communities of practice and notions of 'distributed manufacture' with waste.
What additional social and cultural values are established through re-making with waste?
What do we learn from each other between distant communities with different learning objectives and knowledge?
What re-making methods and processes support inclusive creative processes and facilitate new opportunities and values?
Despite the distance students were able to induct and teach community members how to undertake creative tasks and together design new products made from problematic waste.
The project aims to develop a local making resource or workshop that uses low cost, accessible technology and processes to manufacture products utilising local resources as feedstock. Products are co-designed in a collaboration between the community and designers and makers in the UK taking into account the needs and values of the community. Blue prints and material recipes can then be shared, adapted and ‘re-used’ to benefit other communities.
As such the project is not only about adding value to the individual case-study community, but also explores how the use of technology could ‘openly’ make a difference to communities in the future by sharing models and resources through internet enabled platforms, tools and methods.
The project hopes to produce an 'open-source' toolkit following testing with our case-study community in South Africa in 2017.
See the Community21 project management page with this https://community21.org/partners/wikiwasteworkshop/ can