Industrial Design Courses
ID 3774-01
EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN PRACTICES
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This design seminar provides strategies for advanced research, frameworks for experimental practice in design, and prepares students for pursuing individual projects such as a thesis and deals with a range of scales and contexts through a series of structured experiments and collective engagements in design.
Experimental design practices; refers to design as a situation that deliberately sits at the edge of discipline. This studio/seminar class encourages students to explore diverse contexts and issues through projects and texts that consider the impact of design with new technologies, material exploration and ecologies, economic systems, culture and society. We will explore design as a means to understand and engage with social order, to adopt an open investigative approach to questioning cultural products and practices and how they affect and enforce the perspectives; values, ideas and beliefs that underpin contemporary society in an expanded exploration of contemporary design and its literacy.
What opportunities can free thinking design practitioners uncover through direct exploration of the complexity of design’s role in developing political, cultural, economic systems and social structures as products? Within this class we will reassess the discipline, and reconsider the practice of design, free from the marketplace, but not exclusionary. Allowing an autonomous position to question and challenge a broad range of cultural phenomena, patterns of social interaction and the behaviors in which they are used.
This class will work across both conceptual and material experiments; from tangible objects and interfaces to intangible material processes such as the use of AI as a material exploration. The class will be taught through a series of technical demonstrations, workshops, project briefs, visiting guest speakers and external critiques. The outcome of which will be a series of products / tools / interactions that seek to question social, economic and political order of not only how things are made, but in what context, why and for whom.
Elective
COURSE TAGS
- Administrative :: Seminar Requirement
ID 3787-01
CNC MACHINING: WOOD-BASED APPLICATIONS
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This 3-credit elective course, offered by the Industrial Design department, focuses on foundational 2D and 3D milling techniques using the Camaster Panther 4x4 CNC router table. The course is open to students from any department, who meet the course prerequisites/co-requisites , or equivalent, as determined by the instructor.
Students engage in hands-on assignments that progressively build their skills throughout the course. These include designing and producing a flat pack stool using 2D profiling, creating 2.5D models for mold-making applications, executing a multisided operation assignment for a full 3D object, and culminating in a final portfolio piece that demonstrates individual creativity and proficiency in CNC machining.
The course's learning outcomes include mastering an understanding of machining principles, utilizing CAD and CAM software, and Designing within the limitations of machinery. The course aims to equip students with practical skills and knowledge essential for utilizing CNC machining tools in diverse design applications. The course's process-oriented approach ensures students acquire skills beyond just design mastery, seamlessly aligning with real-world CNC workflows. This holistic perspective prepares them for professional design and fabrication.
Elective
LAEL 1038-01
HISTORY OF INDUSTRIAL DESIGN
SECTION DESCRIPTION
History is a powerful tool; a basic understanding of the history of design and familiarity with important design movements and designers is essential for thorough design work. By examining the work of other designers, we are better able to identify our own interests and concerns, and avoid repeating mistakes that have been navigated in the past. This lecture-based class will present the history of Industrial Design in a way that links it to today's studio work, and offers connection points to link past innovation and design activity with future design success. The lectures present a chronological overview of the profession of Industrial Design and its antecedents. Topics discussed will include major design movements, significant designers, manufacturers, and design-related companies, innovations in technology and material use, the development of sales, marketing, and user-focused designing, and the history of design process. Coursework includes extensive reading, in-class presentations based on independent research, projects, and writing.
Majors are pre-registered for this course by the department. Preference is given to Sophomore Industrial Design Students.
Major Requirement | BFA Industrial Design
LAEL 1038-01
HISTORY OF INDUSTRIAL DESIGN
SECTION DESCRIPTION
History is a powerful tool; a basic understanding of the history of design and familiarity with important design movements and designers is essential for thorough design work. By examining the work of other designers, we are better able to identify our own interests and concerns, and avoid repeating mistakes that have been navigated in the past. This lecture-based class will present the history of Industrial Design in a way that links it to today's studio work, and offers connection points to link past innovation and design activity with future design success. The lectures present a chronological overview of the profession of Industrial Design and its antecedents. Topics discussed will include major design movements, significant designers, manufacturers, and design-related companies, innovations in technology and material use, the development of sales, marketing, and user-focused designing, and the history of design process. Coursework includes extensive reading, in-class presentations based on independent research, projects, and writing.
Majors are pre-registered for this course by the department. Preference is given to Sophomore Industrial Design Students.
Major Requirement | BFA Industrial Design
LAEL 1038-02
HISTORY OF INDUSTRIAL DESIGN
SECTION DESCRIPTION
History is a powerful tool; a basic understanding of the history of design and familiarity with important design movements and designers is essential for thorough design work. By examining the work of other designers, we are better able to identify our own interests and concerns, and avoid repeating mistakes that have been navigated in the past. This lecture-based class will present the history of Industrial Design in a way that links it to today's studio work, and offers connection points to link past innovation and design activity with future design success. The lectures present a chronological overview of the profession of Industrial Design and its antecedents. Topics discussed will include major design movements, significant designers, manufacturers, and design-related companies, innovations in technology and material use, the development of sales, marketing, and user-focused designing, and the history of design process. Coursework includes extensive reading, in-class presentations based on independent research, projects, and writing.
Majors are pre-registered for this course by the department. Preference is given to Sophomore Industrial Design Students.
Major Requirement | BFA Industrial Design