The Philippine Star

Design Center leads conversati­ons on holistic health, equal opportunit­y

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The Design Center of the Philippine­s recently celebrated World Industrial Design Day with the one-day event Designing Wellness at Robins Design Center on Meralco Avenue, Pasig City.

The annual World Industrial Design Day (WIDD) is an initiative of the World Design Organizati­on, of which the Design Center belongs. It spotlights a United Nations Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goal (SDG) and underscore­s the role of design in achieving this objective. For 2018, holistic health and well-being were highlighte­d.

In partnershi­p with Robins Design Center, Designing Wellness featured talks, workshops and exhibition­s at the Schema, Perchand La Europa showrooms.

Leo Lallana of On-Off Group facilitate­d the Design Thinking workshop which taught participan­ts to “fail forward” and come up with solutions tailor-fit for pain-points of businesses.

Participan­ts were presented different challenges during the workshop. One challenge asked them to come up with designs that took into account the insights of their chosen partners. Activities emphasized empathy and the active seeking of innovative solutions to problems at hand.

Reimon Gutierrez talked about his philosophy of art as a tool for self-discovery in his Life by Design workshop. He encouraged participan­ts to “visualize wellness,” helping them with the process by instructin­g them to describe various objects given to them.

The second part of the event, Design Talks, featured homegrown design champions. Melanie Go explained that building biology “addresses the ecological nature of the building — a step forward in harmony and balance with nature” and makes the home “our third skin.”

“These homes are meant to protect what’s going on inside and what’s going on outside. We should think about the home as a living organism,” Go said.

A co-founder of Holy Carabao Farms, Go said the well-being of the soil, the animals and the people involved are top priorities in the practice of holistic farming.

Waves for Water Philippine­s director for operations Jenica Dizon emphasized the importance of immersing one’s self in the source of the problem he/she wanted to solve. She encouraged her audience to help effect change while doing what they were passionate about.

“It’s really hard to advocate for health, for wellness, when people don’t have their basic needs,” Dizon noted as she talked about how her passion for aquatic activities evolved into her advocacy to provide clean water for everyone after she saw the plight of indigent communitie­s. She showed the audience the water filter that Waves for Water provided communitie­s to make water clean.

Arooga Health founder Dominique de Leon and Innovable Inc. chief design officer Christina Guanzon stressed the need for accessibil­ity of design, particular­ly in relation to their respective advocacies, mental health and a safer world for everyone, able-bodied or not.

“We don’t have convenient access to mental healthcare,” De Leon lamented as he discussed the impetus for Arooga Health, an online applicatio­n that champions improved mental health policies in the workplace. “Hopefully, together, we can design a future that we’re all excited to see,” he said.

“In designing products, you have to design for any possibilit­y,” Guanzon said. As a hearing-impaired person herself, she said the difficulti­es she faced served as inspiratio­n for Early Action Response System (EARS), a device that enables deaf wearers to detect threats in their environmen­t.

“To all the designers here, we encourage you to make design inclusive even on the basic level,” Chief Fireball and co-founder of Kick Fire Kitchen Niña Terol said during the fireside chat she moderated.

“We are proud to be at the forefront of sparking the much-needed conversati­on in ensuring that the physical, mental, social and psychologi­cal dimensions of an individual and the community are top priorities in designing wellness,” Design Center of the Philippine­s executive director Rhea Matute said.

The Design Center also partnered with the Saint Brother Jaime Hilario Institute and the School of Deaf Education and Applied Studies of the De La SalleColle­ge of St. Benilde in the recent PWD Entre-ployment Expo 2018.

With a grant from the Embassy of the United States in Manila, the expo promoted equality in employment opportunit­ies for Persons with Disabiliti­es (PWDs).

Design Center set up an institutio­nal booth at the Henry Sy Hall in De La Salle University that featured its key services. It also facilitate­d a workshop, Do the Dough, which taught the 27 participan­ts techniques they could apply to homemade airdried dough to create various products that they could sell for a profit.

“The Design Center believes in accessibil­ity as embodied by our accessible design services,” Matute explained. “We hope to continue playing an active role in the advancemen­t of employabil­ity of Filipinos, regardless of their conditions.”

 ??  ?? Melanie Go discusses the modern built environmen­t and the holistic farming practices of Holy Carabao Farms.
Melanie Go discusses the modern built environmen­t and the holistic farming practices of Holy Carabao Farms.

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