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(Non) Disposable - INDA Experimental projects
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Design-Build Projects 2021
Instructors :

Liva Dudareva


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“Anthropocene,” “Capitalocene,” and “Plasticine” are terms that have emerged in the past fifty years in order to describe the current material realities we encounter on a personal and planetary scale. Reality is irreversibly created and molded by the human hand. The last and the present century have seen numerous material marks left in the geological layers caused by economic and geopolitical processes in the name of progress.

During this Design-Build workshop, students critically examine and embrace the material world that is evolving and developing at the geological scale with a specific focus on bioplastics and food waste. Throughout the seven-week workshop, students collectively explored the Samyan neighborhood, collected food waste from local vendors, and transformed it into new materials and objects.

Student :

Chananya Auttavoothisilpa

Veerin Dumrongkijkarn

Pattaramon Kraiteerawut

Sainam Kwanmontreekul

Thanapat Lohaprathan

Pimnara Poonkham

Nattamon Premsoontorn

Passapol Rodphong

Plaifha Siripanthong

Paramita Tankamhaeng

Tonnam Termrungruanglert

Sudhinee Tridhip

Related Projects:

2023 Design-Build Projects

B.O.B

B.O.B. takes the concepts of biomimicry and biomimetics to create a captivating experience involving themes of generations, connections, and human-nature symbiosis. With forms inspired by the complex nature of the environment such as the lotus flower, the installation can also be seen as an artwork come to life, mimicking its movements through motions of plant likeness combined with robotic joints and mechanisms, as if it was its own living consciousness. It can also be interpreted as different parts and perspectives of nature; Is it a tree or a magnified view of a plant’s leaf, roots, or branches? B.O.B purpose is also to inspire generational connectivity through its users, activating different levels of movement and illuminated displays based on factors of age and user quantity. This encourages users to interact and explore the various patterns that can occur, as well as an element of discovery which inspires interaction between the different user generations.

2018 DCC Projects

Ban Bat

A series of participatory design workshops, meetings, and a communal ‘dinner and dance’ event were organized by the Thai students with the Ban Bat community in preparation for this design-build project. Residents’ opinions were oriented around three main objectives: to represent their identity in a mural, to preserve their craft, and to increase social activity. Everyone agreed that better signage and facilities were needed. Through an assessment of spatial challenges, it was noted that the entrances were undefined and difficult to locate. After a student design charette and approval from the Royal Crown Property Bureau, shop drawings were made for prefabricated bent steel pipes which were modified on-site with guidance from skilled workmen from local design practice, StudioMake. Once all vertical pipes and archways were secure and level, canvas panels were attached. In addition, an eight-meter-long mural represents each step in the bat-making process and includes scenery inspired by the alleyways. One month after completing the installation, we returned to Ban Bat to hear feedback from the community and inaugurate the project. Residents seemed very pleased, especially with the mural and signage, and they shared some suggestions for how best to initiate engagement from an even larger number of residents.

experimental projects