Art, Design, Events July 29, 2010 By Nalina Moses

Masdar Development, city plan. Foster + Partners.  2007; expected completion 2018. Rendering: Foster + Partners. Images courtesy of Cooper Hewitt. (Click images to enlarge)

Masdar Development, city plan. Foster + Partners. 2007; expected completion 2018. Rendering: Foster + Partners. All images courtesy of Cooper Hewitt.
(Click images to enlarge)

whydesignow Why design now?
The vibrant collection of objects on display now through January 10 at Why Design Now?, the Cooper-Hewitt’s National Design Triennial, answers that question quite simply. Design matters because absolutely everything in our environment, from our eating utensils to the cities we live in, is designed, and the materials and methods with which they’re produced have a powerful impact on our culture and the environment.
     Appropriately, the curators have included objects of every scale. The show includes drinking glasses with grip-like profiles to aid those with limited manual abilities, and renderings for Masdar, a new remote desert city in Abu Dhabi that will be the world’s first isolated, self-sustaining, zero-energy community.
     The exhibit projects a curious ambivalence about technology. Some of the high-tech artifacts included, like the iPod, the Kindle, and twitter, have already become seemlessly embedded in our lives. They’re advanced, but commonplace. Other high-tech objects seem to belong to a distant, Jetsons-like future. There’s a giant, rotating dish-shaped solar collector with gleaming mirrored facets, and plans for a communal electric car system that would allow city-dwellers to borrow and deposit vehicles at designated stops.

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