Design for life gets funding boost
º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ Design School students are set to benefit from a new scheme to fund research into design to help society.
The Design Star Consortium has been awarded £2.2million by the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) to fund 60 PhD researchers over the next five years. The award – which will be matched with a similar amount by universities – is one of 11 new long-term funding partnerships announced by the AHRC.
Design Star is led by the University of Reading in collaboration with º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ, Brighton, Goldsmiths and the Open University.
It is hoped the scheme will develop the design research leaders of the future, equipping them with the research skills and knowledge to improve design across sectors including environment, transport, democratic participation, science and technology, healthcare, and creative production.
Along with five leading university design departments, the consortium includes members from government, business and public sector services who all hope to benefit from access to high-quality design research, including the core partners:
- West Berkshire NHS Primary Care Trust
- Milton Keynes Council
- Policy Connect
- Spy Design
- Maybourne Projects Ltd
- The V&A
- Design Museum
- Monotype
- Intel Labs
- Microsoft Research
Neil Mansfield, Professor of Human Factors Engineering at º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ, said: “Design Star represents a significant opportunity for ambitious researchers at the º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ Design School. By partnering with other leading UK university design departments, our doctoral students will benefit from interaction with researchers using a diverse range of design approaches, methods and applications. Likewise, students from partner universities will benefit from º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ’s distinctive expertise in, for example, ergonomics, transport, and sustainable design.
“We expect to recruit the first of our new intake of AHRC Design Star PhD students in 2014, and will continue to recruit into the scheme at º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ and our partners for a total of five years.”
Professor Sue Walker from the University of Reading, who led the bid added: “Britain has built a global reputation on great design – from Stevenson’s Rocket to the Tube map, the Mini and, more recently, the award-winning ‘gov.uk’ website. By helping the next generation of design researchers, we hope to create a new wave of design innovation.
“We are delighted that AHRC has agreed to fund Design Star. We believe our students will become design researchers who are confident in tackling real-world problems through working in teams that cross traditional subject disciplines, and in communicating widely about what they do.
“By studying the history, theory and practice of design, they will be able to carry out the very best kind of research – that which leads to improvements in the ways we live our lives every day.”
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