Schumacher College

How Would Nature Do That? Bio-Inspired Design

June 13 – 17, 2011

Tom McKeag

This course is open for bookings.

This is a course in innovation and problem solving using the framework of bio-inspired design. Bio-inspired design is a compelling method of both seeing and doing for problem-solvers of every discipline, and can be a powerful tool for promoting sustainability.

Course overview

Participants will be presented with a fresh lens for looking at the natural world. They will be offered examples of successful applications of biomimetic innovation from a surprising range of professions. Participants will practice techniques for discovery, analysis, ideation and implementation of creative solutions.

The course will run as a series of short design problem sets or charettes: by briefly introducing a theme, offering a case study and technique, and challenging participants to develop an innovative answer to a problem question. An example of a theme is “Surfing for Free”. How do organisms take advantage of universal physical phenomena to optimize metabolic pathways? From soaring birds, to drifting larvae to even prairie dogs, living creatures are getting by on the least expenditure of energy to maintain themselves. They are doing this at many different scales. Maybe we can design that way, too.

This course is experiential, and problem and team based, so many of the thematic introductions will be interactive rather than didactic. Participants can expect to work in small groups, carry a problem from questions to answers and back to questions, and be challenged to integrate a wide range of conceptual ideas into a coherent, innovative and tangible application. They will also be asked to present their ideas, at any stage, in an effective way using the most basic tools of communication.

Teacher

Tom McKeag is a licensed landscape architect and city planner who teaches at the California College of the Arts and the University of California, Berkeley. He founded BioDreamMachine, a California public benefit corporation dedicated to teaching K12 science through bio-inspired design. He writes a regular blog about bio-inspired design at www.greenerdesign.com and is an Education Fellow and member of the Educational Advisory Board of the Biomimicry Institute. Organizations that he has consulted to include the Marine Science Institute, HOK architecture firm, and the Center for Enviromental Education, Westchester, NY. Tom is an adjunct professor at the California College of the Arts.

Course Fees

£750 June 13 – 17, 2011
All course fees include accommodation, food, field trips and all teaching sessions.

This course is the first part of a two part series on Bio-Inspired Design.
Biomimicry and Buildings: Innovation and Sustainability in Architecture taught by Michael Pawlyn and Robert Somerville which runs June 20 – 24, 2011. Click here for further details.
Participants can attend both weeks consecutively at the all inclusive price of £1450.

For further information about Schumacher College please see About the College

Apply

Click here to access our on-line booking system

click here to find out how to book by fax or mail

Reserve your place now

To provisionally reserve a place for 5 days, email us your contact details and the name of the course admin@schumachercollege.org.uk

We will hold the place for five working days for reservations – three weeks before a course or earlier. After five days we will automatically offer your place to someone else if we have not received your application.

Bookmark & Share
Join our Ning network Our Twitter stream Like us on Facebook RSS Feed
Sign-up for our newsletter...
Part of the Dartington Hall Trust 100 Year Anniversary of E.F. Schumacher Courses accredited by the British Accreditation Council Our 20th Anniversary Appeal
Schumacher College is part of the Dartington Hall Trust, a company limited by guarantee, registered in England and as a charity (company no. 1485560, charity no. 279756). Registered office: The Elmhirst Centre, Dartington Hall, Totnes, Devon TQ9 6EL, United Kingdom