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The nine winners showcase innovative design solutions to some of the world’s most pressing problems.

Good design is socially and environmentally just. This year’s National Design Awards prove it

Paper Monuments [Image: Colloqate Design/courtesy Cooper Hewitt]

BY Nate Berg3 minute read

With works ranging from self-shading windows and solar power for off-grid communities to the transformation of the concrete-lined Los Angeles River, the winners of the 2021 Cooper Hewitt National Design Awards are paragons of environmentally and socially conscious design.

Announced today, this year’s slate of nine winners includes designers across a range of disciplines, including architecture, industrial design, fashion, and communications. Given annually since 2000 by the Cooper Hewitt Smithsonian Design Museum in New York, the National Design Awards honor designers whose work elevates the field while demonstrating the positive power of good design. A common theme among this year’s winners is using design to address persistent energy and social justice challenges.

BioLite HeadLamp 330 [Image: Wondercamp/BioLite/courtesy Cooper Hewitt]
Award winnerBioLiteis being honored for the affordably priced solar-powered lighting, cooking, and charging products it has been producing and distributing in off-grid communities across Africa and Asia. A social enterprise founded in 2009, the company is aprevious winnerofFast Company’sInnovation By Design award, and has also branched out into a successful line of products forcampingandoff-grid living.

Los Angeles River [Image: Studio-MLA/courtesy Cooper Hewitt]
Los Angeles-based landscape architecture firmStudio-MLA, led by designer Mia Lehrer, has been deeply engaged in the city for decades. It spearheaded the development of a master plan for the city’s river, launching regional efforts to soften its concrete edges and reconnect it with residents.

Ross Barney Architects, McDonald’s Global Flagship at Walt Disney World. [Image: Kate Joyce Studios/courtesy Cooper Hewitt]
Another woman-led design firm,Ross Barney Architectsof Chicago, is being honored for its sensitive and socially minded work on projects ranging from transit stations in Chicago to the replacement of the Oklahoma City Federal Building, which was bombed in 1995. The firm’s recent transformation of a kitschy Chicago landmark, known as theRock ‘n Roll McDonald’s,into asleek and environmentally friendly flagshipfor the fast-food giant has shown that even lowbrow buildings can achievehigh-minded goals.

[Image: DOSU Studio Architecture/courtesy Cooper Hewitt]
Architectural designerDoris Sunghas specialized in applying thermally reactive pieces of thin metal to create dynamic and energy-efficient architectural solutions. Her InVert Self-Shading Window uses thermal bimetal sheets embedded within a double-glazed window that physically bend in the sun to block heat during the height of the day, creating an energy-free way to control light and temperature inside buildings.

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Paper Monuments, [Image: Colloqate Design/courtesy Cooper Hewitt]
Some winners are pioneering new approaches to socially conscious design. Bryan C. Lee, Jr., one ofFast Company’s Most Creative People in 2018, foundedColloqate Designin 2017 in New Orleans to engage communities in the planning and design process with the aim of dismantling systems of injustice.Cheryl D. Miller, a veteran Black graphic designer and theologian, is honored by Cooper Hewitt as this year’s Design Visionary for her decades of balancing design work for corporate clients withlongstanding advocacy for Black designers.

Can the Subaltern Speak? [Image: Behnaz Farahi/courtesy Cooper Hewitt]
Other honorees are pushing the boundaries of aesthetic design through novel uses of technology. DesignerBehnaz Farahiis being recognized for her unique mix of architecture, interactive design, and fashion. Theinaugural winner in 2016 of Fast Company’s Linda Tischler Awardfor up-and-coming designers, Farahi’s work ranges fromgarments that react to the gaze of onlookersto a3D printed collarthat senses and reacts to peoples’ emotions. Fashion designerBecca McCharen-Tranis also being recognized for her wearable designs, particularly her futuristic swimwear designed for a wide range of body types.

Lumina [Image: Anastasia Garcia/courtesy Cooper Hewitt]
On the graphic design side, this year’s awards also honorImaginary Forces, a motion design firm known for its work on title sequences for television series, such asMad Men, Stranger Things,andBoardwalk Empire.

Stranger Things main title sequence opening sequence. [Image: Imaginary Forces/courtesy Cooper Hewitt]
Several of this year’s winners will be featured invirtual events and programsduring the month of October.

The winners were chosen from a pool of nominations submitted by the public, and juried by experts in design. This year’s jury includes Kofi Boone, a professor of landscape architecture at North Carolina State University; Grace Jun, an assistant professor of graphic design at University of Georgia; and Joe Gebbia, a cofounder of Airbnb. Nominations for next year’s awards are open now through December 6.

Recognize your brand’s excellence by applying to this year’s Brands That Matter Awards before the early-rate deadline, May 3.


ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Nate Berg is a staff writer at Fast Company, where he writes about design, architecture, urban development, and industrial design. He has written for publications including the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, the Atlantic, Wired, the Guardian, Dwell, Wallpaper, and Curbed More


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