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https://foresightprojects.blog.gov.uk/2017/02/10/data-for-our-future-selves/

Data for our future selves

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How Foresight data has found its way into a national design museum.

Many people wonder how government scientific and economic reports are used in practice. Do they feed directly into policy, can they influence industrial action or do they just gather dust on the shelf? Here’s a slightly unusual story of government data finding its way into a national design exhibition.

2D visualisation of Figure 7.2 from Foresight's Future of an Ageing population project report. The chart shows how horizons shrink for the over 70s with fewer miles travelled, and how commuting falls away the older you get.
Visualisation of Figure 7.2 from Foresight's Future of an Ageing Population project report, seen from behind another exhibit. The chart shows how the over 70s travel fewer miles and commute less as they get older.

In my role as Helen Hamlyn Professor of Design at the Royal College of Art and member of the lead expert group of the Foresight Future of Ageing project, I have just curated a show called New Old: Designing for Our Future Selves at the Design Museum in Kensington, London.

Design to enhance old age

This exhibition explores the potential for design and designers to enhance the experience of later life in the future. As our population ages rapidly, it looks at how new design can help people lead fuller, healthier, more rewarding lives into old age. And it asks whether designers are ready to meet the challenge of a rapidly ageing society.

The New Old exhibition is organised in six sections: Ageing, Identity, Home, Community, Working and Mobility. This structure takes the visitor through an introduction to the demographic shifts behind an ageing population and the key design challenges and opportunities of increased longevity. Each section features a special design commission by a leading design team on the theme of design for ageing.

The exhibition addresses the identity of the ‘new old’, the stereotypes and stigmas encountered around ageing, and the changing representations of older people in media, branding and advertising. It looks at design for the home in the context of healthier, safer and more independent living for older people. And explores interactions with the wider community through better neighbourhood and community design.

Finally, New Old examines the growing importance of older people in the world of work. It displays innovations to enable an ageing workforce to remain economically productive for longer. And it focuses on the future of mobility for those in later life – from laser-guided walking aids to autonomous vehicles.

Bringing government data to life

It has prototypes, models, films and photographs to show how innovation can transform the future of ageing. You might expect that in a design exhibition. But it also features giant graphic panels and even a 3D infographic sculpture based on data from the Government Office of Science’s Foresight Future of an Ageing Population project.

A 3D visualisation of Foresight's data on the change in population age structure from 2014 to 2039. It shows how the proportion of people over 60 is projected to rise dramatically from 2014 to 2039.
3D visualisation of Figure 1.1 (see below) of Foresight's Future of an Ageing Population project report. It shows how the proportion of people over 60 is projected to rise dramatically from 2014 to 2039.
From left to right, the six bars show projections for the years 2014, 2019, 2024, 2029, 2034 respectively.
The bars' heights show population in millions.
Colours with shapes represent different age groups.
Blue bars with octagons = 75+
Orange bars with heptagons = 60-74
Yellow bars with pentagons = 45-59
Green bars with squares = 30-44
Figure 1.1 from Foresight's Future of an Ageing Population report. The data demonstrates that over 70% of UK population growth between 2014 and 2039 will be in the over 60 age group, an increase from 14.9 million to 21.9 million people.
Figure 1.1 from Foresight's Future of an Ageing Population project report. The data demonstrates that over 70% of UK population growth between 2014 and 2039 will be in the over 60 age group, an increase from 14.9 million to 21.9 million people.

Indeed, robust Foresight research underpins the entire exhibition, bringing it alive in an immediate way as part of a general call for action for design and industry to respond to the opportunities that our ageing society provides.

New Old: Designing for Our Future Selves is on at the Design Museum in Kensington, London until 19 February 2017.

Read the Foresight Future of an Ageing Population project report to find out more about the challenges and opportunities of an ageing population.

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1 comment

  1. Comment by Konsultan Terbaik posted on

    Nice to read and I have experienced like this recently. Good insight anyway..

    Regards,
    Utuh Wibowo
    Konsultan Terbaik Indonesia
    http://www.utuhwibowo.com