In search of more sustainable innovation and design

This summer Andrea Botero Cabrera won in the lottery: she got a rare and competed funding from the Academy of Finland for five years for her research 鈥楩rom the lab and the studio, to the garden, the forests and back鈥. As an Academy Research Fellow, starting from September, she will focus on how innovation and design happen in unexpected spaces and locations, trying to find globally common features and differences in them.
Botero Cabrera, an industrial designer from Colombia, says, as a designer she was educated in a very European way. What intreagues her is how design happens in 鈥榦ther places鈥, in other ways, outside of laboratories and studios. She will dig into a combination of cases in Finland, Kenya and Colombia.
鈥業鈥檓 is focusing on more unconventional spaces where innovation and collaboration happen, that are not recognized as such. I want to look into more mundane places for doing experimentation, and to bring new spaces to it. My method is to look at how it happens, but also intervene and facilitate.鈥
The Academy of Finland reasons that the research proposal is 鈥榟ighly original鈥 and has 鈥榮ignificant potential for impact on academia and society at large. It gives voice to currently unrecognised social-cultural practices, norms and beliefs.鈥
Context in climate crisis
An underlying reasoning for Botero Cabrera鈥檚 research work is an attempt to change the world, even on a small scale.
鈥楳y idea is that if we should make something possible that is not and has not been there yet, we need to get better with this in the following two decades. We cannot continue doing what we鈥檝e done, and we need to undo many things in the future, together. There are many ways of doing things, but we need to find the ways of collaboration.鈥
What she is now working on is a combination of many things she has done in the past. 鈥業 tried to put all the crazy ideas together鈥, says Botero Cabrera.
In her doctoral thesis she focused on design space, that she calls a 鈥榮pace of possibilities鈥.
鈥業 work a lot with on how to help collectives and communities to see the space 鈥 it鈥檚 not evident to people. They think they have to do this or that, and use and buy certain products from certain companies and so on. When we work together they realize it鈥檚 only in their minds.鈥
She wants to help stakeholders to understand what the design space is and how to take a grasp of it and find the possibilities it includes.
Andrea Botero CabreraThere are many ways of doing things, but we need to find the ways of collaboration."
Searching for just innovation processes
One of the cases in her research is cloth-diapering, where she is looking at its material designs and practices. It is about the role women鈥檚 knowledge, sewing machines and other stuff have had in revitalizing the use of cloth-diapers and thus contributes to change how families manage their poo.
The other cases are different in that they are not western modern concepts, but present design in not the most obvious environments. One case is in Kenya, another in Colombia, and the third in a research forest in Finland. Botero Cabrera wants to dig deep in different places to find out what is innovation and creation in these locations and the locals鈥 ways of doing.
Her final aim is to find more just innovation processes. The work combines design research, science and technology studies and innovation studies. Botero Cabrera works in the blurred area between these, trying to find the red thread between the cases.
鈥業 believe all innovation processes are collective鈥, she says.
The cases and areas look at first sight very far apart. But Botero Cabrera鈥檚 idea is that putting them together might bring not so recognized voices into what we think and hear of innovation and design. She thinks we need to understand innovation and design in more plural terms. Her research also combines issues facing the global North and South, creating dialogue between them.
About Finland
Botero Cabrera came to Finland to study master鈥檚 degree in TAIK. After graduation in 1999 she went back to Colombia but returned for doctoral studies.
Then 鈥榣ife happened鈥: she got children and a Finnish husband and finished her studies in 2013. So she stayed. After working on as post doc an Academy funded project on digital research infrastructures in University of Oulu she came back 柠檬导航 last year.
When choosing her study destination as a young student she thought Finland is part of Scandinavia, and Scandinavian design is of interest to her.
鈥業 appreciate very much the system here and everything, and the way of working. I admire Finnish and Finnishness, their persistence and stubbornness, and calmness and kindness 鈥 it鈥檚 stable basis, which is good in this shaking and changing world. But it sometimes does frustrate me, too.鈥
Academy funding starts in September and she鈥檚 planning to do her mobility during the first two years. She has already identified some projects in Colombia, as well as some collaboration in Australia, where she has colleagues working on similar topics.
In the end there will be a book, and several articles. She鈥檚 also planning to do some installations to discuss her observations with different kinds of people.
During the summer Botero Cabrera got also an H2020 grant for her research 鈥 which makes her laugh she鈥檚 victim to her own success. But a lucky one.
- - -
Industrial designer Andrea Botero Cabrera
- BA in Industrial Design (Universidad Nacional de Colombia)
- MA Product and Strategic Design (Aalto ARTS - formerly TAIK)
- Doctor of Arts in 2013 (Aalto ARTS/media dept)
- Academy Research Fellow (Aalto ARTS/dept of design)
Hobbies: 'I love reading, drawing and painting. I also like gardening, but I鈥檓 very bad at it. I want to improve.鈥
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