Earlier this month, two designers and six projects received one of Singapore’s highest creative honours: the President’s Design Award. The biannual prize is organised by Design Singapore Council and the Urban Redevelopment Authority, whose 17-member international jury panel includes creative professionals as well as experts in the fields of education, healthcare, communications and digital technology. This broadening of the judging team is part of the council’s ambition to widen an appreciation for design in the city-state beyond architecture and furniture to include the likes of information systems and engineering.
“Designers are crossing traditional boundaries and are innovating across disciplines,” says Dawn Lim, executive director of Design Singapore Council, explaining that the evolution of the prize was a natural process. But the move is also part of a broad shift, as Lim and her team look to celebrate projects that solve complex social, economic and ecological problems – issues that are best tackled with big-picture thinking and wide skill sets, which smart cross-disciplinary teams (and jury panels) possess in spades.
For proof, you only have to look at this year’s winners, with projects such as Hack Care: Tips and Tricks for a Dementia-friendly Home – a book and toolkit for dementia caregivers by Lekker Architects and industrial designers Lanzavecchia + Wai – receiving recognition alongside buildings and parks. By highlighting good design that meets the shifting needs of Singapore and the world, the award not only sets new benchmarks but gives the industry a necessary steer – one that should allow for more cross-disciplinary collaborations and designers to solve problems in fields beyond their own. Here’s to keeping an eye on the prize.
Yvonne Xu is a Singapore-based design journalist and regular contributor to Monocle magazine. For more insight and analysis, subscribe today.