Beazley Designs of the Year awards
BDOTY Overall and Category Winners
The Beazley Designs of the Year awards go to...
Virtual Announcement
The overall and category winners, selected by a judging panel of industry experts, celebrated the prestigious awards with a virtual Q&A where they discussed the projects, the processes behind them and their future ambitions.
overall winner
Teeter-Totter Wall, an interactive installation that allowed children based in both the USA and Mexico to play together across the border wall, and that went viral online in 2019, has been named by the Design Museum as the overall winner of the Beazley Designs of the Year 2020 and the Transport Category.
The Mexico/US border is the most frequently crossed border in the world and one of the most politicised. For the first time, children from both El Paso, Texas and the Anapra community in Mexico were invited to connect with their neighbours, in an attempt to create unity at the politically divisive border between both countries. The project took ten years to realise because of the sensitive context at the border. Architecture studio Rael San Fratello aimed to demonstrate that actions taking place on one side of the border have direct consequences on the other, viewing the boundary as a site of severance. The three bright pink ‘teeter-totters’ (seesaws) were slotted into gaps in the steel boundary wall by designers from both sides of the border and installed for just under twenty minutes on 28 July 2019.
Although a temporary installation, the event lived on through footage shared virally on social media as well as in coverage in the mainstream media: a joyful contrast to the heart-rending scenes of separation often reported at the border.
“It is great to see that a project that is seriously playful and playfully serious is the winner of our Beazley Designers of the Year Award for 2020. The Teeter-Totter Wall was originally installed for only 20 minutes in 2019 across the US/Mexico border, but it encouraged new ways of human connection and struck a chord that continues to resonate far beyond El Paso in the USA and Juarez in Mexico. It remains an inventive and poignant reminder of how human beings can transcend the forces that continue to seek to divide us.
All of this year’s category winners (Digital, Architecture, Transport, Graphics, Product and Fashion) contain powerful messages of change and design’s capacity to explore new ideas to confront some of the difficult issues the world currently faces. I’d like to thank and commend the judges and all the designers who took part.”
– Tim Marlow, Chief Executive and Director, Design Museum
category winners
ModSkool is a school that is designed to be easily erected and dismantled in response to forced evictions of farming communities on the floodplains of the Yamuna river in India. First built in 2017 in less than three weeks by students, school staff, parents and local volunteers, the school was dismantled one year later due to landownership issues. The new school, relocated further south in 2019, was held together with the form of weave used for a charpoy, a multifunctional piece of furniture traditionally used as a daybed. The school’s design mirrors its teaching methods, which focus on a holistic education that includes issues of sustainability.
Designed by Social Design Collaborative
A protest performance denouncing sexual violence against women and LGBTQ communities, A Rapist in Your Way was devised by the Chilean feminist arts group Colectivo LASTESIS. It is rooted in studies of rape in Latin America, specifically the work of the Argentine anthropologist Rita Segato. The first performance in Valparaíso in November 2019 highlighted the use of political-sexual violence by the police during a recent social uprising. It has been replicated by protestors in Chile and around the world in multiple languages.
Designed by Colectivo LASTESIS
Dubbed ‘the accessory of the decade’ by Dazed, the vegan leather, gender neutral Telfar bag has become highly coveted. The bags are available in a wide array of colours, and in three sizes that correspond to those of Bloomingdale’s disposable shopping bags. They are priced according to the average earnings of a New York DJ for a single night’s work. Telfar bags represent the brand’s ethos that luxury should be both practical and financially accessible, with restocks and new colours now selling out online in minutes.
Designed by Telfar.
This is an image of the novel coronavirus, identified as Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARSCoV-2), that causes the illness COVID-19. It was commissioned by the US health organisation Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), which opened its emergency operations centre for the COVID-19 outbreak in January 2020. The purpose of commissioning this image was to help raise public awareness of the oncoming pandemic. The image depicts the virus as viewed through a microscope: a speckled grey sphere with bright red spikes that create the now infamous crown-like appearance of the virus. Using lighting, texture, contrast and colour, Eckert and Higgins give the virus a beautiful yet deadly form.
Designed by Alissa Eckert (MSMI) and Dan Higgins (MAMS).
Impossible Burger 2.0 is more sustainable than its predecessor, which was launched in 2016, and aims to be tastier, juicier and – crucially – beefier. Although the patty is made from plant-based proteins and is suitable for vegans, its core consumers are meat eaters. It is currently served in thousands of restaurants and is entering grocery stores worldwide. It is kosher, halal and gluten-free certified, and fortified with as much iron and protein as a comparable serving of ground beef.
Designed by Impossible Foods.
Architecture studio Rael San Fratello have been researching the border that separates Mexico from the USA since 2009. Viewing the boundary as a site that severs relationships between the two countries, they wanted to create a place where those across the border could connect, designing three bright pink ‘teeter-totters’ (see-saws) to slot into gaps in the steel border wall. One designer worked from Juárez in Mexico and another in El Paso, USA. For just under twenty minutes on 28 July 2019, residents of El Paso and the Anapra community in Mexico could, for the first time, unite through play.
Designed by Ronald Rael and Virginia San Fratello with Colectivo Chopeke.
people's choice award
Made from ordinary bricks, these small but powerful structures were used by Hong Kong protestors from the pro-democracy movement as roadblocks to slow down police vehicles. When struck by a wheel, the top block falls away leaving the two remaining bricks, which together form a buttress that prevents the wheel from moving forward. These arches were referred to locally as ‘mini-Stonehenges’ or ‘brick battlegrounds’. Easier to make and more difficult to clear than ordinary roadblocks, they became widespread when the protests escalated in November 2019.
Designed by Hong Kong protestors
meet The judges
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