Design Thinking

Design Thinking

Share this

January is the month of resolutions, revelations, and new beginnings. This January we celebrate Design Thinking. Why?

Design thinking begins with a deep inquiry into the why and whom – it’s about having empathy and taking a deep interest in understanding people (including ourselves).
  
With design thinking we engage the voices of many to ideate, motivate, innovate and create. Together, we experiment (and start over), solving one problem at a time, until a singular vision emerges. We find harmony, balance and beauty as we build outcomes that improve the way we connect to one another and to the planet.

Whether in the home or the workplace, hospitals or campuses, design thinking challenges the assumptions that have guided how we’ve done things until now and spurs us to consider new approaches.

Here’s to a new decade of forward-thinking design!

Happy January!

Here are some of the conceptual projects we’ve had fun with recently:
https://www.archres.com/project/hydraulics/
https://www.archres.com/project/emerson-at-larkin/
https://www.archres.com/project/community-music-school/

Related Articles

Design Technology by Architectural Resources

Design Technology

A|r was one of the first firms in the country to integrate full scale Building Information Modeling (BIM) project execution into our practice. Our team leverages BIM capabilities to create highly intelligent models, providing sophisticated visualizations which inform and optimize design, budget and schedules.

Valentine’s Heart-Bomb

Here’s to our annual tradition of heart bombing one of our beloved buildings! Check out our vision for this building.

The Egg by Architectural Resources

The Egg

The Egg – named for its iconic design – is the Empire State Plaza’s Center for the Performing Arts. The A|r Vertical Transportation studio was invited to provide complete elevator modernization for the facility.

Adaptive Reuse by Architectural Resources

Adaptive Reuse

In architectural theory and design practice, buildings are treated as static objects. A design may propose spaces, finishes, and adjacencies that respond to one potential path for a building’s use.

find

Buffalo Office
505 Franklin Street Buffalo, NY 14202

NewYork Office
303 West 13th Street New York, NY 10014

Connect