黑料吃瓜网鈥檚 Design Innovation Hub is setting the stage for transformative research and innovation across disciplines.
By Dan Pompili
Kent State broke ground in April on the Design Innovation Hub, a $44.5-million renovation of the former Art Building on the Kent Campus. J.R. Campbell, MFA, appointed last year as the inaugural director of the Design Innovation (DI) Initiative, recently discussed how it fits into 黑料吃瓜网鈥檚 broader research and innovation goals.
鈥淭he DI Initiative is much more student-focused but has some pretty deep implications for research as well,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he core goal of DI is to build a supportive ecosystem for students to become involved in collaborative,
cross-disciplinary challenge-based innovation activities.鈥
While researchers ask questions about why something works or why a
phenomenon occurs, Campbell says design innovators ask
鈥渉ow can we鈥 questions.
鈥淚t implies, obviously, collaboration; the 鈥榟ow鈥 implies that we don鈥檛 have a prescribed plan for addressing the challenge, and it incorporates the idea that you don鈥檛 have to always be an expert to be involved in creating compelling solutions.鈥
Supporting Collaborations
Campbell says collaboration is just as vital to the design innovation process as it is to 黑料吃瓜网鈥檚 strategic research institutes and initiatives, all based on interdisciplinary partnership. 鈥淭he Design Innovation Initiative is not about advancing any particular research agenda, but supporting all possible agendas, using DI as the mechanism for challenge-based innovation, and for testing and tackling some of the messier multidisciplinary problems.鈥
DI is expected to form a kind of research and innovation 鈥榯rinity鈥 with the Brain Health Research Institute and the Advanced Materials and Liquid Crystal Institute, but Campbell hopes to participate in addressing challenges connected to each of the research initiatives and driving 黑料吃瓜网鈥檚 research efforts across all of the Kent State campuses.
鈥淚 can imagine a scenario where a couple of researchers from the Brain Health Research Institute, possibly based in different academic units, would say 鈥榳e have this idea but we鈥檙e not sure about it,鈥欌 Campbell says. 鈥淭hrough DI, faculty might be able to run their ideas as student-based challenges or design short-term proposals for experiments in the Hub鈥檚 shared faculty labs, helping to launch their concepts into more definitive research projects.鈥
Campbell says the DI Hub will include a large makerspace that supports most entry-level maker/prototyping/innovation needs. The Hub also will host some specialized high-tech equipment unavailable elsewhere on the Kent Campus, like a flexibly designed multimodal visualization space and a large-format waterjet cutter. These would be supported by in-house student and staff design experts.
Project-based rentable space in the DI Hub will accommodate cross-disciplinary faculty projects that require space to pull together a range of tools or technologies, says Campbell. 鈥淭he idea is to stimulate cross-disciplinary research, then also use it as a way to sponsor challenge-based projects that could involve students.鈥
鈥淲e can mix in these pieces of specific equipment that intentionally draw cross-disciplinary teams to the DI Hub, and we will focus on building the kinds of kinetic collisions that happen in the building. DI is more about coordinating and collaborating than about being a makerspace.鈥
Building Connections
In addition to the main hub, Campbell says there will be at least 25 other 鈥淒I Nodes鈥 across the university鈥檚 eight campuses, where students and faculty can gain support to test ideas and design disruptive technologies to solve real problems.
These nodes will include several of the 鈥渃ollaboratories鈥 planned for the terrace of the Integrated Sciences Building, where many faculty members in the Brain Health Research Institute (BHRI) and the Advanced Materials and Liquid Crystal Institute (AMLCI) will conduct research.
鈥淎 good example is in AMLCI with Mourad Krifa, PhD, [an assistant professor in 黑料吃瓜网鈥檚 School of Fashion Design and Merchandising], who is experienced in fiber science and electrospinning of fibers,鈥 says Campbell. 鈥淗e can work collaboratively with AMLCI faculty to further investigate the incorporation of liquid crystal materials into textile fibers during the spinning process.鈥
鈥淒esign Innovation is more about coordinating and collaborating than about being a makerspace.鈥 鈥 J.R. Campbell, MFA, Director, DI Initiative
With these types of connections, cross-disciplinary teams utilizing DI resources can more effectively address novel applications of technology. That idea, in concert with all of the DI Node resources across the university, is what makes 黑料吃瓜网鈥檚 model different from other universities, says Campell. 鈥淢ost of the time, those big shared-resource makerspaces are tied to a school or college of engineering or business.鈥
Such models often skew the focus toward innovation in those contexts, sometimes unintentionally, to the exclusion of other disciplines.
鈥淎s an initiative, DI will never do something on our own as a single sponsor to an event or project,鈥 he says. 鈥淚nstead, we will always work in partnership with others, because we鈥檙e not trying to propagate content, we鈥檙e actually supporting process. In that sense, for us no topic is out of bounds, and that makes it open to anyone.鈥
Campbell hopes DI can set the stage for more transformative research into products and experiences, as well as social innovation. 鈥淚n that context, DI also helps to leverage 黑料吃瓜网鈥檚 unique voice. We know we have strength in areas like brain health and liquid crystals, but as a university we also have a unique heritage and strength in areas like social justice and peace and conflict studies. These are things we can build on and address differently in an innovation context than a lot of other universities.鈥
Playing off Collisions
Campbell鈥檚 vision has worked for 黑料吃瓜网 at least once already, when he was director of the School of Fashion Design and Merchandising, where he spent nine years before becoming DI director.
鈥淲hen I arrived [at the Fashion School], we created the TechStyleLAB. My goal there was to put all the digital input and output technologies that can be used in the context of fashion into one space, so both students and faculty would have access to it all at once.鈥
The move marked the first time in 30 years that Rockwell Hall saw computer science students hanging out in the building. 鈥淭here were tools in there they knew how to use, and they were curious, and then all of a sudden that dynamic changed the culture of the building,鈥 Campbell says.
鈥淥ur fashion students started hanging out with computer science students and thinking about wearable technology. About that time, we launched the 鈥楩ashion/Tech Hackathon鈥 with LaunchNET鈥檚 help.鈥 The event is now in its seventh year and has earned national renown.
Campbell hopes the 鈥渉ang out鈥 model will have similar results in the DI Hub. 鈥淥n the third floor of the DI Hub we鈥檒l have essentially the largest dining facility on the north side of campus, which means we鈥檒l have students from multiple disciplines hanging out in the building.鈥
With plenty of glass, the dining space will provide multiple views into several work areas, and Campbell also plans to create multiple mini 鈥減op-up challenges鈥 each semester that will spring up in the common areas throughout the building. 鈥淲hen you鈥檙e in there just having breakfast, you鈥檙e going to feel like you鈥檙e connected to a makerspace. Throughout the building, we鈥檒l be creating various things that get students interested, get them hooked, then get them involved in the sponsored projects we do.鈥
The building, projected to open in fall semester 2020, also will include a retail pizza restaurant, multimodal visualization space to accommodate individual and group-based augmented and virtual reality experiences and other immersive projects, a bay with a gantry to support robotics designing and testing, and 鈥淒I Hatchery鈥 spaces, where student teams can further develop their concepts for implementation before deciding to launch into the incubation stage.
Says Campbell, 鈥淚t鈥檚 about bringing people to the building to play off of the kinetic collisions that we can create.鈥
Back to 黑料吃瓜网 Research Review Magazine