DULLES, Va., July 20 — Some of the world’s hottest
designs, innovative problem-solvers and coolest concepts are among the
winners of the 2007 International Design Excellence Awards (IDEASM). One of
two award programs co-sponsored by BusinessWeek magazine and the Industrial
Designers Society of America (IDSA), IDEA celebrates design excellence.
Here is a small sample of this year’s 81 winners:
– The Tesla Roadster — an electric-powered sports car that combines high
performance and timeless beauty while eliminating emissions.
— A light operated mouse and keyboard to enable people with physical
impairments to operate a computer.
— An outdoor grilling system that allows users to choose between gas,
charcoal, and infrared fuel.
— The world’s first cordless hands-free can opener.
— The first very light jet approved by the FAA.
Since its inception in 1980, the IDEA awards program has generated
worldwide attention from designers, business leaders and consumers as a
powerful endorsement of the aesthetics, engineering and usability of
winning designs. Participation has grown steadily, reaching 1,691 entries
this year. IDEA’s influence has expanded geographically as well, with 595
entries this year from 29 countries other than the United States. In 2007,
the IDEA jury — a carefully selected group of 18 leading thinkers in the
design world — selected 20 entries to receive the coveted Gold award, 19
entries for the Silver award and 42 for the Bronze award in categories as
diverse as consumer electronics, housewares, transportation, sporting
goods, furniture, and medical and scientific equipment and ecodesign.
IDEA jurors noted several exciting trends among entries and winners of
the competition, including greater attention to ecological impact. “There
is markedly greater consideration to how a design’s function, materials and
fabrication impact the environment as a whole,” said Hillary Blumberg,
IDSA, vice president and design director of home furnishings for Martha
Stewart Living Omnimedia. “The Tesla car is just the beginning of an
entirely new way of rethinking existing product types in not just the
canonical dimensions of form and function, but also a third, green
dimension.”
Jurors also noted the high number and quality of student entries as
well as attention to universal design in this year’s competition. J. Ryan
Eder, IDSA, a student at the University of Cincinnati, won Best in Show
with The Access — a sleek, advanced exercise machine concept that embodies
the principles of universal design, accommodating users with or without a
variety of disabilities. More than 240 student designs were entered into
the competition this year and 10 earned an award — up from 101 entries and
8 awards in 2006. “We can look forward to an influx of well-trained ‘fresh
brains,’” said juror Sigi Moeslinger, IDSA, a partner and co-founder of
Antenna Design New York Inc. “This will stimulate the profession.”
Winners incorporated universal design principles into a wide range of
products and concepts, such as the OXO Good Grips Hardware Hand Tools Line,
the MAGICWHEELS(TM) 2-gear wheelchair drive and the Universal Toilet. “This
made for a great jury session and an intensive discussion about the state
of design,” said Jury Chair Ruth Soenius, IDSA, director of user experience
at Siemens Corporate Research, Inc. “Long gone are the days when design was
judged exclusively on appearance.”
IDEO led all design firms with four Golds IDEAs and seven total awards.
Formation Design Group and Smart Design each won three awards and five
other firms won two. Among corporations, Eclipse Aviation led the field
with three IDEA awards, while Belkin, The Stanley Works and The Timberland
Company each won two.
A “People’s Choice” award (voted on by the public) will also be
presented this year when the winners are honored at a formal ceremony at
the Masonic Center in San Francisco, CA on Saturday, October 20 — the
final day of the CONNECTING ‘07 World Design Congress.
This year, several past and current IDEA winners also received the
Design & Business Catalyst Award, also co-sponsored by BusinessWeek and
IDSA. The Catalyst Awards (announced under separate cover) demonstrate the
essential connection between design excellence and business, socioeconomic
and ecological impact.
BusinessWeek’s announcement and in-depth analysis of both IDEA and
Catalyst winners will be featured in the July 30 issue, which hits
newsstands July 20. IDSA’s quarterly magazine, Innovation, will publish
information on the winners in its annual Yearbook this fall. Full coverage
of the winners will also be available on http://www.idsa.org and
http://www.businessweek.com.
About Industrial Designers and IDSA Industrial Designers create
satisfied customers by designing products, interfaces and services that are
desirable, accessible, comfortable, ecologically responsible, innovative,
safe and easy to use. In this way, industrial designers have a quiet but
profound presence in almost everything people encounter during the day.
IDSA is the voice of industrial design, committed to advancing the
profession through education, information, community and advocacy.
Contact
Michael Levin
703.707.6000 x109
michaell@idsa.org
SOURCE Industrial Designers Society of America