INFORMED DECISION


Information and participation replace standardization, power and anonymity of decisions to produce a precise fit between elements and function to meet need. The need for power and standardization to resolve design problems can be countered by substitution of careful observation, acquired knowledge and direct participation. Given adequate information we can achieve precise fits between system and function and make design more closely related to particular user needs. This information may be applied in initial shaping of the environment or during operation and use where feedback may be used. There are a variety of ways that we can gain information to better understand design needs and requirements. Several authors provide examples of ways we can have more informed design practices through ecologic accounting, sharing of knowledge, monitoring of projects and participation.


Sim Van der Ryn and Stuart Cowan in Ecological Design suggest that people have an understanding of design needs that should be tapped into and understood (pg. 146-159). For much of history design has been an intuitive part of culture. People understood their regions and communities and knew the design templates that would work. More recently, design professions have supplanted intuitive design processes.

"Ecological design suggests a deeply participatory process in which technical disciplinary languages and barriers are exchanged for a shared understanding of the design problem. Ecological design changes the old rules about what counts for knowledge and who counts as knower. It suggests that sustainability is a cultural process rather than an expert one, and that we should all acquire a basic competence in the shaping of our world." Design needs to "once again become permeable to the outside world, responding to the challenges offered by real places and adding ecology and community to the list" of concerns. "Design is molded by powerful political and economic forces. It is well past time to open up the methods, products, and apparatus of design to wider constituencies." "While everyone will not become a master builder or a competent ecological engineer, ... we can all possess a basic design literacy that allows us to participate in the shaping of our places."