Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-hc48f Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-22T18:34:02.945Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

From biodesigners to designers in lab: testing the nuances of an emerging profession through autoethnography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 October 2024

A response to the following question: Bio-calibrated: tools and techniques of biodesign practices

Barbara Pollini*
Affiliation:
Design Department Politecnico di Milano, Milano, Italy Design Department, Aalto University, School of Arts, Design and Architecture, Espoo, Finland
*
Corresponding author: Barbara Pollini; Email: [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Biodesign is emerging as a radical design approach with great potential for the ecological turn, finally endorsed by some first academic courses providing designers with hybrid skills to embrace scientific disciplines. However, the resulting professional figure, the biodesigner, still needs to be better defined in the academic and grey literature, also considering the different and multiple facets that working between design and science may entail. This study presents four case studies of research through design (RTD), addressed by the author as an autoethnographic form of inquiry to clarify the roles a biodesigner could assume, emphasising the differences in methods, tools and workplaces, which inevitably affect the Biodesign outcomes. The author analyses her role as a biodesigner and designer in lab, working in teams and environments requiring different degrees of interdisciplinarity. Far from adopting a speculative approach, the RTDs focus on sustainable Material Design and Biodesign solutions that might be feasible in the short run, aiming to test the designer’s abilities in enriching scientific research and investigating the role and contribution designers can play in scientific contexts of different intensities. The study demonstrates the possibility of a reciprocal knowledge transfer between design and science, highlighting the potential of the designerly way of knowing in bringing innovation to the scientific field.

Type
Impact Paper
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press

Introduction

As the discipline of Biodesign consolidates, a resulting professional figure emerges in parallel, characterised by an orientation towards experimentation, sustainable innovation and a hybrid background that combines design and science. Biodesign is closely linked to the bottom-up phenomenon of science democratisation, involving designers eager to better understand scientific principles to apply nature’s potential to design (Myers, Reference Myers2012). Here, the figure of the biodesigner takes shape, still lacking a shared and established framework for definitions, tools and methodologies (Vijayakumar et al., Reference Vijayakumar, Cogdell, Correa, Dade-Robertson, Danies, Edens, Forlano, George, Grushkin, Holbert, Hoover, Jalkh, Kisielewski, Obregon, Pirone, Polli, Scarpelli, Stukes, Ward and Walker2024), to all intents and purposes hybrid. The following paragraphs will give an overview of the varied world of DIYbio practitioners, further focusing on the emergent figure of the biodesigner, who already appears to be evolving despite the discipline’s young age. By adopting an autoethnographic method, the study delves into the figure of the biodesigner along with that of the designer in lab (an even more hybrid counterpart), thus reflecting on the different transdisciplinary nuances this profession can take, depending on the circumstances and the project’s nature.

The multiple nuances of DIYbio practitioners

Biodesign is recognised as a discipline that intersects design and scientific knowledge, established as part of the DIY-Bio movement, and further developed under the influence of other emerging phenomena, such as do-it-yourself, citizen science, and hacking practices spanning from computers and software to genes (Myers, Reference Myers2012; Seyfried et al., Reference Seyfried, Pei and Schmidt2014; Elsacker et al., Reference Elsacker2020; Keulartz and Belt, Reference Keulartz and Belt2016). Therefore, Biodesign is part of that fringe biotechnology (Vaage, Reference Vaage2017) panorama inhabited by different practitioners with hybrid skills, approaches and goals. To comprehensively represent them, we can list (i) biohackers, (ii) scientists with a strong creative aptitude, (iii) bioartists, and (iv) biodesigners. These definitions frame slightly different profiles, which intertwine and influence each other, supporting creativity and innovation in design, art and science (Figure 1).

Figure 1. Positioning of the different professionals and approaches discussed across creative and scientific practices.

Biohackers

The DIY-biology movement promotes open access to scientific resources, such as modern molecular biology or synthetic biology. It promises to provide cheaper and low-tech solutions for social and environmental issues, such as biomonitoring, personal diagnostics and biomaterials, encouraging collaborations between professional scientists and amateurs (Landrain et al., Reference Landrain, Meyer, Perez and Sussan2013). Biohackers, also defined as DIY-biologists, are individuals who conduct biological experiments outside the traditional scientific research environment.Footnote 1 They operate in unconventional labs, outside academic and industry environments, known as biohacker or biomaker spaces Footnote 2 : citizen-friendly autonomous spaces where people interested in biotechnologies can gather to experiment with biological matter (de Beer and Jain, Reference de Beer and Jain2018). Biohackers usually have a strong scientific background and are oriented towards open and community science. They use the methods of science, although their equipment may be home-built and less sophisticated (Delfanti, Reference Delfanti2012). The act of “hacking” here defines the general practice of modifying biology to suit new purposes, usually for the best (Roth, Reference Roth2021).

Scientists with a strong creative aptitude (artist scientists)

STEM disciplines widely explored visual arts for clearer and more engaging communication to make accessible representations of scientific work (Gewin, Reference Gewin2021). Historically, visual literacy has been an essential subject in learning and communicating science. Today, creative approaches are considered a key skill for fostering innovation in scientific research; for this reason, STEAMFootnote 3 educational paths promote the integration with multiple arts to foster students’ creativity (Segarra et al., Reference Segarra, Natalizio, Falkenberg, Pulford and Holmes2018; Aguilera and Ortiz-Revilla, Reference Aguilera and Ortiz-Revilla2021). Scientists with strong creative aptitudes can be defined as professionals trained in scientific disciplines who use artistic means to enrich their studies or for artistic expression. They can create illustrations or 3D models with a more practical approach aimed at scientific representations. They can also experiment more interpretively, obtaining artistic outcomes starting from tools and techniques from their field of study. An example can be Jacob L. Steenwyk,Footnote 4 whose work on software development for life sciences led him to experiment with algorithmic-driven art.

Bioartists

Bioart is an umbrella definition for artistic practices that use biology, living organisms and life processes as media or tools of expression; it includes a wide variety of works dealing with different levels of manipulation, from the macro to the micro level of life, using different biotechnologies, from physical manipulation to genetic engineering (Myers, Reference Myers2015; Kallergi, Reference Kallergi2008). Bioart can foster interdisciplinary initiatives focusing on philosophical, social and environmental issues (Yetisen et al., Reference Yetisen, Davis, Coskun, Church and Yun2015). In the attempt to interpret cultural transformations, bioartists are moved by artistic expression, design innovation, and activism (Asgarali-Hoffman and Hamidi, Reference Asgarali-Hoffman and Hamidi2021). As stated in the bioart manifesto by multifaceted artist Eduardo Kac,Footnote 5 bioartists can use living media both to express human concerns and to celebrate non-human organisms; moreover, his manifesto points out the ethical implications of bioart, stating that “all art materials have ethical implications, but they are most pressing when the media are alive.”Footnote 6 Compared to established bioethics in scientific contexts, bioart does not yet have a consolidated framework. However, many bioartists address the topic, giving rise to a flourishing ethical discussion concerning their field of practice (Vaage, Reference Vaage2016). Scientific knowledge is often indispensable for bio-artworks’ success; bioartists’ scientific literacy can be self-taught or nurtured by collaborations with experts in scientific disciplines- usually supported by specific programmes, such as artist-in-lab projects (Reichle, Reference Reichle2009). When bio-artworks are exhibited in a contemporary art institute, such wetworks and living life forms requires particular conditions or arrangements from the hosting institute, which often needs to set the right spatial conditions and incorporate new routines and procedures in its standard practices (Kallergi, Reference Kallergi2008).

Biodesigners

Biodesigners’ professional background is most often in design; therefore, their methods are based on hands-on experimentation, iteration, optimisation, and a centrality to the user’s needs (Myers, Reference Myers2018). Such background is later combined with scientific knowledge, amateurishly nurtured to create a peculiar hybrid profile. Only recently, biodesigners can properly acquire their “title” through a degree in this emerging field, where they are trained to deal with science’s methods, languages, tools and spaces. Some dedicated academic study paths have recently been established to train design students for a basic understanding of life sciences and lab skillsFootnote 7 ; this could lead to a more conscious and proactive approach to designers’ use of biotechnologies, other than facilitate cross-disciplinary collaborations. Either self-taught or academically trained, biodesigners tend towards a greater understanding of scientific principles to apply Nature’s potential to the project, being prone to work transdisciplinary (Myers, Reference Myers2012). Among other figures in the fringe biotech landscape, biodesigners are more oriented towards practice-based approaches to find innovative material and process solutions, employing living organisms in sustainable design outcomes (Wightman and Pirone, Reference Wightman and Pirone2019; Grushkin, Reference Grushkin2021; Langella, Reference Langella2021). If early biodesigners worked predominantly in kitchens/garages/studios with DIY setups, now that the first biodesign academic courses provide designers with hybrid skills, they can finally operate in lab settings and learn the basics to possibly work in scientific environments. The fermenting DIY-biology phase that started the Biodesign phenomenon has been normalised within these training paths; this can reinforce the emergence of a more specific biodesigner profile, that of the designer in lab, performing in scientific labs, with more specific tools and scientific approaches (Langella, Reference Langella2019).

The figure of the biodesigner will be further investigated in the following paragraphs, as the aim of this study is to better describe this emerging professional figure - poorly covered by the literature but already evolving,despite the young age of the field. This study adopted autoethnography (Munro, Reference Munro2011; Jones, Reference Jones2013; Adams et al., Reference Adams, Ellis and Jones2017) and research through design activities (Frayling, Reference Frayling1993) across design and science to better define the figure of the biodesigner and the designer in lab from a first-person perspective (Varela and Shear, Reference Varela and Shear1999; Tomico et al., Reference Tomico, Winthagen and Heist2012; Tomico et al., Reference Tomico, Wakkary and Andersen2023).

The emerging discipline of the biodesigner

Design’s interest in scientific disciplines comes from two driving factors. On the one hand, the growing awareness of the environmental crisis has led designers to reflect on the responsibilities of their role and to reimagine matter and processes for more sustainable production models (Collet Carol, Reference Carol2013; Camere and Karana, Reference Camere and Karana2018; Myers, Reference Myers2018; Karana, Barati and Giaccardi, Reference Karana, Barati and Giaccardi2020; Oxman et al., Reference Oxman, Antonelli and Burckhardt2020; Langella, Reference Langella2021). On the other hand, the democratisation of science has provided designers with new tools of expression and the possibility of imagining radical and sustainable future production scenarios. Despite designers’ fascination for science implementation in design processes, acquiring such hybrid skills is not trivial. Possibly also to overcome this issue, the origin of Biodesign is characterised by a strong speculative component, often relying on diegetic prototypes and storytelling for future scenarios (Myers, Reference Myers2012). Speculative Design does not focus on problem-solving but aims to ask “carefully crafted questions” (Dunne and Raby, Reference Dunne and Raby2001) to better understand the present and envision alternative futures, thus “being a means of debate and exploration of the alluring promises and alarming perils of manipulating life” (Myers, Reference Myers2018). The first Biodesign training programmes often encouraged designers to embrace a speculative approach (Ginsberg et al., Reference Ginsberg2017; Wightman and Pirone, Reference Wightman and Pirone2019), associating Biodesign with anticipatory fiction and not describing it as a discipline capable of solving societal and environmental issues in the medium-short term; for some scholars, the allure of design with the living was enough to suspend the requirement for a practical design outcome (Figueroa and Carolina, Reference Figueroa and Carolina2018). Interdisciplinary collaborations between design and science may help overcome this misconception, validating the feasibility of Biodesign projects and supporting innovation and practical solutions with scientific knowledge and equipment. However, these collaborations do not yet take place regularly, although their intrinsic value to solve complex future challenges such as sustainability issues is recognised (Mejía et al., Reference Mejía2023). More recent dedicated Biodesign academic programs, nonetheless, support designers’ scientific literacy by enhancing the effective adoption of biotechnologies and facilitating cross-disciplinary collaborations.

Despite Biodesign being increasingly recognised at an academic level, the novelty of the field still lacks an explicit pedagogy (Roshko, Reference Roshko2010; Vijayakumar et al., Reference Vijayakumar, Cogdell and Correa2024; Wightman and Pirone, Reference Wightman and Pirone2019; Walker and Kafai, Reference Walker and Kafai2021) and dedicated methodologies (Camere and Karana, Reference Camere and Karana2018; Esat and Ahmed-Kristensen, Reference Esat and Ahmed-Kristensen2018; Vijayakumar et al., Reference Vijayakumar, Cogdell, Correa, Dade-Robertson, Danies, Edens, Forlano, George, Grushkin, Holbert, Hoover, Jalkh, Kisielewski, Obregon, Pirone, Polli, Scarpelli, Stukes, Ward and Walker2024; Walker, Reference Walker2021; Ferruzca et al., Reference Ferruzca, Díaz and Davila2022). The very figure of the biodesigner today has an uncertain definition, addressed with slightly different terminologies: biodesigner, bioneer, or designer in lab are some definitions currently in use. Biodesigner is the most shared one, directly derived from the discipline. Even without a clear definition in the academic and grey literature, it appears to be the norm for this emerging professional figure to deal with interdisciplinary environments and work in hands-on experimental research paths (Langella, Reference Langella2019; Wightman and Pirone, Reference Wightman and Pirone2019). Daniel Grushkin (Reference Grushkin2021), founder and executive director of the Biodesign Challenge, describes the profile of biodesigners based on his direct experience. He points out that their design ideas are as plausible and exciting as they are rudimentary; moreover, biodesigners feel the burden of liability arising from ideas and technologies that may be misused. Among the recurring characteristics that he observed in biodesigners there is a general attention to sustainability issues (such as systems theory, the life cycle of materials and products and the circular economy), a focus on non-human users,a tendency towards multispecies design, a scepticism towards consumer culture and a general optimism – tending to believe that there are multiple ways (from technological to behavioural) to mitigate and reverse the consequences of climate change and environmental degradation (Grushkin, Reference Grushkin2021). Taking biofabricated materials as an entry point, Camere and Karana (Reference Camere and Karana2018) reported a particular sensitivity of biodesigners towards the living agents involved in the design process, highlighting the importance of such design sensibilities to face complex interdisciplinary problems. Emma van der Leest has coined the variant bioneers Footnote 8 to highlight the pioneering work that designers, pushing their knowledge to other domains, could acquire through innovative solutions. Here, biodesigners are seen as trailblazers; indeed, the early practitioners in the field captured the spirit of an emerging phenomenon, sometimes contributing to the movement as researchers and entrepreneurs of new biotechnological solutions.Footnote 9 The concept of designer in lab describes those designers who conduct activities in scientific laboratories and no longer in the design studio only; such designers are keen to apply scientific methods, embracing the rigour of experimentation, protocols, and more rational criteria (Langella, Reference Langella2019; Sawa, Reference Sawa2016). Designers who hybridise their discipline to such an extent that they switch to the scientific laboratory as a working environment need further specific skills (often explicitly customized around the scientific sector they are addressing, e.g.special training for the required biosecurity level). There are still relatively few accounts of designers in lab experiences in the Biodesign literature, yet some authors underline how long-term collaborations benefit from a transdisciplinary approach (Sawa, Reference Sawa2016; Crawford, Reference Crawford2021; McComb and Jablokow, Reference McComb and Jablokow2022). Indeed, it is necessary to consider a certain latency period in which the designer (with a pure design background or no previous knowledge of the field/organisms/material to be scientifically addressed) learns and absorbs scattered information before actually being able to practically participate in any scientific lab activity.

Despite the great interest in this emerging professional figure, Biodesign is still a challenging field to enter (Crawford, Reference Crawford2023). To date, it is hard to tell if there is a real request from the market for what the community intends as a biodesigner (namely, a designer working across design and science). To find a tangible example, the American website biodesignJobs.com is currently one of a kind, providing biodesign jobs alert; however, when searching for design job offers on this very platform, there are almost no positions matching the general idea of a biodesigner as intended by the biodesign community.Footnote 10 This might be related to the fact that many biotechnologies are still in their infancy, thus making biotech startups and companies more oriented to hire scientists or laboratory technicians rather than designers; this, in turn, is the reason why biodesigners currently thrive on personal practice or tend to gravitate around some inner circle of dedicated academic research labs or Biomakers spaces.

Research through design as an autoethnographic form of inquiry to clarify the roles of biodesigners

The author analysed the biodesigner figure in the context of a doctoral research path (intersecting Biodesign, Material Design and Design for Sustainability) to better frame biodesigned materials and artefacts’ potential for both conventional and regenerative sustainability (Pollini, Reference Pollini2023). Four Research through Design (RTD) projects have been activated, based on collaborations with different professionals and institutions, to test the effectiveness of designers in scientific contexts of different intensities. Given the lack of literature on the biodesigner figure, these RTDs have been fundamental to enrich the study on this emerging figure from a first-person-perspective (Varela and Shear, Reference Varela and Shear1999; Tomico et al., Reference Tomico, Winthagen and Heist2012; Forlano, Reference Forlano2021), adopting an autoethnographic approach (Neustaedter and Sengers, Reference Neustaedter and Sengers2012; Méndez, Reference Méndez2013). This research path was also based on the fact that, among the few references found, the most specific and descriptive on the topic had an autoethnographic approach, indeed reporting the designer’s first-hand experience in the lab. Sawa (Reference Sawa2016) shares a quite personal point of view as a biodesigner working on algal biotechnologies in a university research laboratory: she describes in detail the dynamics with colleagues, the peculiar rules of the lab setting, her workspace and its relationship with other spaces in the lab; as it clearly stands out, she used her very personal experience to address specific concepts concerning the aptitude and challenges of a biodesigner working in a scientific lab. Crawford (Reference Crawford2021) centers her discourse on direct accounts of her journey aimed at developing a photosynthetic ceramic bio-composite material in a university research lab; such autoethnographic framework allows her to reflect on working dynamics that only a first-person perspective can grasp, such as the importance of the informal exchange of knowledge (across different media and modes of communication) between designers and scientists. These two contributions show the potential of qualitative inquiry derived from the researcher’s first-hand experience.

Such a research approach, makingthe researcher the subject of inquiry and relying on personal experience of a phenomenon to produce knowledge, can be used to observe “one’s own experience within a particular group or subculture, one’s own usage of a technology, or perhaps a designer’s or researcher’s own process of designing and using a new artifact” (Desjardins et al., Reference Desjardins, Tomico, Lucero, Cecchinato and Neustaedter2021). Jones (Reference Jones2013) points out how autoethnography, a method associated with a first-person perspective, can help gather the “granular experience of the every day,” particularly fitting for design as a highly embodied practice based on senses and materiality. Bochner (Reference Bochner2017) describes autoethnography as “the genre of doubt” and a method of qualitative inquiry that allows scholars to maintain an emotional and personal connection with their research. This method has been used for qualitative data across various disciplines, constantly based on self-observation and self-reflection. Widely addressed in Human-Computer Interaction studies, first-person approaches have been recently used also to deepen recursive issues arising in Biodesign, such as the perception of the non-human agent (Ofer & Alistar, Reference Ofer and Alistar2023), or the cohabitation in multispecies contexts (Tomico et al., Reference Tomico, Wakkary and Andersen2023).

The overall study presented here has addressed RTDs as a method of qualitative inquiry through personal engagement; its original contribution lies in the focus on the different nuances of engagement with scientific disciplines, thus focusing on how different working conditions and circumstances influence the work of the biodesigner. This approach seemed ideal to embrace both the sensory and subjective side of Material Design and Biodesign practices, which strongly rely on informal and often tacit practical knowledge in tinkering and biotinkering activities (Parisi et al., Reference Parisi, Rognoli and Sonneveld2017; Rognoli et al., Reference Rognoli, Ayala-Garcia, Pollini, Clèries, Rognoli, Solanki and Llorach2021). The autoethnographic study was carried out during four author’s RTD activities (which involved different workplaces, methods, materials, and organisms), to gather information on the designer’s role in scientific contexts of different intensity, addressing the limits and advantages of design methods, testing the designer’s integration in different disciplinary contexts and the adaptation toward transdisciplinarity. Each RTD has been addressed through target autoethnographic research questions (detailed in the next sessions dedicated to RTDs). The author used filed notes (Jones, Reference Jones2013; Phillippi and Lauderdale, Reference Phillippi and Lauderdale2017), systematically collecting sketches, written notes and photographs while carrying out the various RTDs projects. The collected notes were subsequently reported in a final text and analysed through descriptive coding (Saldaña, Reference Saldaña2016); in particular, the notes of each RTDs were compared to evaluate recursive patterns and contrasting elements of the four experiences. Thanks to this self-reflective inquiry, the author resumed the most significant insights on her role as a designer in dialogue with science from different perspectives and workplaces. To reinforce these early findings, the autoethnographic report based on the field notes was subsequently cross-referenced with (1) targeted questions to the scientific lab colleagues about the author’s biodesign activities, (2) the results of two wider surveys carried out among other biodesigners and life sciences professionals, and (3) the insights from 16 interviews carried out with biodesigners, entrepreneurs, professors and researchers in the field of BiodesignFootnote 11 (Pollini, Reference Pollini2023).

Relying on scientific feedback and inspiration is fundamental for Biodesign; however, the autoethnographic investigation was also focused on understanding whether design methods could fit into scientific research and actively contribute to scientific innovation. Some testimonies in the literature argue that designers can contribute to scientific knowledge (Calvert & Schyfter, Reference Calvert and Schyfter2017; Driver et al., Reference Driver, Peralta and Moultrie2011; Sawa, Reference Sawa2016); the objective of this study is to discuss the prospects and bounds of Biodesign at the very moment scientific research takes place, investigating the possibility of actual contributions by the designer in different scientific contexts - from working in a makerspace with a group of designers to being part of a scientific lab as the only designer. A brief description of each project follows, aiming to show how the RTDs were planned as an autoethnographic research tool while contributing in parallel to Biodesign and scientific research in different fields.

RTD1, Biotinkering with kombucha

The first project focused on biotinkering with kombucha and aimed at strengthening the author’s discourse around biotinkeringFootnote 12 , as one of the fundamental activities defining a biodesigner (Rognoli et al., Reference Rognoli, Ayala-Garcia, Pollini, Clèries, Rognoli, Solanki and Llorach2021; Pollini, Reference Pollini2023). Biotinkering activities with bacterial cellulose (BC) were carried out within the DeForma project, with a team composed by PhD students and researchers from the design department of Politecnico di Milano, in the university makerspace equipped for the growth of BC. Specific autoethnographic RQs wanted to investigate how the biotinkering activity might inform the Biodesign process, and how working among other designers in a university makerspace could embed a scientific approach in Biodesign. BC growth is a widespread activity among biodesigners, especially taking advantage of the fermentation process of kombucha, which can be harvested in low-tech laboratories, with simple equipment and skills. In dealing with kombucha BC, biotinkering can be performed during the growth phase, acting on the liquid culture or the BC layer, while further tinkering activities can be done once the material is harvested. Colours, thicknesses and textures can be programmed during the cellulose growth or obtained through low-tech processes on the already collected cellulose. The author had prior experience working with BC; therefore, in this project, her biotinkering activity focused on more specific experimentations, such as testing the circular potential of BC growth (e.g., feeding it with different types of carbon sources from food waste), embedding technological components after or during the BC growth, testing low-tech/cost treatments of the dry material, and testing BC response to different materials during the growth phase. In particular, the author’s biotinkering activity was oriented toward testing the organisms’ response to different material stimuli, attempting a more empathetic understanding of their response. The fermenting culture’s different reactions to various materials led the author to develop a new technique that uses cellulose masks to create patterns derived from different controlled BC growth thicknesses (Figure 2). In this project, the author teamed up with other researchers in the design field, and the knowledge transfer remained within the (bio)design community. A dedicated space and some tools have been implemented for BC growth in the preexisting makerspace, such as incubators, desiccators, a refractometer and a liquid pH metre (in addition to various fermentation vessels). Minimal protective equipment was required, such as gloves and masks. The initial growth of BC occurred following standard methodologies found in the literature. After this initial phase, the author’s biotinkering activity took a less standardised approach, also thanks to her previous knowledge of BC growth. She kept track of the experiments carried out through written notes of the recipes, treatments and organisms’ response (e.g., grow rate, BC colour and homogeneity). The author’s biotinkering phase did not involve any particular scientific methods other than recording experiments and constantly observing the organisms’ growth and responses to stimuli; therefore, a sort of participatory observation (Ciesielska et al., Reference Ciesielsk, Wolanik Boström and Öhlander2018), empathy and interpretation (Koskinen, Reference Koskinen2023) have been valuable approaches in this biotinkering activity.

Figure 2. Incremental stages of the process while using cellulose masks to create textures derived from different BC thicknesses.

RTD2, Bioreceptivity for biomonitoring

The second project was activated to test the theory previously developed by the author on Bioreceptive Design. Bioreceptivity is “the aptitude of a material to be colonised by one or several groups of living organisms” (Guillitte, Reference Guillitte1995); derivatively, Bioreceptive Design “occurs every time a material/artefact is intentionally designed to be colonised by life forms” (Pollini and Rognoli, Reference Pollini and Rognoli2021). The autoethnographic research was focused on the following RQs: How is the biotinkering activity informing the design process when a more precise project’s brief/goal is set? How can a biodesigner address professionals in other disciplines and confront them in interdisciplinary environments? How do biodesigners should present their hypotheses when confronting other disciplines? The author involved an expert in lichenology for collaboration after writing a research proposal focused on developing bioreceptive materials for lichen and moss growth. The primary hypothesis of the project was to understand if bioreceptive design can serve the supply and exposure of lichens and mosses in urban areas for biomonitoring activities – a pool of techniques that uses these organisms as bioindicators of air quality (Contardo et al., Reference Contardo2018; Świsłowski et al., Reference Świsłowski2022). The initial research proposal aimed at solving a supply issue since these organisms grow slowly and their collection in pristine environments for biomonitoring activities must be limited, considering the time necessary for their regeneration. The author’s knowledge of these organisms was initially derived from the literature and subsequently implemented by discussing the project with the expert. The design activity followed the methodology outlined by the author for Bioreceptive Design (Pollini and Rognoli, Reference Pollini and Rognoli2021), addressing also Biomimicry (Benyus, Reference Benyus1997), and computational design (Pollini et al., Reference Pollini, Pietroni, Mascitti, Paciotti, Perriccioli, Rigillo, Russo Ermolli and Tucci2020). The fundamental steps of this reiterative project are prototyping, exposure and evaluation of colonisation. Each design choice concerning the prototypes has been discussed and evaluated with the expert. The prototypes were made with different materials and textures: some were displayed without further treatments to evaluate spontaneous colonisation (which depends on many variables and can be very slow - up to years), while on others transplants were carried out for a more rapid proof of concept (Figure 3). The prototypes are now following a scientific bioreceptivity evaluation process, constantly monitored by experts in the botanical garden of Siena, Italy. Early findings show positive results from transplants and spontaneous colonisation of mosses and of a pioneer species, Cocconeis placentula, an alga often preceding lichens and mosses (Pollini et al., Reference Pollini, Contardo, Paciotti and Rognoli2023). Although the initial focus of the research was on biomonitoring with lichens and mosses, the early results suggest that the project can be expanded, contributing to biophilic urban resilience and positively affecting biodesign, architecture, biology (especially lichenology and bryology) and citizen science. The author has prototyped within design university laboratories equipped with additive manufacturing machinery, in ceramic laboratories and partly in her private studio. Each place was functional for the type of prototype to be created. The design methods used were bioreceptive design, biomimicry, computational design and additive manufacturing. Due to the collaborative nature of such a project, the scientific methods related to treatments, exposure and evaluation of the prototypes’ bioreceptivity are carried out by the lichenologist through specific measurements and microscopy (Ibid.). In this project, the biotinkering activity occurs in “slow motion” given the growth rate of these organisms; therefore, experiments are planned as a mix of scientific hypotheses and an initial biotinkering phase mainly based on the observation of the targeted organisms in the wild. The study aims to find bioreceptive design material variables to support the scientific method of biomonitoring through lichens and mosses. The collaboration with an expert allowed immediate validation of the research proposal and formed the basis of a solid knowledge transfer. Further validation of the project took place by presenting the ongoing research at a lichenology conference and collecting feedback from the scientific community (Pollini et al., Reference Pollini, Contardo and Paciotti2022).

Figure 3. Prototypes, transplants and first signs of spontaneous colonisation on bioreceptive materials.

RTD3, Tinkering with silk-based materials

The last two RTDs took place in scientific laboratories and highly scientific environments. The author was a visiting PhD in these laboratories, conducting various experiments and projects as a designer in lab.

The first laboratory experience took place at SilkLab (Department of Biomedical Engineering at Tufts University) when I joined as a visiting PhD for six months. SilkLab is pioneering the use of silk, and fibroin in particular, as a material platform for advanced technology and global health applications.Footnote 13 Fibroin, the protein component of silk, is an extremely tunable building-block material that can be further processed to create a vast number of materials with equally broad possible applications from the biomedical sectorto active packaging and fashion (Guidetti et al., Reference Guidetti2022). SilkLab had previous collaborations with architects, designers and creatives. The research period at Silklab aimed to test the designer’s role in a highly scientific environment. Two autoethnographic RQs followed the previous ones on understanding how biodesigners can confront themselves with professionals from other fields in interdisciplinary environments. Other specific RQs for this RTD were: Which strategies and design methodologies can help position a designer in an interdisciplinary environment? Which are the designer’s struggles in a highly scientific environment? Can designers be useful professional figures also in extremely scientific settings? The objective of this visiting period was to address the hypothesis that a DIY-Materials approach (Ayala Garcia and Rognoli, Reference Ayala Garcia and Rognoli2017; Pollini and Maccagnan, Reference Pollini, Maccagnan and Ambiente2017; Rognoli et al., Reference Rognoli, Ayala-Garcia, Pollini, Clèries, Rognoli, Solanki and Llorach2021) could also fit in a scientific lab dealing with advanced materials - such as fibroin, at the core of SilkLab’s research. The author had no previous experience working in scientific laboratories, nor experience with the extraction and use of fibroin. For this reason, working in this lab has been the most significant challenge (among other RTD experiences) when it comes to scientific protocols to follow, technologies to learn and use, and the degree of scientific knowledge to assimilate before significantly proceeding in the research. The very first months were devoted to learn the fibroin extraction process and to become familiar with the dedicated processes required to obtain different material results; many initial material experiments were the replication of standard protocols for making fibroin-based films, inks, hydrogels or aerogels. Only after this period the author could design more significant variables in material experiments, relying on a DIY-Material approach and tinkering activity supported by the continuous feedback from chemists and material scientists from the lab (Figure 4). The freedom of experimentation left to the author, together with the availability of colleagues in showing the use of machinery and fibroin manufacturing processes, certainly helped to create the optimal conditions for supporting a DIY-Materials activity in a scientific context. On the other hand, the author’s work contributed to the development of two new fibroin-based materials, thus demonstrating the validity of the design approach, albeit adequately supported by a scientific counterpart. In addition, she applied a Material Driven Design (MDD) approach (Karana et al., Reference Karana, Barati, Rognoli and Zeeuw van der Laan2015) to boost other designers and lab colleagues’ understanding of the possible application of the newly developed materials. Moreover, the author analysed in detail the lab processes’ environmental burdens, also empowering colleagues’ understanding of the fibroin-based extraction and materials’ impacts. Here, the author was a designer in lab, adopting a DIY-Materials approach to conceive new material solutions and using MDD, prototyping, and graphic visualisations to communicate possible applications and environmental impacts of the newly developed materials. She followed various scientific protocols, keeping precise laboratory notes and planning the experiments, albeit with the personal freedom to decide their number and nature within the limits of the materials and machinery availability; the actual knowledge transfer occurred only in the second half of her visiting period, after having assimilated basic notions and protocols which allowed her to generate new insights.

Figure 4. From silk cocoons to material experimentation in the laboratory. The image in the centre shows a series of material samples produced by the author and stored for subsequent evaluation with colleagues.

RTD4, Biofabricated edible electronics

The second lab experience took place when I joined as a visiting PhD the ElFo (Electronic Food) research group at the Italian Institute of Technology (IIT) in Milan; this research team is leading the field of edible electronics, a sector close to organic electronics but with the additional challenge of using edible materials for electronic applications.Footnote 14 Here, the autoethnography RQs were similar to the previous concerning biotinkering, the designer’s integration with a scientific audience, and the work in a scientific lab. Edible electronics focus on material edibility, biocompatibility, and biodegradability, positively contributing to (self-)monitoring and targeted body care, addressing also smart packaging and biodegradable robotics. Although still in its infancy, the field of edible electronics is already generating significant scientific interest by imagining a technology that is safe for consumption, cost-effective, environmentally friendly, and can safely degrade within the body or in the environment after serving its purpose. The embryonic stage of the field requires more basic research, primarily focusing on new possibilities of edible materials (Sharova et al., Reference Sharova2020). The author started this collaboration after submitting a research proposal suggesting the experimentation of biofabricated and bio-based materials to broaden the range of materials for edible electronics. The author’s previous knowledge of BC biofabrication and edible DIY-Materials recipes, together with the previous experience in a scientific lab, facilitated the challenges posed by this RTD, while also giving results in a shorter time (after an initial briefing based on some material samples and experimentation produced by the author in her studio, the whole outcome was produced in just a couple of days a week for four months). Indeed, soon after the research proposal, the first BC samples of material produced by the author were evaluated, and three possible applications for its testing in edible electronics were identified. In this case, the biotinkering phase occurred during the initial briefing phase. From the author’s entry into the lab onwards, she followed the standard protocols for BC growth, planning the subsequent experiments in the lab according to the previously identified research objectives. For the lab phase, she partnered with a materials scientist, and together, they developed new biofabricated material solutions for edible electronicsFootnote 15 . The materials scientist made the necessary measurements to test the prototypes’ validity. At the end of the visiting period, the author gave a workshop to the ElFo colleagues on biofabricated, DIY-Bio and DIY-Materials (Figure 5). The idea for the workshop was born from a request from lab colleagues, given their interest for DIY and bio-based materials. For this activity, the author experimented with a series of DIY-Material recipes that could meet the requirements of edible electronics, creating a series of material samples to show and evaluate with ElFo colleagues during the workshop. The general response to the workshop and its content was positive. Participants saw a way to broaden their mastery of edible materials, profiting from the the knowledge transfer from the design field. The most appreciated aspect of the DIY-Materials approach was the ability to test multiple solutions quickly and easily, perceived by colleagues in the lab as a way to speed up the material research.Footnote 16

Figure 5. Samples of developed materials suitable for edible electronics and material tinkering during the workshop.

Also in this case, the author was a designer in lab, arriving with a research proposal based on her previous knowledge and skills in Biodesign and Material Design. This helped to set the dynamics of the collaboration, structured clearly and effectively from the beginning, to obtain results in a relatively short period of time. For this RTD, the author mainly relied on biotinkering, still following basic BC growing procedures and keeping precise laboratory notes on the planned experiments. As in the case of the second RTD, the first exchange of knowledge already took place in the research proposal itself. Furthermore, knowledge exchange occurred both during the lab research phase (thus contributing to the developement and testing of new BC applications for the sector) and within the final workshop (which allowed the author to share a design approach that can be valuable in boosting scientific material research).

The RTDs presented here have been a form of autoethnographical investigation to possibly contribute to what is still a limited body of knowledge about the figure of the biodesigner (and the even less addressed designer in lab). The four RTDs show that different degrees of cross-pollination between design and science can affect the design process (See Figure 6 for comparisons). Along with autoethnography, RTDs were fundamental to reflecton the different degrees of transdisciplinarity that a designer can assume,and how these degrees, consequentially, could recalibrate design outcomes and potentialities. Transdisciplinary collaborations of different scientific intensities can indeed affect research methods, approaches, skills needed, work environment, and ultimately design outcomes.

Figure 6. Comparison between the four RTDs concerning methodologies, approaches and work environments.

From biodesigners to designers in lab

Although Biodesign generally tends to gravitate toward the scientific method (including basic hygiene and safety protocols), the tested approaches highlighted substantial differences in the adopted tools, methods, and languages. Such nuances inevitably influence the designer and the outcomes of the creative process, while also defining two slightly different professional figures. To better define these emerging figures within Biodesign, here follows a clarification based on the literature and the author’s early findings through autoethnography.

The main difference between the biodesigner and the designer in lab can be observed around the workplace. As intended in this article, a biodesigner is a designer working across design and science in a low-tech studio which might coincide with his/her own design studio (even garage or kitchen) or with a community or university biolab (or adapted makerspace). With regard to basic scientific and laboratory literacies, a biodesigner is often self-taught or trained via the relatively few Biodesign courses available at the moment. He/she might look for consultancy or collaborations with experts in the scientific field; however, the risks of having no feedback on his/her work from a scientific counterpart might be a challenge, preventing validation and meaningful advancement of the project, especially if it aims to be a viable solution. A biodesigner’s working environment cannot be a typical design studio. Usually, the designer’s studio is seen as a place to show completed experiments rather than descriptions of methods and processes. For this reason, some scholars proposed the notion of “Design:Lab”, to emphasise process transparency and open recipes for experimental research in design, specifically addressing “design research as exemplary processes of inquiry rather than as finalised results” (Binder & Brandt, Reference Binder and Brandt2008). The Biodesign phenomenon is helping change this common belief, being process-oriented and keen to open-source philosophy (Myers, Reference Myers2012). Biodesigners usually build a part of their studio dedicated to biodesign activities, supported by integrating specific tools and machinery, depending on the project and the organism treated. There might not be a clear distinction between the “biodesign operational space” and the desk where drawings, digital visualisations, texts, and notes are elaborated; therefore, the work with living organisms and its observation over time might occur in resonance with the rest of the workflow. In this setting, the inclination towards tinkering and biotinkering manifests innately in the designer, even without planned tests and pre-established materials/equipment, thus empowering experiential and tacit knowledge (Rust, Reference Rust2004). In these hybrid DIY labs, especially when improvised in a design studio, designers hold responsibility for biosafety standards (on the contrary, community or university biolabs follow standardised rules); nonetheless high danger levels are rarely reached in these settings. Wearing gloves, masks, labcoat or protective glasses depends on the level of security needed for the designer and the organisms. Sometimes, it is also possible to tinker without protective equipment, improving sensorial knowledge of the material/artefact. In this context, the experimented materials are usually known, easily accessible and sometimes derived from food, organic sources or harmless living organisms. Even for non-experts, these conditions make the tinkering activity very “familiar” and “comfortable,” usually with little to no fear of managing dangerous materials or machinery; these “relaxed” conditionsallow the designers to freely experiment in an environment perceived as safe and playful.

While discussing the figure of the designer in lab, this study describes it as a designer trained for lab skills (e.g., hygiene and security standards, use of specific high-tech machinery), working a significant amount of time in a scientific laboratory (Langella, Reference Langella2019; Sawa, Reference Sawa2016). Coincidentally, he/she may also be a biodesigner with an already developed aptitude for working between design and science, as in the author’s case. Among the many aspects affecting the activity of a designer in a scientific lab, there is, first of all, the training. Specific courses must be undertaken before even entering the lab spaces and being allowed to touch and use chemical components and sophisticated machinery (e.g., Lab Safety Training and Basic Biosafety Training). Lab safety rules require the designer to know which personal protective equipment is required while working- including gloves, masks, lab coats, safety glasses and other wearable equipment. Safety and hygiene rules are very restrictive in scientific labs. This is also because multiple research activities might coincide in a laboratory, none of which must pose risks or be put at risk by failure to observe these rules. This condition could prevent a designer’s experiential learning, given the protective equipment’s partial coverage of the senses, however inevitable. Protective tools might affect the material experience of the designer, perceiving a part of the senses as “blind” (most of the time this happen to the touch, prevented by gloves), not the ideal condition for a tinkering activity, which, by definition, relies on senses (Parisi et al., Reference Parisi, Rognoli and Sonneveld2017). From a designer’s point of view, adapting to the guidelines of the laboratory may limit sensory exploration, initially seeming like a loss of the playful approach associated with material experimentation. However, significant advantages counterbalance the situation, namely that of working with materials, solutions and machinery capable of significantly expanding the potential of the material sources examined. Some materials can hardly be processed in low-tech and improvised labs (e.g., aerogels). High-tech machinery can expand the designer’s potential for experimentation; therefore, the tinkering of a designer who enters a scientific laboratory for the first time is an ongoing work of assimilation of new notions that modify and expand the range of possible material experiments imaginable. Under these circumstances, the initial limitation perceived on a sensorial level due to the laboratory context can quickly be understood as empowered experimentation enhanced by the very same high-tech tools. Designers might feel disoriented in a lab, especially if they lack previous experience. For this reason, as also reported by other designers who had a prolonged stay in scientific labs, following the work of colleagues and having informal conversations with them is essential to properly learn how to move around the laboratory and progress in the research (Sawa, Reference Sawa2016; Stefanova, Reference Stefanova and Chakrabarti2021; Crawford, Reference Crawford2023). By the way, this is not an unusual condition, since labs often foresee shared workspaces, configured as more similar to a makerspace than a private design studio. Being able to see and “copy” the tricks of scientists allows the designer to acquire experiential knowledge, generally understood as a way of knowing and understanding through direct personal engagement, addressed as a key aspect to be integrated into cross-disciplinary collaborative practice (Nimkulrat et al., Reference Nimkulrat, Groth, Tomico and Valle-Noronha2020). That of the designers in lab is a transdisciplinary work, interacting daily with STEM professionals. They not only receive continuous feedback and validation from a scientific audience but also embrace the methods and languages of scientific practice, striving to be understood by their colleagues. This fundamental step helps biodesigners acquire a more practical approach through learning by doing, making Biodesign a less speculative practice. Designers’ prior knowledge of the material or lab environment can significantly facilitate the research process; if this is not a prior condition, a few months of basic learning must be considered depending on the project/material to be addressed. Despite a less spontaneous and immediate start, a designer in lab might achieve more sophisticated outcomes, empowered by lab setups and colleagues’ feedback. However, for the author, having been able to test the different nuances that a biodesigner can take on was fundamental to understand that neither of these two figures is more correct or in any way better than the other. Depending on the project’s objective, certain designer roles and methods best serve the project’s purpose. For instance, the research and the development of the bioreceptive material within RTD2 required scientific theoretical support to guide design activities in creating bioreceptive prototypes, later tested in the natural environment. In this case, a laboratory is only needed when analysing the results. In contrast, RTDs 3 and 4 would not have produced similar results outside of a scientific laboratory throughout the entire research period. The key factor seems to be acquiring an aptitude beyond specific knowledge. Possibly this aptitude might coincide with the mental elasticity that places the designer as a facilitator of connections among different concepts, skills and disciplines. For this reason, before stating that today we are already facing two different professional figures in Biodesign, it is more correct to start addressing different nuances within the possible activities of a biodesigner. However, this distinction may become necessary with the consolidation of practice and greater integration of design in scientific disciplines. These RTDs have confirmed that designers’ collaborations with life sciences professionals are powerful triggers capable of advancing the field of Biodesign with new and innovative material solutions, and that a designer can contribute significantly even in highly scientific environments.

Conclusions and impact statement

On the trajectory of Biodesign’s consolidation, this study highlights the different nuances that the biodesigner can take on, working in contexts of different scientific intensity. This gives space to every type of creative-expressive approach, as well as projects that require greater in-depth analysis and scientific validation. The latter, considering the importance of sustainability for Biodesign, is particularly valuable while evaluating the projects’ outcomes.

Designers are lifelong learners; this attitude is quintessential for hybrid professionals willing to operate in cross-displinary contexts, such as Biodesign. With the consolidation of the field, in addition to the democratisation of science, we are close to seeing a “designification” of it. With adequate preparation and the right opportunities, a designer can contribute positively to scientific research, even working in a transdisciplinary way as a designer in lab. The intuitive and creative design approach may cause some friction in this context; however, such designerly way of knowing can be beneficial when designers are involved in collaborations with scientific disciplines.

Data availability statement

Data availability does not apply to this article.

Acknowledgements

Special thanks to the Materials Design for Transition research group from Politecnico di Milano, headed by Professor Valentina Rognoli, whose feedback and inspirational discussions positively influenced the author’s doctoral research. Moreover, a special mention goes to all the experts and research groups who greatly supported and collaborated on the RTD phase: the DeForma team, Doc. Tania Contardo, the SilkLab research group, and the ElFo research group.

Financial support

This contribution resulted from the author’s doctoral research; the doctoral scholarship from Politecnico di Milano supported part of the work cited in this publication.

Competing interests

The author have no conflicts of interest to declare for this publication.

Ethics statement

Ethical approval and consent are not relevant to this article type.

Footnotes

2 A couple of examples of well-known and established biomakerspaces can be Genspace in New York (https://www.genspace.org/) and Waag in Amsterdam (waag.org/en/lab/open-wetlab).

3 A variant of the STEM educational approach including Arts (Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts, and Mathematics).

4 Retrieved on 12/04/2024 from: jlsteenwyk.com/arts.html

5 Eduardo Kac is well known for his bioart works, especially for creating organisms with new genetic attributes. Retrieved on 12/04/2024 from: www.ekac.org/transgenicindex.html

6 Retrieved on 12/04/2024 from: www.ekac.org/manifesto_whatbioartis.html

7 The emergence of courses and dedicated labs for Biodesign education seems to originate first in Western countries, quickly reaching a global audience. We can refer to IAAC, TU Delft, UAL and UoE in the UE; to Newcastle University, Royal College of Art London and UCL in the UK; MIT Media Lab and the Rhode Island School of Art and Design’s Nature Lab in the US; the Symbiotica Lab at the University of Western Australia – to name a few.

9 E.g., See the professional background of Susan Lee, Maurizio Montalti, Natsai Audrey Chieza or Damian Palin, to make a few examples.

10 Checked at biodesignjobs.com on 08/29/2023; 10/22/2023; 12/30/23; 04/13/2024. Hopefully, this data may change in the future when biotechnology and Biodesign become consolidated fields.

11 A selection of expert interviews is accessible on the website healing-materialities.design where part of the doctoral research is shared.

12 The term biotinkering addresses a tinkering activity dealing with biological matter, including living organisms.

13 Retrieved in December 2023 from: silklab.engineering.tufts.edu

14 Retrieved in July 2023 from: elfoproject.eu

15 The study was presented at European-mrs 2023 in Strasbourg, and a full paper is currently under review for further publication: Ferrarese F.M., Pollini B., Luzio A., Caironi M. (foreseen, 2025) Bacterial cellulose from Kombucha’s SCOBY as multipurpose material for fully edible electronics.

16 From the testimonies collected from a survey proposed to participants after the workshop (Pollini et al., Reference Pollini, Contardo, Paciotti and Rognoli2023).

References

Connections references

Diniz, N (2023) Bio-calibrated: tools and techniques of biodesign practices. Research Directions: Biotechnology Design 1, e10. https://doi.org/10.1017/btd.2023.4 Google Scholar

References

Adams, TE, Ellis, C and Jones, SH (2017) Autoethnography. In The International Encyclopedia of Communication Research Methods. John Wiley & Sons, Ltd, pp. 111. https://doi.org/10.1002/9781118901731.iecrm0011.Google Scholar
Aguilera, D and Ortiz-Revilla, J (2021) STEM vs. STEAM education and student creativity: A systematic literature review. Education Sciences 11(7), Article 7. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci11070331 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Archer, B (1995) The nature of research. Co-design. Available at http://archive.org/details/TheNatureOfResearch (accessed 13 January 2024).Google Scholar
Asgarali-Hoffman, SN and Hamidi, F (2021) Perspectives of bioartists and community lab organizers on working with living organisms. In Proceedings of the 2021 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems. New York, NY, USA: Association for Computing Machinery (CHI ’21), pp. 115. https://doi.org/10.1145/3411764.3445060.Google Scholar
Ayala Garcia, C and Rognoli, V (2017) The new aesthetic of DIY-materials. The Design Journal 20, 375389. https://doi.org/10.1080/14606925.2017.1352905.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Benyus, J (1997) Biomimicry: Innovation Inspired by Nature. New York, NY, USA: Harper Collins.Google Scholar
Binder, T and Brandt, E (2008) The design: Lab as platform in participatory design research. Codesign 4, 115129. https://doi.org/10.1080/15710880802117113 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bochner, A (2017) Heart of the matter: A mini-manifesto for autoethnography. International Review of Qualitative Research 10, 6780. https://doi.org/10.1525/irqr.2017.10.1.67 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Calvert, J and Schyfter, P (2017) What can science and technology studies learn from art and design? Reflections on ‘synthetic aesthetics’. Social Studies of Science 47(2), 195215. https://doi.org/10.1177/0306312716678488 CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Camere, S and Karana, E (2018) Fabricating materials from living organisms: An emerging design practice. Journal of Cleaner Production 186, 570584. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jclepro.2018.03.081.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carol, C (2013) Alive, new design frontiers, central saint martins. Available at https://www.arts.ac.uk/colleges/central-saint-martins/research-at-csm/alive-new-design-frontiers (accessed 13 January 2024).Google Scholar
Ciesielsk, M, Wolanik Boström, K, and Öhlander, M(2018) Observation methods. In Qualitative Methodologies in Organization Studies (pp. 3352). https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-65442-3_2 Google Scholar
Contardo, T, et al. (2018) May lichen biomonitoring of air pollution be used for environmental justice assessment? A case study from an area of N Italy with a municipal solid waste incinerator. Environmental Forensics 19, 112. https://doi.org/10.1080/15275922.2018.1519742.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crawford, A (2021) Practices in bio-design: design research through interdisciplinary collaboration. In Conference Paper, pp. 4152. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-16-0084-5_4 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crawford, A (2023) Designer’s Guide to Lab Practice. London: Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003363774.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
de Beer, J and Jain, V (2018) Inclusive innovation in biohacker spaces: the role of systems and networks. Technology Innovation Management Review 27. https://ssrn.com/abstract=3678222 Google Scholar
Delfanti, A (2012) Tweaking Genes in your Garage: Biohacking between Activism and Entrepreneurship. Innsbruck University Press, pp. 163177. https://doi.org/10.25969/mediarep/1967.Google Scholar
Desjardins, A, Tomico, O, Lucero, A, Cecchinato, ME and Neustaedter, C (2021) Introduction to the special issue on first-person methods in HCI. ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction 28(6), 37:137:12. https://doi.org/10.1145/3492342 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Driver, A, Peralta, C and Moultrie, J (2011) Exploring how industrial designers can contribute to scientific research. International Journal of Design 5, 1728.Google Scholar
Dunne, A and Raby, F. (2001) Design Noir: The Secret Life of Electronic Objects. London: Birkhauser Architecture.Google Scholar
Elsacker, E, et al. (2020) A comprehensive framework for the production of mycelium-based lignocellulosic composites. Science of The Total Environment 725, 138431. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.138431 CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Esat, R and Ahmed-Kristensen, S (2018) Classification of bio-design applications: Towards a design methodology. In 15th International Design Conference, pp. 10311042. https://doi.org/10.21278/idc.2018.0531 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ferruzca, M, Díaz, S and Davila, S (2022) Training A New Generation of Biodesigners for a Better Society. Design for Adaptation. Cumulus Detroit.Google Scholar
Figueroa, R and Carolina, P (2018) Bio-material probes: design engagements with living systems. Ph.D. thesis, Newcastle University. Available at http://theses.ncl.ac.uk/jspui/handle/10443/4110 (accessed 18 April 2023).Google Scholar
Forlano, L (2021) Dispatches on humanity from a disabled cyborg. diid — disegno industriale industrial design 75, 77. https://doi.org/10.30682/diid7521g Google Scholar
Frayling, C (1993) Research in art and design. In RCA Research Papers 1, No. 1. London: Royal College of Art, pp. 15.Google Scholar
Gewin, V (2021) How to shape a productive scientist-artist collaboration. Nature 590(7846), 515519.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ginsberg, AD, et al. (2017) Synthetic Aesthetics: Investigating Synthetic Biology’s Designs on Nature. Cambridge, MA, USA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Grushkin, D (2021) What is biodesign? Issues in Science and Technology. https://issues.org/biodesign-challenge-synthetic-biology-grushkin/ (accessed 11 November 2023).Google Scholar
Guidetti, G, et al. (2022) Silk materials at the convergence of science, sustainability, healthcare, and technology. Applied Physics Reviews 9(1), 011302. https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0060344 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guillitte, O (1995) Bioreceptivity: A new concept for building ecology studies. Science of the Total Environment 167(1–3), 215220. https://doi.org/10.1016/0048-9697(95)04582-L CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jones, SH (2013) Handbook of Autoethnography. 1° edizione. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Kallergi, A (2008) Bioart on Display- Challenges and Opportunities of Exhibiting Bioart. The Netherlands; Leiden University.Google Scholar
Karana, E, Barati, B and Giaccardi, E (2020) Living artefacts: Conceptualizing livingness as a material quality in everyday artefacts. International Journal of Design 14, 3753.Google Scholar
Karana, E, Barati, B, Rognoli, V and Zeeuw van der Laan, A (2015) Material driven design (MDD): A method to design for material experiences. International Journal of Design 9(2), 3554.Google Scholar
Keulartz, J and Belt, H (2016) DIY-Bio – Economic, epistemological and ethical implications and ambivalences. Life Sciences, Society and Policy 12. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40504-016-0039-1 CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Koskinen, I (2023) Design, Empathy, Interpretation; Toward Interpretive Design Research. MIT Press. https://mitpress.mit.edu/9780262546928/design-empathy-interpretation/ CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Landrain, T, Meyer, M, Perez, AM and Sussan, R (2013) Do-it-yourself biology: Challenges and promises for an open science and technology movement. Systems and Synthetic Biology 7, 115126. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11693-013-9116-4 CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Langella, C (2019) Design & Scienza. Trento: Listlab.Google Scholar
Langella, C (2021) Design and science: A pathway for material design. In Materials Experience 2. Elsevier Science.Google Scholar
McComb, C and Jablokow, K (2022) A conceptual framework for multidisciplinary design research with example application to agent-based modeling. Design Studies 78, 101074. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.destud.2021.101074 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mejía, GM, et al. (2023) From researching to making futures: A design mindset for transdisciplinary collaboration. Interdisciplinary Science Reviews 48(1), 77108. https://doi.org/10.1080/03080188.2022.2131086 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Méndez, M (2013) Autoethnography as a research method: Advantages, limitations and criticisms. Colombian Applied Linguistics Journal 15(2), 279287.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Munro, AJ (2011) Autoethnography as a research method in design research at universities. 20/20 Design Vision 156.Google Scholar
Myers, W (2012) Bio Design: Nature, Science, Creativity. MoMA and Thames & Hudson.Google Scholar
Myers, W (2015) Bio Art: Altered Realities. London: Thames & Hudson.Google Scholar
Myers, W (2018) What are Biodesign and Bioart, and Why Should I Care? Lawrence Nature Lab, Edna W.; Co-Works, RISD; Exhibitions, Campus; Kim, David; Monge, Lucia; Myers, William; and Torchio, Angela, “Biodesign Exhibition Catalog” (2018). Biodesign: From Inspiration to Integration. 1. Available at: https://digitalcommons.risd.edu/naturelab_biodesign/publications/exhibitioncatalog_program/1/?utm_source=digitalcommons.risd.edu%2Fnaturelab_biodesign%2Fpublications%2Fexhibitioncatalog_program%2F1&utm_medium=PDF&utm_campaign=PDFCoverPages (accessed 13 January 2024).Google Scholar
Neustaedter, C and Sengers, P (2012) Autobiographical design: What you can learn from designing for yourself. Interactions 19, 2833. https://doi.org/10.1145/2377783.2377791.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nimkulrat, N, Groth, C, Tomico, O and Valle-Noronha, J (2020) Knowing together – experiential knowledge and collaboration. CoDesign 16(4), 267273. https://doi.org/10.1080/15710882.2020.1823995 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ofer, N and Alistar, M (2023) Felt experiences with Kombucha Scoby: Exploring first-person perspectives with living matter. In Proceedings of the 2023 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, pp. 118. https://doi.org/10.1145/3544548.3581276 Google Scholar
Oxman, N, Antonelli, P and Burckhardt, A (2020) Neri Oxman: Material Ecology. New York: Museum of Modern Art.Google Scholar
Parisi, S, Rognoli, V and Sonneveld, M (2017) Material tinkering. An inspirational approach for experiential learning and envisioning in product design education. The Design Journal 20, 1167S1184. https://doi.org/10.1080/14606925.2017.1353059 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Phillippi, J and Lauderdale, J (2017) A guide to field notes for qualitative research: Context and conversation. Qualitative Health Research 28, 104973231769710. https://doi.org/10.1177/1049732317697102 Google ScholarPubMed
Pollini, B (2023) Healing Materialities from a Biodesign perspective. Framing biodesigned materials and artefacts for the sustainability transition. [Doctoral thesis, Politecnico di Milano].Google Scholar
Pollini, B, Contardo, T and Paciotti, D (2022) Designing bioreceptivity. In 34th Conference of the Italian Lichenological Society (SLI), Pavia, Italy.Google Scholar
Pollini, B, Contardo, T, Paciotti, D, and Rognoli, V (2023) Bioreceptive Interfaces for Biophilic Urban Resilience. Nature Positive/Design for Transformation. Cumulus Antwerp.Google Scholar
Pollini, B, and Maccagnan, F (2017) Thinking with our hands. In Ambiente, E (ed.), Materia Rinnovabile/Renewable Matter N°19, December 2017/January 2018.Google Scholar
Pollini, B, Pietroni, L, Mascitti, J, and Paciotti, D (2020) Towards a new material culture. bio-inspired design, parametric modeling, material design, digital manufacture. In Perriccioli, M, Rigillo, M, Russo Ermolli, S, Tucci, F (eds.), Design in the Digital Age. Technology, Nature, Culture. Bologna: Politecnica University Press, Maggioli editore, pp. 208212.Google Scholar
Pollini, B and Rognoli, V (2021) Early-stage material selection based on life cycle approach: Tools, obstacles and opportunities for design. Sustainable Production and Consumption 28, 11301139. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.spc.2021.07.014 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Redström, J (2017) Making Design Theory. Cambridge, MA, USA: MIT Press (Design Thinking, Design Theory).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Reichle, I (2009) Art in the Age of Technoscience. Vienna: Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-211-78161-6.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rognoli, V, Ayala-Garcia, C, and Pollini, B (2021) DIY recipes. Ingredients, processes and materials qualities. In Clèries, L, Rognoli, V, Solanki, S and Llorach, P (eds.), Material Designers. Boosting Talent Towards Circular Economies. Barcelona: Elisava School of Design and Engineering.Google Scholar
Rognoli, V, Pollini, B and Alessandrini, L (2021) Design materials for the transition towards post-Anthropocene. In Camocini, B and Vergani, F (eds.), From Human-Centered to More-Than-Human Design, Exploring the transition. Franco Angeli (pp. 101130).Google Scholar
Roshko, T (2010) The pedagogy of bio-design: methodology development. In DESIGN AND NATURE 2010, Pisa, Italy, pp. 545558. https://doi.org/10.2495/DN100491.Google Scholar
Roth, E (2021) A guide to DIYbio (updated 2021). Medium, 17 August. Available at https://thatmre.medium.com/a-guide-to-diybio-updated-2019-abd0956cdf74 (accessed 21 October 2023).Google Scholar
Rust, C (2004) Design enquiry: Tacit knowledge and invention in science. Design Issues 20(4), 7685. https://doi.org/10.1162/0747936042311959 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Saldaña, J (2016) The Coding Manual for Qualitative Researchers. SAGE.Google Scholar
Sawa, M (2016) The laboratory life of a designer at the intersection with algal biotechnology. arq: Architectural Research Quarterly 20(1), 6572.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Segarra, VA, Natalizio, B, Falkenberg, CV, Pulford, S and Holmes, RM (2018) STEAM: Using the arts to train well-rounded and creative scientists. Journal of Microbiology & Biology Education 19(1). https://doi.org/10.1128/jmbe.v19i1.1360 CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Seyfried, G, Pei, L and Schmidt, M (2014) European Do-It-Yourself (DIY) Biology: Beyond the hope, hype and horror: Insights & perspectives. BioEssays: News and Reviews in Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology 36. https://doi.org/10.1002/bies.201300149.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sharova, A, et al. (2020) Edible electronics: The vision and the challenge. Advanced Materials Technologies 6, 2000757. https://doi.org/10.1002/admt.202000757.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stefanova, A (2021) Practices in bio-design: design research through interdisciplinary collaboration. In Chakrabarti, A, et al. (eds.), Design for Tomorrow—Volume 3. Singapore: Springer (Smart Innovation, Systems and Technologies), pp. 4152. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-16-0084-5_4.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Świsłowski, P, et al. (2022) Mosses as a biomonitor to identify elements released into the air as a result of car workshop activities. Ecological Indicators 138, 108849. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.2022.108849.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tomico, O, Wakkary, R, and Andersen, K (2023) Living-with and designing-with plants. Interactions 30, 3034. https://doi.org/10.1145/3571589.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tomico, O, Winthagen, V and Heist, M (2012) Designing for, with or within: 1st, 2nd and 3rd person points of view on designing for systems. In 12 Proceedings of the 7th Nordic Conference on Human-Computer Interaction: Making Sense Through Design. https://doi.org/10.1145/2399016.2399045.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vaage, N (2017) Fringe biotechnology. BioSocieties 12, 109131. https://doi.org/10.1057/s41292-016-0033-0.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vaage, NS (2016) What ethics for bioart? NanoEthics 10(1), 87104. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11569-016-0253-6.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Varela, F and Shear, J (1999) First-person methodologies: What, why, how? Journal of Consciousness Studies 6(2–3), pp. 114.Google Scholar
Vijayakumar, V, Cogdell, C, Correa, I, et al. (2024) How do we grow a Biodesigner? Research Directions: Biotechnology Design. Published online 2024:14. https://doi.org/10.1017/btd.2024.1 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vijayakumar, V, Cogdell, C, Correa, I, Dade-Robertson, M, Danies, G, Edens, S, Forlano, L, George, J, Grushkin, D, Holbert, N, Hoover, R, Jalkh, H, Kisielewski, A, Obregon, C, Pirone, J, Polli, A, Scarpelli, A, Stukes, S, Ward, D, … Walker, J (2024) How do we grow a Biodesigner? Research Directions: Biotechnology Design 2, e2. https://doi.org/10.1017/btd.2024.1 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Walker, JT (2021) Biodesign education: For what, whom, and how? Biodesigned. Available at: https://www.biodesigned.org/justice-toshiba-walker/biodesign-education (accessed: 2 December 2023).Google Scholar
Walker, JT and Kafai, YB (2021) The biodesign studio: Constructions and reflections of high school youth on making with living media. British Journal of Educational Technology 52(3), 11161129. https://doi.org/10.1111/bjet.13081.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wightman, J and Pirone, J (2019) Building a biodesign curriculum. In Cumulus Conference - The Design After, Colombia.Google Scholar
Yetisen, AK, Davis, J, Coskun, AF, Church, GM and Yun, SH (2015) Bioart. Trends in Biotechnology 33(12), 724734. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tibtech.2015.09.011 CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Figure 0

Figure 1. Positioning of the different professionals and approaches discussed across creative and scientific practices.

Figure 1

Figure 2. Incremental stages of the process while using cellulose masks to create textures derived from different BC thicknesses.

Figure 2

Figure 3. Prototypes, transplants and first signs of spontaneous colonisation on bioreceptive materials.

Figure 3

Figure 4. From silk cocoons to material experimentation in the laboratory. The image in the centre shows a series of material samples produced by the author and stored for subsequent evaluation with colleagues.

Figure 4

Figure 5. Samples of developed materials suitable for edible electronics and material tinkering during the workshop.

Figure 5

Figure 6. Comparison between the four RTDs concerning methodologies, approaches and work environments.