A Case Study in Iterative Design

Author(s):  
Pam Savage ◽  
Susan Pearsall
Keyword(s):  
2021 ◽  
Vol 2069 (1) ◽  
pp. 012076
Author(s):  
L Landuyt ◽  
S Lauwerys ◽  
S De Turck ◽  
M Steeman ◽  
N Van Den Bossche

Abstract Today, strict insulation requirements apply. Nevertheless, the inverse correlation of thermal conductivity with insulation thickness leads to decreasing energy savings with increasing insulation packages. Therefore, a balance between potential energy savings and environmental impact due to additional materials using Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) needs to be strived for. This balance is sought for a case study called ‘The Mobble’ i.e. a flexible, modular, and circular building system developed by a student team from Ghent University. Through an iterative design process supported by LCA, comfort and dynamic energy simulations efforts are made to design an energy-efficient and low impact module with an agreeable indoor environment. First, material choices are made based on LCA and the material impact of a 5-module home is calculated. Second, energy calculations are executed in Modelica/Dymola. For this, three possible energy reductions are explored: insulating the building, altering the working regime of the HVAC system and lowering the setpoint temperature while maintaining comfort by using personal comfort systems (PCS). The results support PCS as a possible energy conservation measure and indicate that reducing operational energy does not shift the environmental burden to the additional materials’ production. However, these environmental saving effects decrease as the operational share decreases.


Author(s):  
Rhea ALEXANDER ◽  
Sarah JONES ◽  
Vinay Kumar MYSORE

This case study explores building design competencies and a design-driven organizational culture within an American healthcare non-profit. With a staff are primarily from the healthcare space, as well as some in banking and sales, we look at how the staff has adapted to working within a design-driven organization. By applying iterative design methods and embracing innovation and uncertainty we observe how the organization’s founder has helped guide team members through a process of discomfort and vulnerability within an experimentally-driven and human-centered organization.Using interviews with employees and the founder at various points in new employee on-boarding processes we chart a transformational arc over six months. The learnings to share include both the universal and the particular: what are the core competencies to develop in all organizational members, and what are the specific and different ways competencies can take form. From building explicitly shared languages to facilitated sensemaking this case study offers an opportunity to share new and developing practices for embedding design-driven innovation and management practices in new fields and contexts.


Author(s):  
Pascal Malassigné ◽  
Audrey L. Nelson ◽  
Robert P Jensen ◽  
Thomas L. Amerson ◽  
Leah P. Rathvon

2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (22) ◽  
pp. 4727 ◽  
Author(s):  
Juana-Mariel Dávila-Vilchis ◽  
LAZ-Avilés ◽  
Juan Carlos Ávila Vilchis ◽  
Adriana H. Vilchis-González

This paper proposes a methodology from the conception to the manufacture of soft wearable devices (SWD). This methodology seeks to unify medical, therapeutic and engineering guidelines for research, development and innovation. The aforementioned methodology is divided into two stages (A and B) and four phases. Stage A only includes phase 1 to identify the main necessity for a patient that will define the target of its associated device. Stage B encompasses phases 2, 3 and 4. The development of three models (virtual, mathematical and experimental physical) of the required device is addressed in phase 2. Phase 3 concerns the control and manufacture of the experimental physical model (EPM). Phase 4 focuses on the EPM experimental validation. As a result of this methodology, 13 mobility, 11 usability and 3 control iterative design criteria for SWD are reported. Moreover, more than 50 products are provided on a technological platform with modular architectures that facilitate SWD diversification. A case study related to a soft mobilizer for upper limb rehabilitation is reported. Nevertheless, this methodology can be implemented in different areas and accelerates the transition from development to innovation.


2017 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
pp. 939-958 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sergej Chodarev ◽  
Jaroslav Porubän

In spite of its popularity, XML provides poor user experience and a lot of domain-specific languages can be improved by introducing custom, more humanfriendly notation. This paper presents an approach for design and development of the custom notation for existing XML-based language together with a translator between the new notation and XML. The approach supports iterative design of the language concrete syntax, allowing its modification based on users feedback. The translator is developed using a model-driven approach. It is based on explicit representation of language abstract syntax (metamodel) that can be augmented with mappings to both XML and the custom notation. We provide recommendations for application of the approach and demonstrate them on a case study of a language for definition of graphs.


Production ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 27 (0) ◽  
Author(s):  
Guillaume Thomann ◽  
Justine Coton ◽  
Marcel de Gois Pinto ◽  
Julien Veytizou ◽  
François Villeneuve

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