Design for Emergency
How Digital Technologies Enabled an Open Design Platform to Respond to COVID-19
S. Colombo (TU Delft - Human-Centred Artificial Intelligence)
Estefania Chechade Ciliotta (Northeastern University)
Lucia Marengo (DocPlanner)
Houjiang Liu (The University of Texas at Austin)
Piero Molino (Predibase)
Paolo Ciuccarelli (Northeastern University)
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Abstract
In the COVID-19 pandemic, digital technologies (DT) supported the design and implementation of solutions addressing new needs and living conditions. We describe Design for Emergency, a digital open design platform developed to ideate solutions for people's fast-changing needs in the pandemic, to analyze how DT can affect human-centered design processes during emergencies. We illustrate how DT: i) helped quickly collect and analyse people's needs in different countries, visualize such data, and identify design directions and problem spaces; ii) facilitated the creation of a virtual network of stakeholders and an open-innovation digital platform; iii) inspired the ideation of solutions responding to people's changing needs and affected their implementation. We discuss the implications of adopting DT in designing for and during emergencies, as well as their current and future potential to promptly respond to emergency situations through a human-centered approach.