Stone, Sally ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5406-139X (2022) Telling tales: design thinking through storytelling. TRACE Notes on Adaptive Reuse, 4. pp. 65-72. ISSN 2593-8002
|
Published Version
Available under License In Copyright. Download (4MB) | Preview |
Abstract
Stories are indispensable to human experience; they are instinctual, and we intuitively understand how they work.1 A well-told story can encourage people to look at a specific situation from a different angle - to place themselves in a different position. Storytelling is an effective strategy to encourage students to un- derstand the nature of the design problem that they are undertaking; it allows them to engage imagina- tion with research. It is an instrument not so much for solving problems as for finding them2, and the es- sence of design thinking is creative problem-solving3, so the relationship of narrative thinking to design thinking can be made through analogy.4 This paper documents a project completed by final year Master of Architecture students at the Manches- ter School of Architecture who used the practice of storytelling to generate a design proposal for the new use for a remodelled building. This approach pro- vided a means for the students to engage with the building in both the formal sense - that is with the ty- pology, morphology, materials and construction etc., and also with the more hidden meanings, such as the contentious heritage inherent within the building.
Impact and Reach
Statistics
Additional statistics for this dataset are available via IRStats2.