Field Guide to Climate Design
Designers play a huge role in our daily lives. Look up and around, and you’ll see things we designed. Unfortunately, a lot of the things that we surround ourselves with and use on a daily basis cause a lot of harm to our planet and communities. Designers create ads that sell stuff we don’t need, made out of finite resources to be used once, twice, three times, and then get discarded (or break) so that people buy the next new thing and then repeat that same process. But I believe that if designers knew how to harness their skills in a better way, we could transform our jobs into roles that heal and renourish our world.
Observations from the intersection of design and the climate crisis
A Field Guide to Climate Design explores the intersections and interconnections between the design world and the climate crisis with a mission to empower all designers to become “climate designers,” even in the non-“green” jobs we find ourselves in every day.
We need to fundamentally redesign the design industry so that designers put climate at the core of their work. The Field Guide to Climate Design is a key component in helping us achieve this goal. It’s one piece in the puzzle that will help show others how their skills can play a huge role in taking climate action.
What can you take away from this book today that you could implement in your work tomorrow? What frameworks, resources, and questions resonate with you?
In cooperation with
Climate Designers and Matt McGillvray for the project
Field Guide to Climate Design