Design in the 21st century: technology and democracy
As in earlier decades, museums have continued to present industrial design to the public. Many museums specifically devoted to design were constructed, expanded, or remodeled during the 1980s and ’90s; examples include the Design Museum and the Victoria and Albert Museum, both in London, the museums of applied art in Frankfurt and Vienna, the Musée des Arts Décoratifs in Paris, and the Neue Sammlung (New Collection) in Munich.
Even more spectacular new museums featuring industrial design products were established in the 21st century, the most notable being the Glass Pavilion of the Toledo Museum of Art in Ohio, U.S., designed by Kazuyo Sejima and Ryue Nishizawa (opened 2006); the Mercedes Benz Museum in Stuttgart, Ger., designed by Ben van Berkel of UN Studio (opened 2006); and the Harley-Davidson Museum in Milwaukee, Wis., U.S., designed in 2006 by Jim Biber of Pentagram Architecture.
While museum buildings and exhibits lent a seriousness to the field of industrial design, the general public was increasingly obtaining firsthand experience with affordable designed artifacts through successful chains of specialty stores that concentrated on home furnishings, such as Williams-Sonoma, Pottery Barn, Crate and Barrel, IKEA, and the EXPO Design Centers created by Home Depot. Those stores owed an enormous debt to the design mogul Sir Terence Conran and his pioneering designs for the Habitat Stores (1964 and later).
Conran wanted his stores to promote affordable, attractive, and functional modern goods to the general public. His consistently well-designed displays and products prefigured contemporary efforts by manufacturers such as Apple to effectively retail their products within a compatibly designed space. Tim Kobe of the San Francisco architectural firm Eight Inc. designed the standard Apple computer stores from the earliest establishments in San Francisco (2001) to shopping malls and renovated buildings across the United States (2001–04), including larger new structures in Chicago (2003) and New York (2006). In part because of the success of these spaces, Kobe’s firm is planning and building similar standardized stores across the world for other firms. In all, these environments consistently present a company’s products in a way that is both ennobling, as in a museum, and approachable. In one particular, specially designed stores are more effective tools than design museums because the consumer can actually touch and take home the products on display.
The public’s increasing access to well-designed objects has been accompanied by a growing integration of technology into design. In part, this has been made possible by the wealth of new materials available to designers, from electronic liquid crystal displays to composites such as carbon fibre, which provides great strength despite its light weight. Since the 1980s, industrial designers have helped produce the small electronic appliances—including laptop computers, mobile telephones with video capabilities and GPS (Global Positioning System) devices, and iPods—that have permeated people’s lives around the world.