Wednesday, 17 October 2012

The Big Draw 2012

At the V&A for The Big Draw, I attended one of the seminars given by Heatherwick Studios.

The main theme was about the importance of sketching in order to structure your design thinking.

Guggenheim Bilbao - Frank Gehry
Quick sketches made with your client on site are a great visual shorthand that can be developed later in the studio. The challenge is to keep the energy of those initial sketches as the design goes through various iterations and refinement on drawing boards, computer and CAD systems.

Sketching elevations and floorplans, page layouts or wireframes conveys much information that would be lost if the same information was provided as a narrative. Sketches are easier for both the layman and expert to interpret and so understand the vision of the designer.

East Beach Cafe - Heatherwick Studio

And with the increasing number of competitions and awards that require a story arc, anecdotally, many designers are going back at the end of a project to retrospectively create that all important ‘back of the napkin’ sketch that inspired the project in the first place (with apologies to Renzo Piano).

The Shard - Renzo Piano

Now, where did I put my pencil…