Art and sustainability merge at the Lucerne School of Design, Film and Art Lucerne, where students challenge conventional approaches by innovating with materials like plant waste and exploring social themes. These projects showcase how design can be a tool for change rather than just consumption.
Explore more on sustainability with innovative approaches as Circulab’s circular economy principles to learn how waste can be significantly minimized.
Reimagining security with Chiara Aeschbacher
Designing Security for FLINTA* People by Chiara Aeschbacher addresses gender-specific violence using design for community empowerment. Her project focuses on intersectional-feminist approaches to creating secure environments, encouraging empowerment and prevention.

Sustainable creativity by Tiana Borcherding
Die Quittung, designed by Tiana Borcherding, invites students to reconsider their role within environmental networks. This project challenges traditional design processes and encourages a collective responsibility for sustainability.

Sabrina Brunner revives Swiss heritage
In Rustic Bern Ceramics, Sabrina Brunner brings new life to traditional Swiss crafts. She simplifies design principles, making heritage accessible while using stencilled engobe painting to pass knowledge across generations.

Noah Bühler‘s sensory sanctuary
Eingenistet, created by Noah Bühler, offers a refuge for autistic children. This biophilic design promotes inclusion, providing security and reducing stress among children aged 4 to 12 through a comforting sensory retreat.

Adjustable solutions by Sherine Keller
Sherine Keller’s Sitta+ addresses the needs of children with shorter statures using a 3D-printed adjustable chair system. This inclusive design aims to prevent stigmatisation and promote equality in educational settings.

Nadja Knuchel‘s modular privacy

Nadja Knuchel‘s Modular Partition Wall offers a versatile solution for open-plan living spaces. Using disassemblable spruce wood and cotton, these walls provide privacy while promoting sustainable consumption.
Local craftsmanship with Sinah-Moana Mainardi
Through 20944072, Sinah-Moana Mainardi explores local production with a handbag made entirely from regional materials. This self-experiment challenges global supply chains and showcases the value of local resources.

Bex Nitsch defies conventional design
Untamed Objects by Bex Nitsch challenges the patriarchal norms in design. These 3D-printed pieces explore freedom and diversity, highlighting the potential of Queer and multi-gender design expressions.

Nicolas Roseng critiques consumption
In From Consumption, Nicolas Roseng uses delivery cartons to comment on consumer behaviour and production inefficiencies. This project turns recycled cardboard into seating solutions, prompting reflection on consumption habits.

Jana Berit Seregi fosters communication
Share by Jana Berit Seregi seeks to address stress in nursing contexts. Sensory objects facilitate crucial conversations, fostering mental wellbeing and improving institutional interactions within educational settings.

Nicolas Zeller aids autonomy
Nicolas Zeller‘s Self-helping Hands tackles the issue of tremors in seniors, providing tangible solutions to enhance independence and quality of life through gently weighted instruments.

Jessica Zwahlen combats loneliness
Jessica Zwahlen‘s project Sen creates comforting objects to alleviate loneliness in youth. Through touch and warmth, these items provide emotional reassurance, linking design with personal wellbeing.

Noemi Curty reimagines remembrance
Noemi Curty utilizes florists’ waste to craft biodegradable urns in Kukka Urna, offering a poignant reflection on transience and remembrance, transforming floral remains into meaningful commemorative pieces.

For those interested in creative expressions using discarded materials, Rebecca Szeto’s paintbrush portraits beautifully highlight sustainability in art.
These students from the Lucerne School of Design, Film and Art demonstrate how design can go beyond aesthetics to address critical social and environmental issues, nurturing a future-proof society.
Source: dezeen.com
