The Design Revolution Hits the Road

Photo: the Design Revolution Road Show on Flickr
Last night, in San Francisco, Emily Pilloton and her merry band of humanitarian-design crusaders hosted the official send-off for their Design Revolution Road Show, which will be touring the country in a vintage Airstream trailer between now and April. I am very sorry I wasn’t able to attend—the invite to the “parking lot party” touted a tantalizing trifecta of mobile food vendors: one taco truck, one pizza truck, and one cupcake truck. Fortunately, even if you can’t make it to any of the tour stops, Pilloton and company are posting copious photos and videos on their blog. In fact, the Road Show has already made three pre-kickoff stops, including one at Pilloton’s alma mater, Redwood High School.
One other piece of related news: Pilloton’s nonprofit, Project H Design, is in the running for a $50,000 grant from Pepsi to help launch Studio H, a design-build program in the poorest county in North Carolina. It’s a terrific idea, so be sure to take a moment to vote for Studio H here.
You can also watch a video about Studio H, “the country’s first design, vocation, and community-service program in a public high school,” after the jump.
Related: Read more about the revolution in Design Revolution: 100 Products That Empower People, from Metropolis Books. And be sure to check out Pilloton’s recent appearance on the Colbert Report.






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For those in the Baltimore/Washington area:
Emily will be at the Maryland Institute College of Art on March 11 during her road trip and MICA, along with the D:center Baltimore and Urbanite magazine, is hosting an interesting panel on the future of design practice.
DESIGN REVOLUTION: JOIN THE DEBATE
Thursday, March 11, 6 p.m., Falvey Hall, Brown Center, 1301 W. Mount Royal Ave. Admission is FREE.
Panelists include Emily Pilloton, founder, and Matthew Miller, project manager, of Project H Design; John Bielenberg, founder of Project M; and Julie Lasky, editor of Design Observer’s Change Observer section, which covers socially aware design.
Comment by Elizabeth Evitts Dickinson — February 8, 2010, @ 1:10 pm