Richard Larsen
About
Service designer from Sandhurst, Berkshire, UK. Studied for an undergraduate degree in product design at Brunel University prior to attending the RCA. Worked with SONY and Forum for the Future and showcased the result at the Design Museum in the “the Future is Here” exhibition.
At the RCA, project partners have included Camden Council, MODAL Systems and most recently the United Nations Development Programme’s City Experiment Fund.
Also attended the Behavioural Economics and Decision Making elective at London Business School.
Degree Details
Statement
It’s no secret that design is largely about people. If you were to look down at the vast webs of relationships and communications, services and systems, that are our cultures and societies you would see that they consist mostly of people. Each with motives and goals of their own; hundreds, thousands, millions of pieces moving individually, and all together. If we can understand the realities of one person’s life, and their individual motives - their fears and their hopes - then we’ve made a good start in understanding the larger context in which they exist. The systems they influence, and those that influence them. From this understanding comes the recognition of real problem spaces, and routes to effective solutions.
I am interested in designing for social issues, with a focus on inclusivity, equity and environmental change. Often (arguably all the time) these issues exist inside a larger, more complex set of circumstances, so a good understanding of systems thinking also feels essential to my interests and skillset. Through my elective module at the London Business School I’ve also developed a further interest in behavioural science and how it can contribute to the discipline of design and understanding of a wider system.
The focus for my final project has been about understanding the scope of service design in large systems, making it an amalgamation of multiple perspectives, geographies and people.
Along with Aditi Soni (also RCA Service Design), I have been looking at the scope of shaping the structure of innovation for future ready cities through UNDP's City Experiment Fund. This is a fairly new initiative that seeks to make sense of and address complex issues playing out in cities - including impacts of migration, climate change, and inequality - by working in the intersection of innovative methods and technologies. Our purpose is to shape and optimise the process of the programme in order to provide more agency to the change makers for implementing innovation and embracing experimentation practices in their respective geographies.
Learning Pods
Learning Pods is a road map to build a community of practice for knowledge around systems thinking. With the United Nations Development Programme and their City Experiment Fund initiative, we explored continued learning in country offices for growing organisational capability by a series of tools and interventions to embed a learning infrastructure within internal programmes.