Some issues 
a.k.a wicked problems & 
opportunities 
Joint Design Masters Introduction course 
Aalto ARTS, Aalto University, autumn 2014 
Outi Kuittinen, Head of Co-creation 
Demos Helsinki, outi.kuittinen@demoshelsinki.fi, 
+358 50 326 55 82
Demos Helsinki 
Future-oriented, people-centric think tank studying megatrends and systemic change and 
transforming it into action of people, organisations and groups. 
Our key areas are Resource-smart Economy and Sustainable Lifestyles, and 
Democracy and capabilities of the 21st Century 
Our views, reports and experimentations are based on applied and applicable research, 
future studies and co-creation. 
We work with companies, start ups, ministries, the parliament, municipalities and other 
actors of the public sector as well as NGOs that are willing to look for new perspectives 
and renew themselves. 
Founded in 2005 by enthusiastic people. Politically independent, project-funded, legal 
form is NGO. We believe in people, openness and democracy.
think tanks 
• a group of people who apply research 
• strive to influence decision making 
• independent of institutions 
• usually non-profit 
• driven by an ideology, belief or a 
perception of human beings or society
three types of think tanks 
1. Politically 
affiliated think 
tanks 
Fabian Society (UK), 
E2 (FIN) 
renew political 
ideology, support 
political decision 
making 
Emphasise the 
importance of 
representative 
democracy and 
political parties 
2. Thematic 
think tanks 
Institute of Foreign 
Policy (FIN), World 
Watch Institute, 
OECD, EVA (FIN) 
gather and value 
information and data, 
enhance 
understanding of a 
theme 
Emphasise expert 
knowledge and 
insight, make 
research applicable 
3. Ecosystems 
for new ideas, 
“think and do 
tanks” 
Demos Helsinki 
(FIN), Young 
Foundation (UK) 
experiment new 
solutions, establish 
new institutions and 
financing schemes 
Emphasise 
competing ways of 
working and the need 
for new institutions 
and solutions 
(Mokka & Neuvonen 2011)
A Wicked problem 
1. The problem is not understood until after the 
formulation of a solution. 
2. Wicked problems have no stopping rule. 
3. Solutions to wicked problems are not right or 
wrong. 
4. Every wicked problem is essentially novel and 
unique. 
5. Every solution to a wicked problem is a 'one 
shot operation.' 
6. Wicked problems have no given alternative 
solutions.
Method of working 
Source: Demos Helsinki (2010). Well-being of the Metropolis
Issue 1: New Urban
The suburbia was a project that cut 
through every aspect of the society, 
redifining work, mobility, housing, 
CC: Paul Townsend 
space, food, commerce, private 
property, family, gender roles, 
generation roles, past time, culture... 
CC: James Vaughan 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Television_in_the_United_States#mediaviewer/File:Family_watching_television_
The project started well before: 
Futurama at 1939 New York World's Fair 
presented a possible model of the world 
20 years into the future (1959–1960) 
"Free-flowing movement of people and goods across our 
nation is a requirement of modern living and prosperity.” 
– Norman Bel Geddes 
Various actors from 
industry to social policy 
makers had interests in 
the project.
Work, mobility, housing, space, food, 
commerce, private property, family, 
gender roles, generation roles, past 
CC: Paul Townsend 
time, culture all have seen and will see 
change. 
CC: James Vaughan 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Television_in_the_United_States#mediaviewer/File:Family_watching_television_
New ”project” of the new urban is 
needed. 
The previous project felt good. 
It was about the prosperity and well-being 
of the nation, individuals, 
communities, economy, companies... 
The new urban needs to feel as good 
and be about all those things. 
But in a different world by different 
means, ways and natural resources.
THE URBAN NOW 
More than half of the buildings of 2050 are already 
built. A great part of those buildings faces large-scale 
renovations in near future. 
But buildings are not enough: 
”If everybody lived like in Hammarby Sjöstad [an 
new area famous for sustainable building], it would 
be an ecological catastrophe.” 
– Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden
MANY INTERLINKED ISSUES 
”We need investments for major renovations of the building stock. 
At the same time, retail space keeps emptying.” – City of Lahti 
”We want services that stay in the areas and improve them.” 
– a public housing company and developer 
”Less and less people walk in through the supermarkets’ doors. We need to 
come up with new ways to serve customers.” – a retailer 
”We have models to develop single buildings. 
But we need shared concepts to develop areas with different stakeholders.” 
– a construction company 
We would need people, companies or public actors to test our service with 
us to proof it really works. But getting pilots running is really hard. 
– a startup developing a sharing service
SMART RETRO – PROOF OF 
CONCEPT FOR SUSTAINABLE 
SERVICES IN BUILT ENVIRONMENT 
> SMART RETRO: Ret rof i t t ing sma r t serv i ce s into the 
exi s t ing bui l t envi ronment . 
> PROOF OF CONCEPT: Evidence whi ch e s t abl i she s tha t 
a n idea , i nvent i o n , p roce s s, o r bu s i ne s s model i s fea s i b le. 
There is an urgent need for rethinking refurbishment projects and 
sustainable service models. In the areas built in the mid 20th century, 
where many of the buildings are due to refurbishment and where local 
retail and service availability is declining, there is 
– potential to address sustainable lifestyle changes and revitalisation 
of local retail and service economies. 
Through including also the service environment in refurbishment 
projects, the sustainability of these neighbourhoods can be increased in 
terms of energy and resource performance, viability, sense of belonging 
and attractiveness.
SMART RETRO: CREATING 
THE MISSING LINK
SMART RETRO AREAS 
Stockholm case takes place in 
Bagarmossen. The area has 
post 1950’s built stock going 
under refurbishment and 
have retail and other 
commercial space requiring 
tenants. Most built stock is 
owned and managed by 
Stockholmshem that 
provides the site the project. 
Oslo case takes place in 
Kvadraturen, a central area is 
very rundown but with 
historical value. 
Lahti case takes place in 
downtown area, that has 
emptied from services and 
offices and where most built 
stock is in need of 
refurbishment. There will be a 
dedicated site for Innovation 
Camps of the project that is a 
city owned large property 
undergoing development and 
refurbishment in the coming 
years. It serves as an intense 
working ground of the new 
services and companies during 
the project. 
BAGAR-MOSSEN 
LAHTI KVADRATUREN
+ startups, local entrepreneurs, 
urban activists & residents 
Smart Retro project is 
• a prototype of a co-design process for smart, sustainable and 
attractive urban services and areas between city authorities, 
companies, startups, residents and citizen groups 
• a service development process for actual services provided by 
start-ups and more established companies 
• an exercise of foresight combining global drivers with local 
context and business models
MODEL & SCALE 
Concept a new 
business model for 
refurbishment through 
innovative 
regeneration. 
Plan to move and 
multiply the 
sustainable lifestyles 
service coalition and 
new model to a new 
site. 
CO-DESIGN 
Companies, startups, 
residents, municipal 
actors and other 
stakeholders develop 
the services together 
first on innovation 
camp, and then test 
them in the daily lives 
of the test areas. 
IDENTIFY best 
practices, models and 
close-to-market 
consumer services, 
startups and citizen 
initiatives in the Nordic 
Countries enabling 
sustainable lifestyles. 
Identify special qualities, 
needs and wishes of the 
areas. Analyze Nordic 
refurbishment models. 
BUILD SCENARIOS 
that depict alternative 
futures of built 
environmental 
evolution, lifestyle 
transitions and local 
service economy and 
communicate 
commercial and 
sustainability potential 
of services. 
HOW?
SMART RETRO SEES 
...renovations as an opportunity for improving quality of life 
instead of mere technological improvements 
...smart city retrofitted, not newly built 
...sustainable urban services seen as an opportunity to 
upscale the value of old neighbourhoods 
...startup acceleration as well as the new wave of citizen 
activity as catalyst for services and solutions of the future 
…new alliances (city, construction industry, real estate, retail, 
startups, inhabitants, citizen groups) and attitude of co-design 
as a tool for urban transitions 
...retrofitting as a fruitful new business opportunity for 
construction companies, real estate and retail
What it means for you as designers? 
Applying the designer’s tool kit of 
service design etc. in built 
environment and the life in it. 
”Will a young person use 3000 € for a 
design couch or a trip around the 
world? 
I want to see designers take part in 
designing the trips around the world.” 
And better and smarter everyday life.
Issue 2: Power of groups 
Lataa pdf: http://www.demoshelsinki.fi/
Other people define what we 
consider normal. 
How we eat, live and dress? 
How we behave in a student building? 
How much energy we use compared to our 
neighbours?
Groups improve our wellbeing: we feel 
useful, competent and needed 
Examples:, Time Banks, Volunteering, Elderly Care
According to behaviour change research, 
groups are utterly important when 
changing behaviour. 
Groups support us when engaging in 
something new. 
Examples: North Karelia Project & 
Restaurant Day
Citizen groups hold 
immense potential for 
generating change.
Typical way of thinking 
of groups
Residents of Helsinki
Men Women
Children and young people 
Working age 
Retired
Residents of 
Suburbs 
Downtown 
People
Rich 
Middle Class 
Poor
Other way of looking: 
competent groups
Dog 
owners
Dog 
owners Cross-country 
skiers
Cross-country 
skiers 
Dog 
owners 
Residents 
of 
Paloheinä
Cross-country 
skiers 
Dog 
owners 
Residents 
of 
Paloheinä 
SOK co-op 
members
Cross-country 
skiers 
Dog 
owners 
Residents 
of 
Paloheinä 
SOK co-op 
members 
Cyclists
Community of 
Geography 
Community of 
Interest 
Residents of Helsinki 
City Council City Administration
Method of working 
Source: Demos Helsinki (2010). Well-being of the Metropolis
Examples of communities of interest or competent groups at work in Helsinki 
Fillarikanava 
Cyclists and the city improving 
cycling in Helsinki. 
Vetoa ja Voimaa 
Improving the neighbourhood 
in a coalition of city officials, 
politicians, NGOs, church and 
business.
Community of interest: PriusChat
Peloton 
Business of 
Behaviour 
Change 
project: 
collabo-ration 
btw 
Biolan and 
Dodo ry
What it means for you as designers? 
Working WITH people. People as not mere 
informants but partners. 
A perception of people not based on 
stereotypes but research. 
Creating people-public-private-partnerships. 
Source: Demos Helsinki (2010). Well-being of the Metropolis
Issue 3: Carbon Bubble 
Source: Rolling Stone Magazine, July 2011
“New math of climate change” 
• 2 degrees of celsius temperature rise 
is what we can handle 
• 565 gigatons of carbon dioxide is 
what we can emit 
• 2795 gigatons of carbon dioxide is 
what there is in the assets of the 
energy companies 
• Read: Carbon Tracker’s Unburnable carbon report and 
Global warming’s terrifying new math by Bill McKibben
“’We’re not going to be able to 
burn it all.’ 
With those 10 words, Barack 
Obama uttered one of the most 
stunning, far-reaching statements 
ever made by a U.S. president. He 
also completely contradicted his 
own energy policy. Yet no one 
seemed to notice.” 
(Businessweek 26 Jun 2014)
Fossil fuel reserves represent 
trillions of dollars of wealth, both 
on the balance sheets of 
companies and in the asset 
valuations that inform investors 
the world over. 
Being unable to sell most of those 
reserves would translate into a 
massive markdown on this 
wealth, $28 trillion according to 
one estimate. (Businessweek 26 
Jun 2014)
Well, who would oppose that? 
You, too. 
Because it’s your pension at 
stake.
What it means for you as 
designers? 
You need to understand the systems 
level, study how it works, interwines 
and by what means and tools of can 
be changed. 
You will work with very different 
kinds of partners, environments and 
professionals from policy makers and 
civil servants to business that come 
from different backgrounds. 
E.g. Design for government.
Upstream Downstream 
Design Brief 
Attribution: Seungho Lee after 
Alastair Fuad-Luke, Aalto University
Upstream Downstream 
Design Brief 
Attribution: Alastair Fuad-Luke, 
Aalto University
Problem 
Definition 
Cost 
Policy Design Implementation Evaluation 
Time 
Conventional approach 
New approach 
Attribution: Sungwon 
Yoon, KIDP
”The intro makes the students to understand the shift in the study 
objectives from undergraduate to master studies with a changing 
emphasis from form to content, from product to process, from 
design along a brief to designing briefs, from single discipline to 
multidisciplinary and from knowledge reception and digestion to 
active competence acquisition and generation. 
The intro introduces existing and emerging design practices 
driven by contemporary societal challenges.” 
To succeed in this and to solve any 
wicked problem, 
you need stronger research 
understanding and skills.
Thank you! 
Outi Kuittinen, Head of Co-creation 
Demos Helsinki 
outi.kuittinen@demoshelsinki.fi 
www.demoshelsinki.fi 
slideshare.net/demoshelsinki 
facebook.com/groups/8838070791/ 
flickr.com/photos/demoshelsinki 
smartretro.demoshelsinki.fi 
www.peloton.me www.pelotonclub.me

Some issues a.k.a wicked problems & opportunities for designers at Aalto Design MA intro course

  • 1.
    Some issues a.k.awicked problems & opportunities Joint Design Masters Introduction course Aalto ARTS, Aalto University, autumn 2014 Outi Kuittinen, Head of Co-creation Demos Helsinki, [email protected], +358 50 326 55 82
  • 2.
    Demos Helsinki Future-oriented,people-centric think tank studying megatrends and systemic change and transforming it into action of people, organisations and groups. Our key areas are Resource-smart Economy and Sustainable Lifestyles, and Democracy and capabilities of the 21st Century Our views, reports and experimentations are based on applied and applicable research, future studies and co-creation. We work with companies, start ups, ministries, the parliament, municipalities and other actors of the public sector as well as NGOs that are willing to look for new perspectives and renew themselves. Founded in 2005 by enthusiastic people. Politically independent, project-funded, legal form is NGO. We believe in people, openness and democracy.
  • 3.
    think tanks •a group of people who apply research • strive to influence decision making • independent of institutions • usually non-profit • driven by an ideology, belief or a perception of human beings or society
  • 4.
    three types ofthink tanks 1. Politically affiliated think tanks Fabian Society (UK), E2 (FIN) renew political ideology, support political decision making Emphasise the importance of representative democracy and political parties 2. Thematic think tanks Institute of Foreign Policy (FIN), World Watch Institute, OECD, EVA (FIN) gather and value information and data, enhance understanding of a theme Emphasise expert knowledge and insight, make research applicable 3. Ecosystems for new ideas, “think and do tanks” Demos Helsinki (FIN), Young Foundation (UK) experiment new solutions, establish new institutions and financing schemes Emphasise competing ways of working and the need for new institutions and solutions (Mokka & Neuvonen 2011)
  • 5.
    A Wicked problem 1. The problem is not understood until after the formulation of a solution. 2. Wicked problems have no stopping rule. 3. Solutions to wicked problems are not right or wrong. 4. Every wicked problem is essentially novel and unique. 5. Every solution to a wicked problem is a 'one shot operation.' 6. Wicked problems have no given alternative solutions.
  • 6.
    Method of working Source: Demos Helsinki (2010). Well-being of the Metropolis
  • 7.
  • 8.
    The suburbia wasa project that cut through every aspect of the society, redifining work, mobility, housing, CC: Paul Townsend space, food, commerce, private property, family, gender roles, generation roles, past time, culture... CC: James Vaughan http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Television_in_the_United_States#mediaviewer/File:Family_watching_television_
  • 9.
    The project startedwell before: Futurama at 1939 New York World's Fair presented a possible model of the world 20 years into the future (1959–1960) "Free-flowing movement of people and goods across our nation is a requirement of modern living and prosperity.” – Norman Bel Geddes Various actors from industry to social policy makers had interests in the project.
  • 10.
    Work, mobility, housing,space, food, commerce, private property, family, gender roles, generation roles, past CC: Paul Townsend time, culture all have seen and will see change. CC: James Vaughan http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Television_in_the_United_States#mediaviewer/File:Family_watching_television_
  • 11.
    New ”project” ofthe new urban is needed. The previous project felt good. It was about the prosperity and well-being of the nation, individuals, communities, economy, companies... The new urban needs to feel as good and be about all those things. But in a different world by different means, ways and natural resources.
  • 12.
    THE URBAN NOW More than half of the buildings of 2050 are already built. A great part of those buildings faces large-scale renovations in near future. But buildings are not enough: ”If everybody lived like in Hammarby Sjöstad [an new area famous for sustainable building], it would be an ecological catastrophe.” – Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden
  • 13.
    MANY INTERLINKED ISSUES ”We need investments for major renovations of the building stock. At the same time, retail space keeps emptying.” – City of Lahti ”We want services that stay in the areas and improve them.” – a public housing company and developer ”Less and less people walk in through the supermarkets’ doors. We need to come up with new ways to serve customers.” – a retailer ”We have models to develop single buildings. But we need shared concepts to develop areas with different stakeholders.” – a construction company We would need people, companies or public actors to test our service with us to proof it really works. But getting pilots running is really hard. – a startup developing a sharing service
  • 14.
    SMART RETRO –PROOF OF CONCEPT FOR SUSTAINABLE SERVICES IN BUILT ENVIRONMENT > SMART RETRO: Ret rof i t t ing sma r t serv i ce s into the exi s t ing bui l t envi ronment . > PROOF OF CONCEPT: Evidence whi ch e s t abl i she s tha t a n idea , i nvent i o n , p roce s s, o r bu s i ne s s model i s fea s i b le. There is an urgent need for rethinking refurbishment projects and sustainable service models. In the areas built in the mid 20th century, where many of the buildings are due to refurbishment and where local retail and service availability is declining, there is – potential to address sustainable lifestyle changes and revitalisation of local retail and service economies. Through including also the service environment in refurbishment projects, the sustainability of these neighbourhoods can be increased in terms of energy and resource performance, viability, sense of belonging and attractiveness.
  • 15.
    SMART RETRO: CREATING THE MISSING LINK
  • 16.
    SMART RETRO AREAS Stockholm case takes place in Bagarmossen. The area has post 1950’s built stock going under refurbishment and have retail and other commercial space requiring tenants. Most built stock is owned and managed by Stockholmshem that provides the site the project. Oslo case takes place in Kvadraturen, a central area is very rundown but with historical value. Lahti case takes place in downtown area, that has emptied from services and offices and where most built stock is in need of refurbishment. There will be a dedicated site for Innovation Camps of the project that is a city owned large property undergoing development and refurbishment in the coming years. It serves as an intense working ground of the new services and companies during the project. BAGAR-MOSSEN LAHTI KVADRATUREN
  • 17.
    + startups, localentrepreneurs, urban activists & residents Smart Retro project is • a prototype of a co-design process for smart, sustainable and attractive urban services and areas between city authorities, companies, startups, residents and citizen groups • a service development process for actual services provided by start-ups and more established companies • an exercise of foresight combining global drivers with local context and business models
  • 18.
    MODEL & SCALE Concept a new business model for refurbishment through innovative regeneration. Plan to move and multiply the sustainable lifestyles service coalition and new model to a new site. CO-DESIGN Companies, startups, residents, municipal actors and other stakeholders develop the services together first on innovation camp, and then test them in the daily lives of the test areas. IDENTIFY best practices, models and close-to-market consumer services, startups and citizen initiatives in the Nordic Countries enabling sustainable lifestyles. Identify special qualities, needs and wishes of the areas. Analyze Nordic refurbishment models. BUILD SCENARIOS that depict alternative futures of built environmental evolution, lifestyle transitions and local service economy and communicate commercial and sustainability potential of services. HOW?
  • 19.
    SMART RETRO SEES ...renovations as an opportunity for improving quality of life instead of mere technological improvements ...smart city retrofitted, not newly built ...sustainable urban services seen as an opportunity to upscale the value of old neighbourhoods ...startup acceleration as well as the new wave of citizen activity as catalyst for services and solutions of the future …new alliances (city, construction industry, real estate, retail, startups, inhabitants, citizen groups) and attitude of co-design as a tool for urban transitions ...retrofitting as a fruitful new business opportunity for construction companies, real estate and retail
  • 20.
    What it meansfor you as designers? Applying the designer’s tool kit of service design etc. in built environment and the life in it. ”Will a young person use 3000 € for a design couch or a trip around the world? I want to see designers take part in designing the trips around the world.” And better and smarter everyday life.
  • 21.
    Issue 2: Powerof groups Lataa pdf: http://www.demoshelsinki.fi/
  • 22.
    Other people definewhat we consider normal. How we eat, live and dress? How we behave in a student building? How much energy we use compared to our neighbours?
  • 23.
    Groups improve ourwellbeing: we feel useful, competent and needed Examples:, Time Banks, Volunteering, Elderly Care
  • 24.
    According to behaviourchange research, groups are utterly important when changing behaviour. Groups support us when engaging in something new. Examples: North Karelia Project & Restaurant Day
  • 25.
    Citizen groups hold immense potential for generating change.
  • 26.
    Typical way ofthinking of groups
  • 27.
  • 28.
  • 29.
    Children and youngpeople Working age Retired
  • 30.
    Residents of Suburbs Downtown People
  • 31.
  • 32.
    Other way oflooking: competent groups
  • 33.
  • 34.
  • 35.
    Cross-country skiers Dog owners Residents of Paloheinä
  • 36.
    Cross-country skiers Dog owners Residents of Paloheinä SOK co-op members
  • 37.
    Cross-country skiers Dog owners Residents of Paloheinä SOK co-op members Cyclists
  • 38.
    Community of Geography Community of Interest Residents of Helsinki City Council City Administration
  • 39.
    Method of working Source: Demos Helsinki (2010). Well-being of the Metropolis
  • 40.
    Examples of communitiesof interest or competent groups at work in Helsinki Fillarikanava Cyclists and the city improving cycling in Helsinki. Vetoa ja Voimaa Improving the neighbourhood in a coalition of city officials, politicians, NGOs, church and business.
  • 41.
  • 42.
    Peloton Business of Behaviour Change project: collabo-ration btw Biolan and Dodo ry
  • 43.
    What it meansfor you as designers? Working WITH people. People as not mere informants but partners. A perception of people not based on stereotypes but research. Creating people-public-private-partnerships. Source: Demos Helsinki (2010). Well-being of the Metropolis
  • 44.
    Issue 3: CarbonBubble Source: Rolling Stone Magazine, July 2011
  • 45.
    “New math ofclimate change” • 2 degrees of celsius temperature rise is what we can handle • 565 gigatons of carbon dioxide is what we can emit • 2795 gigatons of carbon dioxide is what there is in the assets of the energy companies • Read: Carbon Tracker’s Unburnable carbon report and Global warming’s terrifying new math by Bill McKibben
  • 46.
    “’We’re not goingto be able to burn it all.’ With those 10 words, Barack Obama uttered one of the most stunning, far-reaching statements ever made by a U.S. president. He also completely contradicted his own energy policy. Yet no one seemed to notice.” (Businessweek 26 Jun 2014)
  • 47.
    Fossil fuel reservesrepresent trillions of dollars of wealth, both on the balance sheets of companies and in the asset valuations that inform investors the world over. Being unable to sell most of those reserves would translate into a massive markdown on this wealth, $28 trillion according to one estimate. (Businessweek 26 Jun 2014)
  • 48.
    Well, who wouldoppose that? You, too. Because it’s your pension at stake.
  • 49.
    What it meansfor you as designers? You need to understand the systems level, study how it works, interwines and by what means and tools of can be changed. You will work with very different kinds of partners, environments and professionals from policy makers and civil servants to business that come from different backgrounds. E.g. Design for government.
  • 50.
    Upstream Downstream DesignBrief Attribution: Seungho Lee after Alastair Fuad-Luke, Aalto University
  • 51.
    Upstream Downstream DesignBrief Attribution: Alastair Fuad-Luke, Aalto University
  • 52.
    Problem Definition Cost Policy Design Implementation Evaluation Time Conventional approach New approach Attribution: Sungwon Yoon, KIDP
  • 53.
    ”The intro makesthe students to understand the shift in the study objectives from undergraduate to master studies with a changing emphasis from form to content, from product to process, from design along a brief to designing briefs, from single discipline to multidisciplinary and from knowledge reception and digestion to active competence acquisition and generation. The intro introduces existing and emerging design practices driven by contemporary societal challenges.” To succeed in this and to solve any wicked problem, you need stronger research understanding and skills.
  • 54.
    Thank you! OutiKuittinen, Head of Co-creation Demos Helsinki [email protected] www.demoshelsinki.fi slideshare.net/demoshelsinki facebook.com/groups/8838070791/ flickr.com/photos/demoshelsinki smartretro.demoshelsinki.fi www.peloton.me www.pelotonclub.me