User Info
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| My Groups: | AskNature |
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Connected with 6 organizations
Connected with 31 people
Connected with 2 resources
Connected with 0 solutions
Connected with 0 jobs
Connected with 0 events
Connected with 0 wikipages
Areas of Focus
Recycling and Reuse
(2586 people) | Infrastructure
(993 people) | Industrial Ecology
(781 people) | Local Food Systems
(2853 people) | Natural Capitalism
(2460 people) | Environmental Monitoring
(980 people) | Business Firm and Organization Sustainability
(3020 people) | Life Cycle Assessment
(1167 people) | Global Food Supply and Sustainability
(2435 people) | Sustainable Building
(3010 people) | Ecological Economics
(2345 people) | Environmental Accounting
(866 people) | Urban Ecology
(1648 people) | Consumption and Green Consumers
(2200 people) | Art and Sculpture
(1680 people) | Ecolabeling and Certification
(1237 people) | Arts Education
(1597 people) | Sustainable Communities
(4066 people) | Sustainable Urban and Regional Planning
(1926 people) | Responsible Business Practices
(2971 people) | Ecosystem Services
(1325 people) | Sustainable Production
(2465 people) | Internet
(2552 people) | Hunger and Food Security
(1324 people) | Women's Health
(1189 people) | Urban Revitalization
(1184 people) | Sustainable Materials
(2033 people)
About
I explore the intersection of design, sustainability and business. In other words: I want to create things that benefit both people and the world. Trained in all three disciplines and with hands-on experience with a range of complex projects, I’ve acted as a boundary-spanner, cross-disciplinary designer, art director, project manager, producer and artist.
I apply my experience as a designer to problem solving, drawing from a deep toolkit: from pencils and shop tools to systems thinking and dialogue. I frequently hear what others at the table don’t pick up, integrate, synthesize and clarify ideas, critique carefully and think strategically.
Details: http://barkingcrickets.org
Studio: http://aylanto.com
Words: http://worldchanging.com
Pictures: http://flickr.com/photos/dawn/
.. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..
"As a designer, Danby's goals are down to earth and practical: to develop environmentally sustainable systems and products that change the way we experience the things around us."
(Julia Dault put it nicely.)
Dawn holds a design degree from the Rhode Island School of Design (2000), and an MBA in Sustainable Business from the Bainbridge Graduate Institute (BGI) (2007). She apprenticed in green building and policy with the Fisk-Vittori team at the Center for Maximum Potential Building Systems (CMPBS), and in furniture design with Macek Furniture. She often collaborates with international artist Noel Harding on Windsor, Ontario's Green Corridor initiative, where she helped teach an interdisciplinary course at the University of Windsor. She designed a $3.5M tree-covered, wind-powered pedestrian bridge on the US-Canada border, has developed closed-loop manufacturing strategies for a leading outdoor footwear manufacturer, and helped establish a public art master plan for a major american airport.
Dawn has been a contributor to Worldchanging since just after it began, connected by luck, geography and circumstance during the early Viridian heyday. She's a co-author of Worldchanging: A Users Guide for the 21st Century, and has spoken at TEDGlobal 2005 (Oxford UK), Subtle Technologies (Toronto), and Unilever (Sao Paulo). A Canadian liaison for the o2 Global Sustainable Design Network (Toronto/Ontario), she also researches and maintains the sustainable/design/portal as a resource site for product designers.
Other hats: secret identity as a medical illustrator for numerous books and journals, specializing in women's health; former and future art-maker and singer.
Dawn has recently moved from Toronto to the San Francisco Bay Area. Aylanto, her little design consultancy, is named after the ailanthus altissima, best of the urban ruderal species. Invasive, heatseeking, alley-dwelling and concrete-devouring, they delight in inhabiting and remediating a broken landscape.
I apply my experience as a designer to problem solving, drawing from a deep toolkit: from pencils and shop tools to systems thinking and dialogue. I frequently hear what others at the table don’t pick up, integrate, synthesize and clarify ideas, critique carefully and think strategically.
Details: http://barkingcrickets.org
Studio: http://aylanto.com
Words: http://worldchanging.com
Pictures: http://flickr.com/photos/dawn/
.. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..
"As a designer, Danby's goals are down to earth and practical: to develop environmentally sustainable systems and products that change the way we experience the things around us."
(Julia Dault put it nicely.)
Dawn holds a design degree from the Rhode Island School of Design (2000), and an MBA in Sustainable Business from the Bainbridge Graduate Institute (BGI) (2007). She apprenticed in green building and policy with the Fisk-Vittori team at the Center for Maximum Potential Building Systems (CMPBS), and in furniture design with Macek Furniture. She often collaborates with international artist Noel Harding on Windsor, Ontario's Green Corridor initiative, where she helped teach an interdisciplinary course at the University of Windsor. She designed a $3.5M tree-covered, wind-powered pedestrian bridge on the US-Canada border, has developed closed-loop manufacturing strategies for a leading outdoor footwear manufacturer, and helped establish a public art master plan for a major american airport.
Dawn has been a contributor to Worldchanging since just after it began, connected by luck, geography and circumstance during the early Viridian heyday. She's a co-author of Worldchanging: A Users Guide for the 21st Century, and has spoken at TEDGlobal 2005 (Oxford UK), Subtle Technologies (Toronto), and Unilever (Sao Paulo). A Canadian liaison for the o2 Global Sustainable Design Network (Toronto/Ontario), she also researches and maintains the sustainable/design/portal as a resource site for product designers.
Other hats: secret identity as a medical illustrator for numerous books and journals, specializing in women's health; former and future art-maker and singer.
Dawn has recently moved from Toronto to the San Francisco Bay Area. Aylanto, her little design consultancy, is named after the ailanthus altissima, best of the urban ruderal species. Invasive, heatseeking, alley-dwelling and concrete-devouring, they delight in inhabiting and remediating a broken landscape.
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