Human Centered Design
Solving problems, creating opportunities, designing an ever-better future for people.

What
In recent years, we have designed and created quite a few things: just under a hundred websites, an outdoor seating system, five printed magazines, seven digital magazines, an indoor lamp and three outdoor lamps, a gazebo for organic markets, a modular micro-house that can accommodate up to four people (six in emergencies), four TV program formats and a web fiction series, seven shapes of bread and six of pasta.
And more: a wooden window frame kit system, a standing catering plate, 4 vertical social networks, a business model for 30 startups, a data center, a bookstore and an internet café, a coffee shop and 3 restaurants, furniture for 5 offices and a coworking space, a domestic system for recovering fallen leaves as fuel.
And also: 5 office tables, a folding table for events, a work-bench that can be dismantled in 3 minutes, a modular workstation for mobile workers, a modular notebook and an academy diary, four business games, the branding of 30 companies, 13 events, 20 software applications, including 5 for mobile devices, over 200 recipes, and a proofing chamber for bread making.
How and why
In short, we see design as a continuum in which there is no real boundary between physical and virtual, digital and analog, product and service. A continuum in which we operate by applying design thinking and service design with advanced methods and techniques derived from years of design and implementation experience, using the technologies available.
