From Melbourne’s connection to the Yarra River through to climate change and waste, this year’s program for Melbourne Design Week is asking how design can influence social good.
Going into its third year, the 2019 Melbourne Design Week program is extensive, but don’t let the quantity be perceived as overriding quality. There is a substance to the topics being covered this year that dive much deeper than in years past.
The overarching theme for this year’s Melbourne Design Week is Design Experiments, which then asks the question ‘how can design shape the future?’ This lofty sentiment takes the scope and lens of Australian design and opens it out to the world at large and looks to showcase how design can have an impact.
For all passionate design lovers we suggest going through the website but at a glance, there are five thematic pillars that punctuate the 10-day event.
Climate change and pollution are up there as some of the biggest moral dilemmas facing our planet today. But solving these problems will take creativity and radical thought. Under The War on Waste banner, several events have been curated in response including an exhibition featuring products made from waste materials. Other highlights include the Toxic City? Symposium presented in partnership with The New York Times.
Melbourne is shaped by the Yarra River but has long been forgotten by white settlement. This series of programming, presented by Open House Melbourne looks to reconnect to the historical and significance of the Yarra, reflecting on its importance to local indigenous peoples and posing questions around how design can reinstate the community’s relationship with the river. Event highlights include several river talks that will take place afloat on the Yarra. Another key event is a talk around Fishermans Bend.

Watering the Garden talk will look at water in the Royal Melbourne Botanic Gardens. Photo by Adrian Vittorio.
Materials themselves are big players in the global sustainability ecosystem. From synthetics to the rise of natural materials and a look at the production and supply chains, this pillar explores how new ways of looking at materials can have a bigger knock-on effect than what might be expected. Highlights include a keynote talk in the Geelong Gallery by Dale Hardiman (Dowel Jones) on material experimentation. Studio Edwards will also present a follow on event from last year’s plasticity with an exhibition this year titled Elasticity.
One of design’s roles is to prepare for the future. As design shapes so much of what is visible and invisible, this stream of events looks into the many ways that designers are crossing boundaries with science, technology and culture to create a better future. Highlights include a keynote by world-renowned digital media artist Refik Anadol. Portable will also present a talk on it’s the Future of Death and Ageing in Australia report.
The final thematic series of events is around inclusive cities. As our urban environments become ever more populated designers, architects and city-makers will need to respond. From affordable housing to gender diversity this series engages with topics that every citizen can relate to.

McIntyre Drive Social Housing Altona as part of How do we build the next generation of affordable housing? Photo by Trevor Mein.
Melbourne Design Week will run from Thursday 14 – Sunday 24 March 2019. Stay tuned for other events to be announced with Indesign.
Want more design news? Join our mailing list.
INDESIGN is on instagram
Follow @indesignlive
A searchable and comprehensive guide for specifying leading products and their suppliers
Keep up to date with the latest and greatest from our industry BFF's!
In the first instalment of our three-part series exploring what it means to sit your best, we pose the question to Gray Puksand’s Dale O’Brien, who discusses the importance of ease and majority rule when it comes to sitting and reveals why specifying a task chair is not unlike choosing a Volvo.
Natural stone shapes the interiors of Billyard Avenue, a luxury apartment development in Sydney’s Elizabeth Bay designed by architecture and design practice SJB. Here, a curated selection of stone from Anterior XL sets the backdrop for the project’s material language.
In the last instalment of our three-part performance seating series, Alex Bain from Architectus explains why sitting well shouldn’t feel like sitting at all and explores an unexpected success metric of the hybrid workplace: the grounding power of emotional support.
Stepping into Intuit’s Sydney workplace certainly doesn’t feel like walking into an office. Why? In this film, we discover that, when joy takes precedence as a design driver, even a high-performing commercial CBD headquarters can feel like an intuitive wonderland that invites employees to choose their own adventure.
FK hosted a standout Melbourne Design Week event with a panel on adaptive reuse and renewable real estate at 500 Bourke, featuring previous contributor Nicky Drobis and our editor as moderator.
Curator, writer and educator Kate Goodwin was in town for Melbourne Design Week. Here, she reflects on how light-touch organising and designer-led spaces created some of the most impactful, distinctive exhibitions.
The internet never sleeps! Here's the stuff you might have missed
The newest brand to emerge from Cosentino’s creative crucible is Ēclos, a next-generation mineral surface that embodies the organic beauty and tactility of marble in a precision-mineral surface or material.
The renowned American architect stopped by to record a STORIESINDESIGN episode with Timothy Alouani-Roby, delving into his philosophies of design and the landscapes that inspire his work.