“Utopia by design” is the theme of London’s first ever design biennale, which is at Somerset House until 27 September.The topic marks the 500th anniversary of Thomas More introducing his fictional Utopia to the world.
Installations, artworks and design proposals from 37 countries explore issues such as sustainability, migration, pollution, water and inequality. Here are 10 of them: visions that could shape tomorrow’s real world.
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Border City
Fernando Romero (Mexico)
Fernando Romero’s conceptual city straddles the US and Mexico. From Hong Kong to Andorra, border cities have flourished by both blending and offering contrasts between different cultures. Border City’s hexagonal plan is designed to use space efficiently, conserving resources and shortening journey times: a compelling and politically pertinent vision for border regions that are already home to over 100 million people.
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Water Machine
Basma and Noura Bouzo (Saudi Arabia)
In a world of dwindling resources, business as usual is no longer an option. This point is driven home by sisters Basma Bouzo and Noura Bouzo, whose futuristic dispenser sells plastic-packaged globes of fresh water— good for one gulp. The specious convenience of their product, and its obvious wastefulness, are a powerful provocation to think differently about how we distribute the stuff we need for life.

Al Falaj: Water Systems of the Gulf’s Oases
Rashid Bin Shabib, Ahmed Bin Shabib, Samuel Barclay and Anne Geenen (United Arab Emirates)
Rashid Bin Shabibis no stranger to magical lands. His home region once depended on a system of irrigation channels that greened the desert, provided water for all, created meeting places in the middle of nowhere and encouraged civic society to develop in one of the most inhospitable places on Earth. In an exhibition intoxicated by the future, Bin Shabib’s quiet, bold proposition to reintroduce traditional irrigation systems is based on the idea that we already live in Utopia: we just have to uncover and restore it.

The Counterculture Room
Andres Briceño Gutierrez andTomasVivanco Larraín (Chile)
The manufacturing laboratory Fab Lab Santiago recreates the control room of Project Cybersyn, a phone-based “nervous system” created in 1970 for the Chilean government by engineer Fernando Flores and Stafford Beer, a statistician from Surrey, UK. The Pinochet coup in 1973 ended Chile’s vision of participatory, cybernetic government— but the dream of a“socialist internet” of sorts persists among the nation’s technologists and designers.

Discovering Utopia
Alexandra Sankova (Russia)
The Soviet Union’s failure to realise its own utopian ideals adds a bitter note to Moscow Design Museum’s staggeringly dense exhibition of innovative industrial and commercial design, from the 1960s to the 1980s. TheAll-UnionSoviet InstituteofTechnicalAesthetics created nothing less than a fully worked-out vision of a decent, efficient, egalitarian way of living—but few of its designs were ever realised.

AIDrop
YanivKadosh(Israel)
These folding cartons, whose design was inspiredbytherotating motionofseeds that slows their descent, can be filled with 3 kilograms ofequipmentandemergency aid supplies and dropped from aircraft over isolated, disaster-hit areas. For Kadosh and other exhibitors from Israel’sShenkarCollegeofEngineering,DesignandArt, utopia is a state of mind—a willingness to respond quickly and inventively to events.

Eatopia
RainWu, ShikaiTseng and Chung-HoTsai (Taiwan)
At the heart ofaserene, forest-likeinstallation, the“culinary performances” of experimental chef Chung-Ho Tsai conjure up the fusion food of the future, as Taiwan continues to accrete people and influences from around the world. Taiwanese identity is a famously fractured and complicated thing, but the act of cooking and eating reminds visitors of their shared humanity. In More’s Utopia, peopleeat lunch and dinner together every day, and food is always plentiful.

Reaching for Utopia: Inclusive Design in Practice
Norwegian Centre for Design and Architecture (Norway)
By 2025, all citizens will be able to participate in society on equal terms. That, anyway, is the vision of the Norwegian government, and theNorwegian Centre for Design and Architecture spotlights the bricks and mortar of this brave new world. Users participated in the design ofBergen Light Rail from the very start, and the city’s comfortable new public transport system has proved staggeringly popular.

Shenzhen: New Peak
URBANUS (China)
Thirty-six years ago, Shenzhen was a town housing 30,000 people. Now it is a megacity of over 17 million. “Totally utopian urban forms such as megastructures are now a practical necessity for the city of Shenzhen,” say the anonymous creators of “DenCity”, a slickly designed city of the future that, by constantly reallocating flexible shared spaces, opens its doors to everyone — including those who will never be able to afford its real estate.

Mezzing in Lebanon
Annabel Karim Kassar (Lebanon)
After a pomegranate juice and a wet shave in Annabel Karim Kassar’s installation, the promise of utopia seems both imminent and unimportant. The recreated street life of Beirut, with its tangled electric cabling, street signs and the overflowing barrows of street sellers, celebrates the ordinary virtues of ingenuity and optimism. It’s almost as though, left to their own devices, and given a chance, people will always find a way to live well.