The annual Helen Hamlyn Design Awards, organised by the Royal College of Art’s Helen Hamlyn Centre for Design (HHCD) – have been announced. The awards focus on celebrating the most visionary, inclusive and innovative RCA graduate projects.
This year’s cohort of award winners propose innovative and transformative solutions to improve people’s lives, solving problems around sustainability, ableism and health. In 2024, three awards were granted, the Helen Hamlyn Award for Creativity, The Northumbrian Water Award for Inclusive Innovation and The Snowdon Award for Disability. Each winning project is awarded £2000.
Alexander Spencer, Hanju Seo, Maria Asif and Sven Winkler Von Stiernhielm (all MA/MSc Innovation Design Engineering) were awarded The Helen Hamlyn Award for Creativity. Their project ‘Pera’, a smart health assistance for people with bowel incontinence, consists of a wearable device that monitors bowel activity and provides people with predictive insights through Pera’s paired app.
A staggering 1 in 10 people have bowel incontinence, often hidden through shame and taboo. Pera allows those suffering to specify their circumstances and background, which forms the basis of a personalised experience. The technology can predict passing stool 40 minutes in advance, offering an alternative to the use of sanitary products that can cause infection and skin breakdown, giving sufferers of bowel incontinence the ability to plan their day, transforming lives.
Sven Winkler Von Stiernhielm (MA/MSc Innovation Design Engineering) has been awarded The Northumbrian Water Award for Inclusive Innovation for his project ‘ Sven Winkler Von Stiernhielm (MA/MSc Innovation Design Engineering) has been awarded The Northumbrian Water Award for Inclusive Innovation for his project ‘Ziwa Vision ’, a device aiding thriving and environmentally responsible food production in developing countries.
Ziwa Vision introduces a way to feed farmed fish more sustainably by improving the evaluation of fish behaviour via real-time machine learning analysis. The physical device is attached to enclosure frames widely used by Tilapia farmers globally and alerts staff to stop providing feed at the optimal time with a speaker sound.
Stiernhielm found Ziwa Vision performed with higher evaluation accuracy than manual evaluation, confirming that thousands of tonnes of feed could be saved annually per fish farm. This will help maintain healthy aquatic ecosystems, positively impact local communities dependent on lake water and reduce environmental damage.
Yiming Pang (MA Fashion) and Jialu Hou (MA Design Products) have been awarded The Snowdon Award for Disability for their project ‘Branches’, a multifunctional caring hanger designed for one-armed individuals to enhance their independence in daily tasks such as dressing and grooming.
Inspired by the natural form of tree branches, it integrates practical features including quick shoelace tying, convenient cuff buttoning, one-hand tie tying, and dressing/undressing aids.
Made from lightweight and durable eco-friendly materials, Branches is both aesthetically pleasing and ergonomically sound. It promotes equity and inclusivity, setting a standard for future assistive tools by highlighting the importance of diverse user needs and contributing to a shift towards greater empathy and accessibility in product development.