MA Regenerative Design
London, United Kingdom
DURATION
2 Years
LANGUAGES
English
PACE
Full time
APPLICATION DEADLINE
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EARLIEST START DATE
Sep 2025
TUITION FEES
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STUDY FORMAT
On-Campus
Scholarships
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Introduction
Regenerative Design
In the context of a fast-accelerating climate and biodiversity emergency, sustainable design is not enough. To date, the integration of environmental considerations in the design process has largely focused on more efficient use of natural resources or the reduction of our environmental impact. Regenerative design goes further to restore and replenish what human activities have radically deteriorated.
With a fast-expanding human population, one million species at risk of extinction and a looming global climate shift, we need to transition towards a new culture of repair. Regenerative design is a rising discipline that incorporates principles of deep ecology and living system thinking and a fundamental understanding of planetary health to develop new design propositions that can help empower communities and restore our biodiversity and climate. Instead of perpetuating an anthropocentric mindset which leads to the depletion of our underlying life-support systems, regenerative design goes beyond sustainable and circular design principles to actively promote a multi-species approach in which humans and non-humans co-habit holistically.
Admissions
Scholarships and Funding
Curriculum
Unit 1: Design for Life
Living Systems Approach to D
- In order to reach beyond the limitations and pitfalls of sustainable design, we need to shift how, what and why we design. Informed by deep ecology principles, living system thinking and scenarios for regenerative cultures, this unit deconstructs prior learning. It challenges you to re-evaluate your design practice with radical new lenses that embody living systems thinking and places biodiversity, climate, cultural and socio-economic equity at the heart of your creative process.
- By integrating knowledge, tools and methodologies from the fields of ecology and cultural anthropology, this unit will enable you to build the foundations of a holistic and regenerative design practice. The unit starts with a three-day workshop to build an online cohort dynamic by sharing cultural values, design tales and backgrounds as well as introduce the course ethos.
- The unit comprises a series of short design briefs combined with lectures, seminars, tutorials, group critiques and workshops. These design briefs will provide a creative canvas for you to experiment with new knowledge informed by planetary boundaries, permaculture, regenerative systems, biodiversity framework, climate research and science-based targets, nature conservation and rewilding, international frameworks and governance, cultural anthropology, decolonisation and indigenous methodologies, holism and ethics of care.
Unit 2 (Elective): Design with Permaculture Principles
Translating permaculture principles in design to address planetary challenges
- This unit is shared with other postgraduate courses at Central Saint Martins. You will work in interdisciplinary groups to respond to a global planetary challenge via a regenerative design lens. The challenge will be identified on an annual basis and the unit will start with a workshop to present and frame the design challenge.
Unit 3: Design for and with your local biosphere
Place-based action research
- In this unit you will research and develop an individual regenerative design brief related to your local biosphere and community via an action research project. You will explore how to adopt a multi-species approach to design where humans and non-humans can co-habit holistically. You will use living system thinking tools to frame a pertinent research question, establish a relevant network of stakeholders and develop experimental design work.
- This unit will include lectures and seminars on ecological, anthropological and design research tools, ethics, as well as new economic frameworks and business models (for example doughnut economics and the circular economy).
- At the end of this unit you will present your research proposal, situate your action research (including rationale, research methodology and stakeholder cartography) and map out the regenerative blueprint for your design practice in terms of biodiversity, climate and communties.
Unit 4: Design for regenerative futures
Regenerative design development and conclusions, evaluation and legacy
- In this concluding unit, you will use the research and outcomes produced in Unit 3 as a platform to develop a well-resolved final regenerative design project. You will also evaluate and forecast the holistic impact and regenerative legacy of your project in terms of planetary care.
- The unit will start with a knowledge-gathering sprint when students will come together for a three-day online workshop to share the outcomes of Unit 3, map regional knowledge for regeneraative design and generate a world view of key stakeholders based on their individual research and development. At the end of this Unit, you will submit an annotated design portfolio and a project presentation at an online public symposium.
Program Tuition Fee
Program delivery
Two years (60 weeks) Extended full-time