In Dubai, the fledgling design scene of past years has quickly emerged in a contemporary local design culture. This culminates with the Dubai Design Week, which incidentally took place in November last year. Continuing to build on strong foundations set eight years earlier, and thanks to its strategic partnership with Dubai Design District (d3), the event has served to shine a spotlight on global designers exploring new creative conversations around sustainability – that is ‘Design With Impact’.
“We [are] deeply committed to rethinking the regular, empowering talent and being an ever-growing ecosystem for creative thinkers,” says Khadija Al Bastaki, vice president of d3. “With this edition of Dubai Design Week, we [were] fortifying Dubai’s status as a UNESCO Creative City of Design and further growing the profile of the creative industries in our city.”
Here we round up 10 impressive examples of how sustainability is being addressed creatively through installations, conversations and thought-provoking design.
1. How Much Does Your Debris Weigh? by Quartz Architects

The construction industry is a huge producer of waste – and it was this topic that Saudi-Italian architecture practice
2. Second Life by Iman Ibrahim


Giving new life to discarded or otherwise unused materials epitomises a responsible approach to sustainability and has given rise to the recycled art movement. Artist and designer Iman Ibrahim has transformed a dead tree into a series of intricately carved artworks that symbolise hope and opportunity. Second Life comprises 12 patterned relief carvings and a collection of sculptural floor lights created by carving incisions into the trunk and branches of the tree allowing it to literally radiate light in its new form.
3. KIN by Fadaa Space



Based between Amman, Jordan, and New York City,
These were then used to build an otherworldly installation housing native plants that invited visitors to reimagine their relationship to the natural world and explore ways to live symbiotically.
4. Home Dreaming by Ahed Al Kathiri

Upcycled materials were a recurring theme at this year’s Dubai Design Week. While others used construction debris and waste materials to explore how we might approach these ideas in the future, Ahed Al Kathiri repurposed patterned textiles to create a sculptural interpretation of qamariyat – a traditional Yemeni window covering.
These colourful works evoke memories of her grandmother’s house and the way generations past have often used recycled fabrics to create domestic objects. By looking to the past, she posits a way to move into the future.
5. Once Upon a Forest by OBMI



The UAE is home to vast mangrove forests – and these natural wonders were the inspiration behind the Once Upon a Forest installation by the Dubai branch of American architecture studio
“Our goal was to educate and inspire the community about the benefits and beauty of the mangrove forests by providing an immersive experience that ignites the senses and showcases nature’s power to mitigate climate change,” says the studio.
6. From the Dunes & Trees by ARDH Collective



For Dubai Design Week, the group created an architectural installation titled From the Dunes & Trees that demonstrates the potential of these revolutionary materials to build the future in the region, exhibiting the materials alongside the natural resources they are derived from. The founders also took part in a panel discussion in partnership with the
7. Let’s talk about the Weather! by BOKJA

A boxing ring might not be the first thing that springs to mind when thinking about sustainability, but for Beirut-based textiles, fashion and homewares brand
“We’re asking people to stop and engage in a conversation on some of the most pressing issues of today,” say the designers. “Let’s talk about the weather, air our opinions, and agree to disagree on a disjointed assemblage of items raised on a boxing ring.”
8. Suhail by Reem Al Bustani

Interior designer Reem Al Bustani took inspiration from Suhail – an orange supergiant star located in the constellation Vela with particular importance in the Arab world. Not only is Suhail known as a reliable navigation tool for sailors and travellers of the past, its appearance also marks the changing of the seasons.
The poetic, sculptural installation is crafted from looped LED tube lights and mirror-finish metallic elements that evoke the symbolic star and the rhythmic sound of waves that accompanies the cooler weather.
9. Al Gargoor by Sara Alrayyes


This sculptural composition by Sara Alrayyes of Bahrain’s
10. RI–BBORN by Nada Zuhair & Riham Ahmed


Green living is often expressed through the “three Rs”: reduce, reuse, recycle – and this theatrical installation by
Some ribbons double as relaxed, hammock-style swing seats, and a sculptural assemblage of rocks and greenery at the centre of the scaffold-like structure alludes to the relationship between the natural and built worlds.
Dubai Design Week
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