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3. Helbling
Sustainable Consumer Product Design
Radical visions for future Consumer Products
Initial Question: How might we design consumer products that people love, keep, repair, and pass on – while minimizing their environmental footprint?
Background & Current Situation
Consumer products such as coffee machines, kitchen appliances, or small household devices are often designed for short lifecycles. Driven by cost pressure and fast-changing trends, many of these products are built with limited durability, low repairability, and materials that are difficult to recycle.
As a result, they are frequently discarded after a relatively short period of use, contributing significantly to waste and CO₂ emissions. At the same time, affordable and convenient products remain highly attractive to consumers. This creates a key challenge: how to reconcile sustainability, durability, and circularity with cost and user expectations.
Problem Statement
Despite increasing awareness of sustainability, most consumer devices are still not designed to last, be repaired, or remain desirable over time. Products often fail prematurely, are difficult to fix, or become obsolete due to design and business model limitations. The central question is: What does it take to design a consumer product that is robust, repairable, timeless, and at the same time affordable and competitive? And how must product design and business models evolve to make this possible?
Existing Solutions & Market Insights
Approaches such as modular design, repair initiatives, and product-as-a-service models demonstrate that longer lifecycles and circularity are possible. However, these solutions are often limited to niche markets or higher price segments. Helbling will contribute to this challenge by introducing practical tools and a simplified methodology based on Ecodesign principles and Life Cycle Assessment (LCA). These tools enable participants to directly qualitatively assess the CO₂footprint of current products and compare different and new visionary design strategies.
The Challenge
Design a consumer product vision for the year 2040 that combines market success with a radically reduced environmental footprint.
Participants will select a product (from provided suggestions or their own choice), analyze its current state using Helbling’s methodology, and identify key weaknesses regarding durability, repairability, and sustainability. Based on these insights, teams will develop a future-oriented product vision that integrates circular design principles, improved materials and architecture, and potentially new business models. The goal is to create a solution that is not only environmentally sustainable (“enkeltauglich”), but also attractive, usable, and scalable in the market. Throughout the process, participants will be supported by Helbling coaches.
Outcome
Teams will present a Product Vision 2040, outlining their concept, key innovations, and expected sustainability impact. The solution should demonstrate how future consumer products can achieve both low environmental footprint and high user acceptance.
Author: Roland Lehmann