Industrial Design Studentships

Applications now closed

The Commissioners, who wish to encourage innovation and profitable creativity in industry, see design as an integral part of the process. One of the reasons that the Great Exhibition was so successful was that it overflowed with the fruits of dynamic, forward-looking Victorian design, embodying novelty and aesthetics in over 100,000 artefacts.

In the Commissioners' view, industrial design cannot be dissociated from a clear understanding of the underlying engineering science of the product and it is for this reason that first degrees in science or engineering are prescribed.

These are complementary, not alternative disciplines. For products to succeed they must not only be fit for purpose, but they must also look good and represent value for money.

The Commission aims, by funding these Studentships, to encourage a holistic approach to excellence in product development, in which aesthetic design and engineering both play their full and proper parts.

Applicants and their colleges are assured that, once awarded, the 1851 Fellowships are refreshingly free of tiresome bureaucratic procedures, and lay no claim on intellectual property rights or commercial-in-confidence material.

Aim

To stimulate industrial design capability among the country’s most able science and engineering graduates.

Scheme

About seven Industrial Design Studentships are offered each year for outstanding potential designers with a good first degree in engineering or science who wish to develop their capabilities in industrial design and who aspire to becoming leading designers in industry.

Eligibility

Award

Applications

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