Ingredients for Innovation

How the kitchen flavours SDF culture and learning

Design Factory Melbourne
Life at DFM
3 min readNov 4, 2015

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The kitchen is the heart of Swinburne Design Factory (SDF). It provides a different approach to learning and epitomises how SDF differs from other learning environments.

Early birds have arrived to SDF monthly breakfast.

Everyone is Welcome

For a start, the kitchen is an informal space. Anyone can go there and grab a coffee or make something to eat. It’s a gathering point as well. It emphasises socialisation. It helps to build relationships and to break down barriers.

A Level Playing Field

According to Dr Alison de Kruiff, SDF lecturer, the café culture that emerged from the 1920’s European intellectuals sparked the concept of the SDF kitchen. A moment of relaxation gets your mind away from what you’re working on.

The kitchen encourages people into one space and invites them to interact. ‘In a kitchen, no one is scared of being wrong’, Alison says.

‘If you’re sitting and having a chat with someone over a coffee, you’re not in a classroom and ready to be examined on your knowledge. It’s just about having a chat. It removes a lot of the pressure so people can be creative and have fun. Our innovation process is about having fun at the same time, because that’s when people are at their most creative’.

Familiar Tools, Sophisticated Learning

Kitchen-based activities are an important part of SDF methods and practices of teaching and learning. Complex concepts can be unpacked in comfortable and fun ways. For example, the kitchen is used to explore the concept of ‘innovation’- a word that means many things to many people. For teams to be effective, it’s important they develop a shared understanding of what they mean by ‘innovation’.

A dessert called ‘Innovation’!

In the SDF kitchen, students were tasked with the challenge of creating a dessert called Innovation. Through the process of selecting ingredients, crafting their masterpieces and then ‘pitching’ them to their peers, they took important steps to building shared understanding around ‘innovation’. And they got to share the tasty results.

Start with Breakfast

The SDF has a flat hierarchy environment. The kitchen reduces the disciplinary, cultural and professional barriers, as eating is a universal need. The kitchen invites collaboration and brings people together. It works on the basis that every person you meet knows something you don’t, and this encourages innovation which is at the heart of SDF.

Part of the role of the breakfasts is to facilitate the serendipitous moments. Serendipitous moments are common in the kitchen. People chat about their different projects and someone suddenly makes a comment or suggestion that changes another person’s approach to what they’re working on. According to Dr Alison de Kruiff, it’s the small ideas that can lead to amazing breakthroughs where people collaborate, and that’s the role of the kitchen.

SDF holds public breakfasts on the last Tuesday of each month (except July and December). Last breakfast in 2015 is on the 24th of Nov. So why not pop in and check it out yourself.

SDF monthly breakfasts — everyone is welcome!

This story was written as part of a collaboration between Swinburne Design Factory and Swinburne PAVE. The collaboration enables Diploma of Professional Writing and Editing students to work on real-life journalism projects as part of their studies. This article is part of a series of case studies and stories around SDF published in 2015.

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Design Factory Melbourne
Life at DFM

Design Factory Melbourne (DFM) brings together students, researchers and industry partners to solve complex problems and generate innovative solutions.