Design Buy Build Issue 16 2015 | Page 106

I Art For Art’s Sake? t started with stainless steel light switches and before you could say “form and function”, premium electrical accessories were featuring in schemes like the international Red Dot design awards. Were they any better than their predecessors, or was it just art for art’s sake? Probably the latter, but they looked good on the wall. The evolutionary design of our electronic Programastat wall thermostats and heating controllers marked a watershed in our approach, but the real revolution was our approach to outdoor LED lighting. We simply could not see the point of the industry presenting what was revolutionary technology that looked like the dinosaurs it was replacing. So we gave our London-based designer free rein to tear up the rule book – but with one key proviso. We did not want design for design’s sake: each design feature had to have a function. Meanwhile in the mass market, the pressure on prices was leading us down the path of bulk offshore manufacturing, with fractions of pennies shaved of the unit price by minimising tooling and materials costs. So, even when the industry was really bringing exciting technical and energy saving innovations like low-cost LED lighting to you, not just cosmetic improvements, the irony was that they often look exactly the same as their predecessors because re-tooling was too expensive in a price-led market. All too often, that fractionof-a-penny pinching extends to componentry and, at the e