Most conversations about the connected home begin with a solution in search of a problem: smart thermostats, voice assistants, app-controlled lighting. The assumption is that homes are waiting to be upgraded — that the introduction of networked devices will naturally improve domestic life.
Instead of focusing on problems/behaviours that are aided by IoT technology, Quicksand’s design sprint took a different approach—it used ethnographic research situated in homes across Bangalore to break down how people are interacting with their everyday spaces. How do people communicate within households? How are shared responsibilities managed? How do they stay connected to family members living elsewhere? How do they remember, archive, and share the moments that matter?
The learnings from fieldwork pointed to a reimagination of homes as dynamic spaces that are sensitive to material improvements, pushing the dynamics of interactions to adapt to the same.
The domestic lives of individuals is a complex mix of sophisticated practices and habits centered around objects, making it essential to understand how technology might enhance rather than disrupt what people already value.