Courses

Performative Design

C.O.P. Suit

C.O.P. Suit

C.O.P. Suit

C.O.P. Suit

C.O.P. Suit

C.O.P. Suit

Power generator device

Megaphone hack

C.O.P Suit was inspired by the COP15 climate summit. The brief was to propose solutions for, or to comment on, the ongoing climate debate - using wearable technology and design as a medium.

The C.O.P Suit is an experiment in personal protest wear, designed to address the by now almost ritualised stand-offs between police and demonstrators - what has ironically been described as the ‘folk dance of disorder’. The suit is composed of an armored protection sleeve connected to a megaphone-mounted helmet, offering protection as well as the possibility of voicing commands, orders or simply generating noise. The suit is designed as a purposefully ambiguous and (slightly) ironic artifact, echoing the fetishistic visual language of protesters and police alike - a comment on the similarity of the means each side employs.

The C.O.P suit is designed to be completely self-sustainable - utilising kinetic energy from common gestures in a protest situation (the fist thrust triumphantly into the air, the swinging of a baton or the force of a strike to the armor) to power the megaphone, making rioting hard on the ears, but easy on the conscience.

The Interaction Design Programme


The Interaction Design Programme is a collaborative initiative between Copenhagen Institute of Interaction Design (CIID) and The Danish Design School (DKDS). Our aim is for students, faculty and staff to work together in a multi-cultural, multidisciplinary studio environment to co-create a new kind of education that is relevant for academia and industry.

This site is a gallery of student work. For more information about the Interaction Design Programme please visit the website: http://ciid.dkds.dk/ - or contact us by email: info@ciid.dkds.dk.