top of page

Create Your First Project

Start adding your projects to your portfolio. Click on "Manage Projects" to get started

Beyond human perception: designing nonhuman material affordances for ecological reintegration

Project type

Conference Paper

Date

September 2025

Location

ICED25, Dallas, TX

Biodegradability is often framed as an intrinsic material property. By integrating industrial design and soil science, this research examines how material design can actively support ecological reintegration. Through a case study of Polylactic Acid (PLA)—marketed as sustainable yet resistant to breakdown in everyday soil—we challenge how biodegradability claims misalign with real-world decomposition. To address this, we designed and tested 3D printing filaments, using compost respiration analysis to show that microbial engagement depends on material composition and environmental factors. We then introduce decayability as a novel affordance that supports microbial activity. By extending affordance theory beyond human perception, this study establishes a framework for designing materials that mediate interactions between human fabrication needs and nonhuman decomposition processes.

Read full paper: https://doi.org/10.1017/pds.2025.10087

bottom of page