乐播传媒

Growing older is both a privilege and a universal part of life. With people now living longer than ever before, it鈥檚 time to rethink how design shapes the way we live, age, and stay connected.

Graphic design and gerontology typically do not overlap. One discipline focuses on visual communication and creation, while the other draws from health and human sciences. But 乐播传媒 Assistant Professor Kimberly Mitchell is bringing those fields together by championing human-centered, age-inclusive design.

At the heart of her research is a simple but powerful question: What would change if we designed with our future selves in mind?

Headshot of Kimberly Mitchell
Mitchell

鈥淒uring a conversation with a gerontologist, she described touring retirement communities and realizing they didn鈥檛 reflect her and her husband鈥檚 interests鈥攈e still plays video games,鈥 Mitchell says. 鈥淚t raised a larger question about why we continue designing for outdated ideas of aging instead of how people actually live today.鈥

Supported by the James Johnson Dudley Fellowship and the Alma and Hal Reagan Research Award, Mitchell has spent the past two years visiting interdisciplinary aging-research labs across the country to explore how collaboration among design, health, engineering, and gerontology can lead to more innovative ways to supportolder adults. By challenging outdated assumptions and rethinking conventional models, she aims to influence how care, technology, and everyday experiences are designed to support independence, dignity, and meaningful connection at every stage of life.

鈥淲hile aging is universal, no two people experience it the same way,鈥 Mitchell says. 鈥淲e want to understand the physical, emotional, cultural, and social changes that shape our lives so we can work toward new possibilities.鈥

Designing in the 鈥淢urky Middle鈥

Mitchell visited eight research labs at leading institutions, including the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Georgia Tech, the University of Pittsburgh, and the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign鈥檚 McKenchie Family LIFE Home, a premier research center focused on smart-home technologies. These spaces bring together engineers, psychologists, and health experts to improve quality of life as we age.

Mitchell describes this work as happening in what designers sometimes call the 鈥渕urky middle.鈥 It鈥檚 the space where disciplines that do not traditionally intersect come together and where, she says, true innovation happens.

鈥淚 was on a conference call and a participant asked, 鈥榃hy is there a graphic designer on the call?鈥 And I thought, well, who do you think is shaping how people interact with these systems? There is so much we gain from collaboration across disciplines if we broaden the conversation.鈥

During her lab visits, Mitchell saw how user testing and feedback from older adults shaped everything from lighting and layout to technology integration. She knew many people want to age in place, staying in their homes and communities as they grow older. But saw first-hand how various disciplines are working together to support different models of aging in place.

Turning Research into Resources

Recognizing a gap in how aging is represented in design, Mitchell created the website, a curated shop for aging-related research, tools, and case studies from multiple disciplines, giving designers tangible ways to rethink assumptions and apply more inclusive approaches in their work.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a digital resource hub for designers, educators, and professionals who are passionate about creating inclusive, thoughtful, and joyful experiences for aging adults,鈥 she says.

Mitchell also created interactive workshops and a companion workbook to help designers put that research into practice. A key conversation during her research became a turning point, revealing how often the systems and experiences we design don鈥檛 reflect how people actually live as they age.

Overhead view of a group collaborating around a table, placing pink sticky notes onto a large worksheet labeled 鈥淲hat鈥檚 on Your Radar?鈥 with concentric circles and a section titled 鈥淔rom the Radar.鈥
A group collaborates during a workshop led by Mitchell.

That insight led to her 鈥淒esigning for Our Future Selves鈥 workshops, where participants examine how age bias shapes design decisions, consider physical and social changes, and reflect on what it means to design for their own future selves and others.

Central to the workshops is the 6Ms framework鈥擶hat Matters, Mobility, Meaningful Activities, Medication, Mealtime, and Making Comfortable鈥攚hich encourages designers to think more broadly about the experience of aging. Through that lens, Mitchell says participants consider how design decisions can support comfort, independence, dignity, and connection.

鈥淲hen they first come into the workshops, they often think design for aging is just about accessibility,鈥 she says. 鈥淏ut once they begin thinking about how the systems and experiences they design today will shape their own future selves as they age, everything starts to shift.鈥

What Comes Next

Spiral-bound workbook titled 鈥淒esign for Our Future Selves Workshop鈥 rests on a woven placemat; subtitle reads 鈥淎 workshop led by Kimberly Mitchell,鈥 with a small Design for Care Lab logo at the bottom.
Mitchell’s 鈥淒esign for Our Future Selves Workshop鈥 workbook.

Mitchell is continuing to advance her research through writing, collaboration, and speaking engagements. She is currently drafting a journal article on innovation in care environments, writing a book on the future of aging and design, and expanding the Design for Aging Resources website as a place where researchers, designers, and practitioners can share ideas and tools.

Building on this research, Mitchell has established the Design for Care Lab, an emerging lab that organizes collaborations across design, health, and engineering. The lab has been designated as an AARP AgeTech Collaborative Testbed, positioning it within a national network evaluating new technologies with older adult populations.

鈥淎s designers, we鈥檙e shaping the future and changing the way people think about aging,鈥 she says. 鈥淎nd the future includes all of us, at every stage of life.鈥