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Design Thinking for Physicality

Product Design and Technologies
StudyPulse

Design Thinking for Physicality

Product Design and Technologies
01 May 2026

Design Thinking to Generate, Refine and Critique the Physicality of Product Concepts

Physicality in Product Design

Physicality refers to the three-dimensional, tangible qualities of a product: its form, weight, texture, ergonomics, material feel, and structural integrity. Graphical concepts communicate intent but cannot fully test physicality — only physical models can.

Generating Physical Concepts

Mock-ups
- Low-fidelity physical representations using available materials (cardboard, foam, clay, timber off-cuts)
- Purpose: test form, proportion, and ergonomics quickly and cheaply
- Do not need to use final materials or processes — speed and low cost are priorities

Material samples and trials
- Cut, fold, bend, join, finish, and test samples of candidate materials
- Purpose: understand how the material behaves under the intended production processes
- Document results: photographs, notes on workability, surface finish, joint strength

Scale models
- Proportional replicas at a reduced scale
- Useful when the full-size product is large or expensive to produce in early trials

Ergonomic testing with models
- Physical models allow end users to hold, operate, or wear the concept
- Reveals grip comfort, reach, clearance, and accessibility issues that drawings cannot

3D printing for concept models
- Rapid production of complex geometries for form and ergonomics testing
- Not necessarily the final material — but accurate in form

Refining Physical Concepts

Refinement responds to findings from testing and feedback:
- Adjust dimensions (mock-up reveals handle is too thick for intended end user)
- Revise joining method (tested joint failed at required load)
- Change surface finish (end user found textured surface uncomfortable)
- Simplify or detail form (production challenge identified in mock-up)

Refinement should be documented: show the change, record why it was made, and note how it addresses a specific finding from testing.

Critiquing Physical Concepts

Evaluation against criteria
- Apply evaluation criteria to physical concepts systematically
- Record evidence: measurement results, user ratings, structural test outcomes

Comparative analysis
- If multiple physical concepts were developed, compare them criterion by criterion
- Select the concept that best addresses the brief, not simply the most visually appealing

End user critique
- Present physical concepts to end users; observe and record responses
- Ask structured questions (open and closed) about form, feel, function, and aesthetics

Designer self-critique
- Annotate models with observations: what works, what doesn’t, what requires development
- Be honest about weaknesses — identifying problems in the development phase is better than discovering them after production

The Relationship Between Physical Testing and the Brief

Physical concept testing generates evidence that feeds back to:
- Evaluation criteria (a criterion may need revision if it proves unachievable)
- Material selection (a material that fails testing is replaced)
- Production plan (a process that is too time-consuming triggers plan revision)

KEY TAKEAWAY: Physicality cannot be fully assessed from drawings. Physical mock-ups, material trials, and ergonomic testing are essential for honest evaluation of design concepts.

EXAM TIP: Describe specific testing methods for physical concepts and link each to what it tests (e.g. ‘a cardboard mock-up tests ergonomics and proportion before committing to timber, saving time and material’).

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