Owen Hudock

Project Gracie

Design Sprint Winner

Creating a sustainable, empathetic

approach to the grieving process

Overview

Project Gracie was completed during a 24-hour design competition hosted by SCAD's UX Club. We

were tasked with creating a product that adhered to the theme “Closing the Loop in Circularity,” by creating a sustainable solution to a problem that incorporated a physical product.

Duration

24 hours

Team

Corey West

Jon Rodz

Tools

Figma

Rhino

Keyshot

The Problem

Children struggle to navigate through the

grieving process at a young age.

Our Solution

A burial process that helps children navigate the

grieving process by representing the circularity of life.

We placed 1st!

Jumping into my first 24-design challenge was stressful,

but my team and I were proud to take home first place!

Discovery

Finding our problem space

"2 out of 3 children experience a pet
death before the age of 7.

Around half of all households in developed countries own at least one pet. For families, the relationships that children form with their pets mimic that of human connections, and helps foster social development in their early years.

Why is this a problem?

Early experiences with grief can significantly influence lifelong grieving patterns. For children, improperly navigating the grieving process can result in lasting mental health effects and hinder developmental progress.


Creating a solution to this problem will not only helps

children navigate the grieving process, it can promote

an environment where parents can comfortably speak

about this difficult topic with their children.

Why is this problem important

to us?

Coming from pet-lover households, my team has all had the

unfortunate experience of saying goodbye to our pets.


It was this empathy that helped drive our research and design process, and our deep connection to the topic motivated us to go above and beyond.

Pictured: Corey and his dog Gracie (2008-2019), who inspired this project

Target Audience

Families with pets and children under the age of 12

Develop healthier grieving

process early on

Establishes a base for conversations regarding death

Determining touchpoints

Before Ideating solutions, we created a journey map to identify the key stages our solution should be involved in and enhance.

How might we…

Provide an empathetic, eco-friendly experience for children

to better understand death?

Our approach

Our goal was to create a sustainable memorialization product

to help children better visualize and understand

death and the circle of life.


We wanted to close the loop in the literal and figurative sense, representing the circle of life while also making a product that existed in a closed loop.

Eco-friendly materials

Zero waste

Symbolizes the Circle of Life

Solving for sustainability

The biggest sustainability issue we encountered was cremation, which prevented circularity due to its non-degradability and pollutive nature.


Our first step was substituting cremation with a more sustainable method, we found aquamation to fit that role perfectly.

Cremation

Current Method

creates air pollutants such as

mercury and particulate matter

Fire based, energy-intensive process

that burns fossil fuels

Ashes generated by cremation

take millions of years to biodegrade, and

damages plants and soil

Aquamation

Project Gracie's Method

Process generates no air pollutants

Uses 90% less energy and burns

no fossil fuels

Produces biodegradable material

filled with nutrients necessary

for plant growth

Finalizing our design

After finalizing our research, we created the physical products that would pair with our service.

Closing the loop

Our Product consists of a biodegradable mycelium based urn. After a pet goes through the aquamation process and be placed in the urn. The urn would then be buried under a wooden planter where flowers could be planted.


The nutrients from the urn would feed the flowers, continuing the circle of life.

Thanks for reading!

Want to learn more? Send me a message!

Owen Hudock