Yves Behar


Yves Behar on the Evolution of Designers from Equity Holders to Back Office Staffers and Back

Published on Sep 17, 2014
 

The home of the future will "know where you are" - Yves Behar

Dezeen and MINI World Tour: San Francisco designer Yves Behar, who recently launched a keyless lock that you control with a smartphone, discusses his vision for how technology can be successfully integrated into the home in this movie filmed in Milan.

Speaking at our Dezeen and MINI World Tour Studio at the MINI Paceman Garage during Milan deisgn week, Behar says that design for the home has been slow to embrace today's technology.

"What we see here [in Milan] from the Italian manufacturers is very safe," he explains. "On the other hand, you have a world of technology that's booming, that's very dynamic. What I'm missing is for those two worlds to come together more."

Behar continues: "It's not about putting a speaker in a chair, or putting a TV in a bed. That's not how technology and the home intersect. For me, it's about sensors, about the home knowing where you are."

In May this year, shortly after we filmed this interview, Behar launched a new company and product called August Smart Lock, which replaces physical keys with a smartphone app and can open automatically as you approach the door.

"Cars have been like this for years," Behar says in the movie. "Keyless entry in a car is something that we're used to. Somehow the home has been very resistant to this. Some of it has to do with security, but today we know that technology, when things are invisible, is actually safer than physical artefacts."

Looking to the future, Behar believes that wearable technologies, such as the Up wristband he designed for San Fransisco company Jawbone, provide an exciting opportunity for integrating technology into the home.

"The next step for me with the Up is how it talks with the rest of the home," he says. "It's an object that can tell the home where I am and what I'm doing. Am I tired from a long day so the lighting should be really mellow and calm, or do I need to be energised so the ambience is going to be rocking? Am I about to get home, so maybe the temperature should go up?"

He concludes: "There are all kinds of new intuitive ways that these technologies that we're wearing can interface with the technologies in our home. For reasons of efficiency, but also for having a home that responds to you in ways that are going to be magical."
 

Where Yves Behar finds inspiration for product design

Published on Oct 14, 2015

The famed designer, who has worked with Apple, Movado, Jawbone, Prada, Herman Miller and Samsung, is also the co-founder of August, which just launched three new smart lock products. Behar sat down with CNET's Shara Tibken to explain his design process and the beauty of designing useful products.
 

Fuseproject's Foray into AI and robotics | Forbes

Published on Jun 1, 2018

Acclaimed designer Yves Behar explains why his San Francisco-based agency fuseproject has been focusing more on AI, robotics and smart environments.
 
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