The competition is intended to take powerful ideas to market and to provide a platform for consumers to experience and interact with innovative solutions.
The call is for sustainable solutions to improve living conditions in low-income households and there will be R500,000 of support for each competition winner to take the idea to market
Designers and innovators, inventors and creators, students and professionals, manufacturers and retailers (local and beyond South Africa's borders) are all encouraged to enter. Three winners will each receive support worth R500,000 to commercialise their home improvement solutions. Students will compete for a R40,000 cash prize.
This competition (WDC#204) is one of seven CCDI projects selected for the Cape Town World Design Capital 2014 (WDC2014) programme.
CCDI executive director Erica Elk said, "Millions of South Africans live in dire conditions in informal settlements, backyard shacks and RDP houses. The need is much greater than the capacity and resources of government to deliver.
"We need to find solutions for home improvements that are affordable, result in better living conditions and quality of life and provide people with the choices and resources to help themselves at their own pace. There are many needs and also many opportunities."
The competition will be rolled out in three phases
Three entry categories
Elk called on tertiary institutions to support the competition, "Lecturers could encourage their students to channel their expertise into this vital sector. They could base a design brief on the Challenge, with cross-disciplinary teams from various departments working together."
Jenny Cargill, who leads 110% Green, said, "The Challenge differs from the usual design contests. It encompasses innovative marketing to test consumer acceptance of the designs and products on show, hopes to encourage financial institutions to provide new financial products to support self-improvement, and follow-up business support to award winning manufacturers and designers in the subsequent year."