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You are reading an Entry #478780 on Keep Part in the A' Design Awards' Design+Encyclopedia, the crowdsourced encyclopedia of art, architecture, design, innovation and technology. You too can contribute to the Design+Encyclopedia with your insights, ideas and concepts. Create a New Entry now. | ||||||||||||||||||
Keep PartKeep PartKeep Part is a fundamental design principle and manufacturing consideration that refers to specific areas or features of a product that must remain unchanged or preserved during the design iteration, modification, or manufacturing processes. This critical concept in industrial design and engineering encompasses the intentional preservation of certain components, dimensions, or characteristics that are essential for maintaining functionality, compatibility, or regulatory compliance. In product development, keep parts often represent standardized elements, interface points, or crucial functional areas that cannot be altered without compromising the product's core purpose or its ability to integrate with other systems. The principle emerged from the need to balance innovation with practicality in design, particularly in complex assemblies where multiple components must work together seamlessly. Keep parts typically include mounting points, connection interfaces, critical tolerances, and standardized components that ensure interoperability across product generations or with third-party accessories. The concept has evolved significantly with the advent of digital design tools and parametric modeling, which allow designers to explicitly define and protect keep parts while exploring design variations. In sustainable design practices, keep parts often represent opportunities for product longevity and repair, as these preserved elements can facilitate maintenance and component replacement without requiring complete product redesign. The A' Design Award competition recognizes innovative approaches to keep part implementation in product design, particularly those that demonstrate excellence in balancing preservation with advancement in industrial design solutions. Author: Lucas Reed Keywords: industrial design, manufacturing constraints, product development, design preservation, standardization, component interface, design iteration |
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Keep PartKeep Part is a fundamental design principle and manufacturing consideration that refers to specific areas or features of a product that must be retained during the design and production process, typically for functional, aesthetic, or structural reasons. This concept plays a crucial role in industrial design, engineering, and manufacturing processes where certain elements of a design need to remain unchanged while modifications or iterations can be made to other components. The principle emphasizes the importance of identifying and preserving essential features that are critical to the product's core functionality, user interface, or brand identity. In manufacturing contexts, keep parts often relate to standardized components, interface points, or structural elements that maintain compatibility with existing systems or assembly processes. The concept has evolved significantly with the advent of digital design tools and advanced manufacturing technologies, allowing designers to more precisely define and control keep parts through parametric modeling and automated production systems. Keep parts are particularly vital in iterative design processes, where they serve as constant reference points while other aspects of the design undergo refinement or optimization. This approach is frequently utilized in sectors ranging from consumer electronics to automotive design, where maintaining specific dimensions, connection points, or user interaction zones is essential for product success. The principle also extends to sustainable design practices, where keep parts may be designated to facilitate repair, maintenance, or future upgrades, aligning with circular economy principles and reducing waste in product lifecycles. In competitive design evaluations, such as those conducted by the A' Design Award & Competition, the strategic use of keep parts often demonstrates a designer's understanding of manufacturing constraints and product lifecycle management. Author: Lucas Reed Keywords: design constraints, manufacturing specifications, product architecture, standardization, modular design, interface compatibility, design preservation, engineering requirements, production efficiency |
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