What do a lamp that purifies the air, a sculpture for feeding bees and a gravestone made from discarded clothing have in common? They are all the result of a new exhibition ‘Hybrid: Objects for Future Homes’ that is currently on at the Powerhouse Museum in Sydney.

Multi-disciplinary ‘hybrid’ teams were commissioned by the museum to create new works for the future home, with a target date set for 2030. According to design writer Stephen Todd, who curated the exhibition with the Powerhouse Museum’s Keinton Butler, each team was given data from the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) that said the critical 1.5% tipping point of global warming would be reached by 2030, as well as data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) that modelled dramatic population growth and an evolved cultural mix, especially in Western Sydney, by 2030. “By setting the focus ten years hence, we tasked the designers to envisage a very possible future,” says Todd.
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