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Public Access Design

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Engage to Change

Technical Assistance

Engage to Change

Pinned Down? Rise Up!

Making Policy Public

Pinned Down? Rise Up!

Government in Plain Sight

City Studies

Government in Plain Sight

Figuring Out Health Insurance

Making Policy Public

Figuring Out Health Insurance

Don't Bank On It

Making Policy Public

Don't Bank On It

Meet the Designers: All Other Services

Meet the Designers: All Other Services

As part of a new feature on CUP collaborators, we asked Kevin and Joel from All Other Services to tell us a little bit more about themselves and about working on a CUP project.

All Other Services is a civic-minded graphic design team that develops visual and strategic direction for brands, institutions, and advocacies that positively impact communities. They collaborated with CUP on the recently released Your Guide to Welfare in NYC.

1. Can you tell us a little bit more about All Other Services? When did you become a firm? How did you start doing design work?

We first met as design students at MCAD and then worked alongside one another as interns at Project Projects. In subsequent years we kept coming back to the idea of a practice focused on public interest design. CUP’s Making Policy Public program offered the perfect place to formalize that practice. 

2. How would you describe your practice?

We work to apply the communicative tools and processes of graphic design to bridge and engage communities.

3. What projects is All Other Services working on now?

We’re very excited to be working with CUP on a new toolkit about neighborhood re-zoning issues. We are also working on food education material for Just Food, a program identity for the Center for Architecture, and we continue to freelance as individuals. We’re also looking forward to the Blue Ridge Labs @ Robin Hood Foundation’s 2015 design fellowship, where Joel will represent All Other Services.

4. Are there other designers that inspire you?

Muriel Cooper is a big one. Her design work for MIT and her interdisciplinary exploration of media and pedagogy are very inspiring.

5. What was the most exciting part of working on the Your Guide to Welfare project?

Based on feedback from welfare recipients we began re-structuring the flow of the poster, and developed the narrative-pathway we were looking for. It was a great moment that highlighted Making Policy Public as both an inclusive process and as an opportunity to clarify a complex experience.

6. What was the most important thing you learned from the project?

We learned that making an opaque system more approachable can be as valuable as explaining a system in full.

7. What are your secret skills that have nothing to do with your design work?

We can both speed read.

H2 Oh No!

Technical Assistance

H2 Oh No!

Is Suspension The Solution?

City Studies

Is Suspension The Solution?

It's Not Just Personal

Making Policy Public

It's Not Just Personal

Grand Army Plaza

Urban Investigations

Grand Army Plaza

Field Guide to Federalism

City Studies

Field Guide to Federalism

What Does It Mean To Live In My Own Place?

Making Policy Public

What Does It Mean To Live In My Own Place?

Making the Grade

Urban Investigations

Making the Grade

Shine a Light on Your Utility Rights

Making Policy Public

Shine a Light on Your Utility Rights