About Me

Error

Education

Carnegie Mellon University
BFA Industrial Design, 2016

Experience

SnapCab Systems
Production Specialist; R&D Engineer
2022-2024
James A. White Construction
Assistant Project Manager
2020-2022
Voyage Auto
Research and Test Operations; UX Designer
2019-2020
Freelance Design/Build
Brooklyn
2018-2019; Ongoing
Uber Advanced Technologies Group
Test Specialist II; Test Engineer [Black Ops Team]
2016-2018
Piecemaker Technologies
Design Engineering Intern
2015

Design + Engineering Skills

Design for Manufacturing, Lean Principles Sketching, Rapid Prototyping, Test Engineering Design Engineering, Mechatronics Failure Mode and Effects Analysis, Root Cause Problem Solving Design Research, User Testing Human Computer Interaction Environmental Health & Safety

Digital Tools

Solidworks, Mastercam, Vectric AutoCAD, Fusion 360, Inventor Rhino, Sketchup Blender, Dimension Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign Premiere Pro Sketch, Figma HTML, CSS Python, JS

Fabrication Skills

CNC - Routing, Milling, Waterjet, Plasma, Laser CNC - Machine design and fabrication Machine Shop - Mill, Lathe, Tube Bending/Notching, Various Cutting/Drilling Additive Manufacturing - 3D printing (FDM, SLA, SLS) Wood Shop - Jointer, Planer, Table Saw, Drum Sander, etc... Welding - MIG, TIG, Arc Composites - Wet layup, Vacuum Infusion, Mold Making

Site designed and built by David Power ✌️

Meal Planner
Designing for
Health Literacy

Meal Planner

  • User Research
  • Design Research
  • Visual Design
Designing for Health Literacy
2015
Carnegie Mellon University

Through collaboration with the Regional Health Literacy Coalition (RHLC), our team set out to understand what effects poor health literacy might have on those in the Pittsburgh community. Health literacy is the ability to find, understand, evaluate, communicate, and use health information to make informed decisions about your health, and it's one of the strongest indicators of individual and familial health status - moreso than age, income, employment status, education level or racial/ethnic group.

Collab: Andro Zuzul, Joe Jung
  • Product Design
  • Metal Fabrication
  • CNC Fabrication
  • 3D Modeling

Research Process

We visited the Urban League’s Duquesne Family Support Center (DFSC) and sat in on their monthly Parents Council meeting, where had the opportunity to introduce ourselves to a faction of the dedicated parents who frequent the center. We quickly learned that nutriton literacy was a topic most parents were both eager to learn about. We visited the DFSC many times over the next few weeks in order to explore more specific aspects of our audience’s nutrition literacy, shopping and eating habits, and pain points in preparing food for their families. Along the way we invited parents + kids to participate in various surveys and activities designed to help spark conversation and involve them in the design process.

Probes

One of these activities involved parents taking turns "shopping" by putting grocery items - images backed by foamcore - into a shopping cart - some velcro adhered to a sheet of MDF. We observed how shoppers' priorities, habits, and decisions changed when presented with different scenarios, budgets, and choices. The activity gave us lots of valubale insight into the factors our users weigh when selecting items to purchase.

Shopping Experience

During our travels to and from the Family Support Center, our group identified an apparent lack of food markets in the surrounding areas. A bit of research and conversations with our users confirmed there were less than a handful of reasonable options in the area. In fact, parts of Duquesne could be categorized as food deserts.

Most of our users don't own a car, instead relying on public transit to make trips outside of the neighborhood. So while many would prefer to shop at a Giant Eagle or Walmart outside of Duquesne, the prohbititively long bus rides (and heavy bags to bring on them) make this very difficult.

In order to aquire the items they need, as well as get the best prices, many Duquesne residents make a seperate shopping list for each store they shop at. They generally buy basic necessities at their local stores on a weekly basis, and travel to their preferred stores for everything else - about once a month or for special occasions.

Empathy Map

We gathered together the various forms of data we'd collected, along with observations from our activites, conversations, and interviews, in order to paint a clearer picture of our user group. The goal of this exercise is to try and empathize with their motivations, goals, and desires. We could then use this information to guide our decision making through the rest of the design process.

User Persona

We filtered through everything again in order to craft a persona that would embody our user group. That persona is Brianna Hill - a typical Duquesne mom.

Family Meal Planner

The Family Meal Planner is a simple booklet that helps families make each meal of the day affordable and nutritious. It's meant to act as a starting point for parents to think about how to shop smarter, and a conversation starter for families to approach healthy eating in a lighthearted way. The booklet is packed with bright colors and fun imagery to entice kids to learn along with their parents.

Comparison Pages

For each meal category - Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner, and Snacks - a common unhealthy food option is called out while reccomendations of better choices sold in nearby stores are given. Each food item includes information about local prices and locations, nutrient content, dietary restrictions, and serving sizes.

Since many of the families we worked with reported having trouble meeting the needs of family members with dietary restrictions, we included gluten free, lactose free, nut free, and low in added sugar products whenever possible.

Recipe Pages

The last section of the booklet includes a small collection of recipes featuring inexpensive and readily available ingredients. Many of our families admitted to being overly reliant on packaged and frozen foods, so these recipes were chosen to demonstrate that cooking a healthy meal can be quick, easy, and fun.

Nutrient Card

Housed in a library book-esque pocket in the back cover of the booklet is a removeable nutrition info card that users can easily carry with them to reference when out shopping.

The complicated and confusing nature of the standard nutrition labels found on all food packaging was one of the most common pain points for our families.

The front of the card highlights and explains the information printed on nutrition labels, while the back of the card provides a more detailed description of each nutrient category.