logo
#

Latest news with #PolitecnicoDiMilano

One Man's Fight To Make Fashion Fair Transparent And Accountable
One Man's Fight To Make Fashion Fair Transparent And Accountable

Forbes

time20-07-2025

  • Business
  • Forbes

One Man's Fight To Make Fashion Fair Transparent And Accountable

Hakan Karaosman trailblazer in the sustainability fashion space Dr. Hakan Karaosman did not inherit his authority on fashion from glossy runways or brand legacies. He earned it, thread by thread by starting in a small home where his mother sewed garments to keep the family afloat. Today, as a globally recognized voice in sustainable fashion and responsible supply chain management, Karaosman is using that early proximity to labor and dignity to reshape an industry long defined by opacity, exploitation, and exclusion. Currently serving as Associate Professor at Politecnico di Milano, with a Visiting Scholar role at University College Dublin, Karaosman stands at the critical intersection of academia, policy, and industry. His research, policy influence, and grassroots collaborations have made him one of the most trusted experts among brands and institutions striving to future-proof their operations, not through superficial ESG statements, but through structural reform. While his résumé reads like a checklist of global impact and includes co-founder of the EU-backed FReSCH (Fashion's Responsible Supply Chain Hub), former Associate Professor at Cardiff Business School, scientific partner to the United Nations Fashion and Lifestyle Network, collaborator with brands like Prada and Salvatore Ferragamo, his mission remains deeply personal: to center the garment workers, especially women in the Global South, whose hands and lives hold up the multi-trillion-dollar fashion industry. From Engineer to a Voice for the Vulnerable in the Fashion Sector Karaosman's story defies the sanitized, feel-good narratives often found in sustainability marketing. Trained first as an environmental engineer, he went on to earn an Erasmus Mundus Master's in energy and environmental management across Spain, France, and Sweden. His Ph.D. is a double doctorate jointly awarded by Politecnico di Milano and Universidad Politécnica de Madrid and deeply focused on sustainability integration in luxury fashion supply chains. In a sector where much of sustainability work is reduced to carbon counting and marketing campaigns, Karaosman champions a people-first approach. Through FReSCH, he has built a global coalition of NGOs, workers, researchers, creatives, and policymakers to address not just climate and compliance, but heat stress in garment factories, governance failures, and the invisibility of labor. Its policy insights have informed initiatives led by the European Commission, Welsh Government, and UN bodies. Furthermore, its academic work has been downloaded thousands of times and translated into industry tools. From Engineer to top voice in fashion equity A Voice in Sustaible Fashion And Equity Karaosman's work has garnered prestigious accolades from across the sustainability and fashion landscape. Recently, his work also left a lasting imprint on the five-part Forbes series on sustainable fashion, where his voice helped illuminate the systemic reforms needed to achieve real equity and climate accountability in global supply chains. He was named to the Vogue Business 100 Innovators: Class of 2023, received the Greenpeace Italia Voice for the Climate Award, and earned Cardiff University's Excellence in Sustainability Award. Most recently, FReSCH was honored with the Financial Times Responsible Business Education Award, recognized for transforming academic insights into real-world tools that shape policy and industry practice. Upcoming Work and Fashion Impact Dr. Karaosman's upcoming work at Politecnico di Milano zeroes in on three of the fashion industry's most stubborn fault lines: social justice, decarbonization, and supply chain resilience. His teaching on sustainability and management in high-end industries incorporates systems thinking, inclusive leadership, and actionable strategy which prepares students not just to enter industry, but to change it. As part of his broader engagement, Karaosman continues to lead high-impact convenings from Milan Fashion Week to TEDx stages, where garment workers sit at the same table as luxury executives and government ministers. Which is a deliberate restructuring of who gets to speak, shape, and benefit. In an industry too often distracted by aesthetic over substance, Dr. Hakan Karaosman is the rare figure weaving academic rigor, lived truth, and collective action in a system where justice is not just a feature, it is the foundation of sustainability and innovation.

Materials, Data, Landscapes, Space, and Wellbeing: Politecnico di Milano research supporting 7 Projects at the Biennale Architettura 2025
Materials, Data, Landscapes, Space, and Wellbeing: Politecnico di Milano research supporting 7 Projects at the Biennale Architettura 2025

Globe and Mail

time14-05-2025

  • Science
  • Globe and Mail

Materials, Data, Landscapes, Space, and Wellbeing: Politecnico di Milano research supporting 7 Projects at the Biennale Architettura 2025

MILAN, May 14, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- At the 19th International Architecture Exhibition – La Biennale di Venezia, taking place 10 May-23 November 2025, Politecnico di Milano will support seven projects addressing the challenges of contemporary architecture through an interdisciplinary lens. This year's event, curated by Carlo Ratti, is entitled 'Intelligens. Natural. Artificial. Collective.' and invites reflection on the forms of intelligence emerging from the interplay between space, technology, and society. In this context, the presence of the Politecnico di Milano is reflected in the installations that foster dialogue between architecture, science, and innovation, engaging with themes such as sustainability, sensory perception, wellbeing, and new materials. Applied research, a cross-disciplinary outlook, and an emphasis on social impact form the common thread linking these projects, designed to enrich the global discourse on the future of architecture. Politecnico di Milano's Rector, Donatella Sciuto said: 'The presence of the Politecnico di Milano as a supporter of several projects participating in the Biennale Architettura 2025 is part of one of the most prestigious cultural events on the Italian and international scene. The Biennale di Venezia, with its long-standing heritage and unrivalled prestige, is a hub of creativity where artists, architects, thinkers, and innovators converge and work together. It reflects the social, cultural, and technological transformations of our time, and the university finds itself mirrored in this setting as a driver of change. The university is a place of knowledge, where intelligence is nurtured, developed, and evolves and where new areas of application and forms of expression are discovered. The theme chosen by Carlo Ratti is significant for us, as it is within this framework that architecture must imagine and bring to life new worlds.' Biennale Architettura 2025 curator and Politecnico di Milano professor Carlo Ratti said: 'The message of this Biennale is urgent - the built environment must adapt to a changing planet. Architecture is no longer a matter of form, but of survival. To address this challenge, it must evolve, drawing on all forms of natural, artificial, and collective intelligence at our disposal. This is why universities play such a crucial role in this year's Biennale, especially in a time when they are confronted by emerging forms of obscurantism. We are honoured to count Politecnico di Milano among our participants. I hope the Biennale can carry this message to Piazza Leonardo da Vinci and our current and future students. Architecture has the power to change the world, if we are brave enough to let it.' The Politecnico di Milano supports the following projects participating in the Biennale Architettura 2025: Material Bank - Matters Make Sense is a project set up at the Corderie dell'Arsenale, presented by Ingrid Maria Paoletti and Stefano Capolongo (Department of Architecture, Built Environment and Construction Engineering, Politecnico di Milano), together with set designer Margherita Palli and Nobel Laureate Konstantin Novosëlov (National University of Singapore), awarded for his work on graphene. The project explores perception as a fundamental form of intelligence, linking innovative materials, sensory experience and the built environment. Inspired by the intertwined concepts of a labyrinth and a library, the installation, features interactive devices such as the Polimi_Sensing Core, which enables visitors to perceive their own heartbeat through reactive fabrics, prompting a reflection on the body as an environmental interface. On display at the Arsenale, within the Intelligens Canon section, Milano Urban Mine is an applied research project proposing a spatial model designed to map building components at the end of their life cycle. The aim is to encourage material reuse strategies in urban settings, supporting the principles of a circular economy and sustainable urban planning. Developed by participants Andrea Bortolotti, Matteo Clementi, Federico Godino and Elena Luongo (Department of Architecture and Urban Studies at Politecnico di Milano), and based on an academic exercise carried out within the 2023–2024 Urban Planning Laboratory at the School of Urban Architecture and Construction Engineering of the Milanese university, the project aligns with current approaches to urban regeneration and material flow analysis. Resourceful Intelligence is an installation created through a partnership between Park, Accurat, and the Politecnico di Milano research team composed of participants Gabriele Masera, Francesco Pittau and Michele Versaci. The project tackles the challenge of reusing material resources in the urban landscape, suggesting strategies to reduce raw material consumption via selective deconstruction and mapping resources. Based on two Milanese case studies, the installation illustrates how the built environment can serve as an active reservoir for city regeneration, championing an architectural methodology grounded in circularity and sustainability. This contribution is part of Politecnico di Milano's wider commitment to design approaches that are conscious, adaptable, and geared toward ecological transition. With the ' Instabilities. The shifting Alpine landscapes ' project, Politecnico di Milano supports to the Biennale Architettura 2025 a cartographic investigation of the Alpine region, displayed at the Corderie dell'Arsenale. This work, developed by participants Francesco Garofalo (Visiting Professor) and Chiara Geroldi (Department of Architecture and Urban Studies, Politecnico di Milano), results from a partnership with BOKU University of Vienna (INLA) and the design studio Openfabric. First conceived during a project workshop within the master's degree programme in Landscape Architecture – Land Landscape Heritage, this project challenges the idea of the Alps as a fixed and unchanging landscape. It traces the extractive processes such as quarrying, hydroelectric power, ski tourism and monocultures that have historically shaped and continue to transform the Alpine region. Using critical maps, sectional drawings, and visual representations, the project portrays the Alps as a dynamic landscape of extraction—shaped by cycles of expansion and contraction and crossed by material flows and global infrastructure networks. REwind REwild is a project by the Centro di Competenze Territori AntiFragili (CRAFT) of the Department of Architecture and Urban Studies at Politecnico di Milano, showcased in the Italian Pavilion – Terrae Aquae. L'intelligenza del mare (The Intelligence of the Sea), by Valeria Fedeli, Massimo Bricocoli, Chiara Nifosì, Cristina Renzoni and Nicola Russi, the project explores the instability of Mediterranean coastal areas through a series of 18 research projects presented in video format. REwind REwild introduces a 'polytechnic' and 'polytemporal' design approach focused on building resilience and reshaping the connection between infrastructure and natural processes. Set against the backdrop of climate change and urban challenges, the project investigates rewilding strategies and approaches to regional governance that transform crises and disruptions into opportunities for adaptation and regeneration. Archive & the City is a visual exploration project based on the Historical Archives of Contemporary Arts of Biennale di Venezia, designed to convey the complexity and richness of over a century of artistic heritage through three large-scale graphic visualisations, each measuring 3×3 metres. Created in partnership with the DensityDesign Lab from the Politecnico di Milano Design Department and coordinated by Luigi Farrauto with Jon Kleinberg, Marco Santambrogio, Achille Varzi, these visualisations convert archival data into an engaging, immersive visual experience. The first showcases the structure and diversity of the stored materials; the second arranges more than 140,000 digital images based on their visual similarities, revealing unexpected connections across different eras and events; the third highlights the relationships between artworks and individuals, uncovering hidden connections and often overlooked figures. The project experiments with data visualisation as a tool for critique, storytelling and curation. Design as an Astronaut provides a virtual reality experience within the Argonaut Habitat Unit, developed with the support of the European Space Agency (ESA), MIT Media Lab and Politecnico di Milano. Presented by Valentina Sumini, Cody Paige, Tommy Nilsson, the project investigates the living potential of the Argonaut lunar lander, re-envisioned as a habitat module for short-duration human space missions. The work combines algorithmic modelling and innovative materials - such as Kevlar and mycelium - to create a lightweight, safe and self-sufficient structure. The interior, designed for the astronauts' psychophysical wellbeing, provides adaptive solutions and lighting strategies inspired by circadian rhythms. It is an invitation to consider extreme habitats as laboratories for a new culture of sustainability.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store