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Five Questions With Nadia Beyzaei

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By Rumnique Nannar

Posted on | Updated

Nadia Beyzaei is admittedly someone who likes to steer projects behind the scenes at the . However, as a 2023 Staff Excellence Award recipient, we clamoured to chat with Nadia and spotlight her outstanding work at Emily Carr.

What do you love most about your role?

Blending research, health, and design fields in one space is a stellar combination. Sometimes, health research can take many years for findings to inform best practices or feel tangible. It鈥檚 so applied at Emily Carr, and the process is a big part of the outcome. It鈥檚 not only about the 鈥榝inal鈥 thing but building community and local capacity along the way. On a recent project, a couple of students had never stepped into a Canadian hospital until they were hired on a project. Not to say all our projects are connected to the formal healthcare system. Still, it鈥檚 rewarding to create opportunities for students to see themselves as future social innovators, service designers, and design researchers in the Canadian healthcare field.

When have you felt the proudest and why?

When you see a project come together after a co-design workshop or after a phase of work, it makes all the countless hours put in worth it. Over the past few years, I have tried to live by the motto, 鈥淛ust because you haven鈥檛 done it before, doesn鈥檛 mean you can鈥檛 do it!鈥 While there鈥檚 some blissful ignorance intertwined, it has created opportunities to challenge myself and those around me to strive for something bigger than the sum of us. There have been cool opportunities over the last few years, including co-curating the Lheidli: Where the Two Rivers Meets exhibit at Emily Carr with the Aboriginal Gathering Place, the Health Design Lab, and Knowledge Carriers from Prince George this past summer. The Decolonizing Cultural Safety Education Through Cultural Connections project has been a highlight of my time at Emily Carr!

What鈥檚 the best advice you鈥檝e gotten?

It鈥檚 a simple one. To be effective in whatever you鈥檙e doing, you don鈥檛 need to replicate how someone else has done something to do it 鈥榬ight鈥; you need to be yourself, put the time in, and push through the learning curve to discover what works for you. There are countless ways of accomplishing the same outcome, but finding your path is what pushes you to grow.

If we set you loose, what would you present a TED Talk on?

It鈥檚 definitely designing tiny spaces. I lived in a micro-apartment for a couple of years, which was 175 square feet. My challenge was, 鈥楬ow can I effectively design this space to be cozy and worthy of Architectural Digest!鈥 On top of that, I lived there during the early COVID years of mostly working from home, so curating a zen space featuring a cute Zoom background was a top priority. So yeah, sign me up for a Ted Talk on designing small spaces with furniture and decor finds solely from Facebook marketplace!

What piece of art of any medium would you bring to a desert island?

I like to keep my hands occupied, so I would bring a sewing needle. I鈥檝e been a Girl Guide leader for over ten years and have taken wilderness first aid training. So, hopefully, I have the whole survival thing sorted, and I can last on a desert island for a while! I would probably look for found items to make a tarp, sleeping bag, or experimental outfits. It鈥檇 be fun to make a two-piece fit out of driftwood or something. Who knows?

Check out Nadia's work at the Health Design Lab .