Grit Grocery

Grit Grocery

Spring 2016

Problem statement: How can we educate customers about where their food comes from and how it was produced through the design of the GRIT grocery food truck?

Members: Kajal Patel, Dominique Devlin, Emily Lisa, Emma Wu, Tian Udomsak

Clients: Kelly and Dustin Windham

Time: Spring 2016

Introduction

A community’s relationships to food varies worldwide. Kelly and Dustin became inspired by a local farmer’s market food experience in Azerbaijan, where people built a personal relationship with each other through buying local food in a community. Back home in Houston, they decided to create Houston’s first mobile grocery store to bring locally grown or sourced products to the neighborhood and educate Houstonians on sustainable food practice.

Digital prototype for food signage

Setting goals

As a team, we initially identified three areas of challenge that we wanted to tackle: 1) Educate Houstonians about differences between foods types and values 2) Design the exterior and interior of the grocery space in a way that enhance vendor-customer interaction and community development, 3) PromoteGrit Grocery in a way that speaks to everyone since food is a personal and individualistic experience.

 

Creating a Problem Statement

Keeping the three areas of challenge in mind, we visited GritGrocery in person and conducted some preliminary evaluation of the food truck by doing basic measurements etc. Then, we realized that the scope of the project was very big and it would be better if we focus on one area of challenge to effectively help our clients. Therefore, we narrowed down to the educational component and refined our “how-can-we” statement into: How can we educate customers about where their food comes from and how it was produced through the design of the GRIT grocery food truck?

Research and Design

To achieve our goal of the project, we conducted research ongrocery store, farmer’s market, international food markets, as well as grocery food trucks. In addition, we visited a farmer’s market for first-hand experience with food truck layout and vendor-customer interaction. After drawing inspiration from the visit and communicating our vision of the project with Dustin and Kelly, we decided to design a labeling system that educates customers about local, organic, natural, seasonal, wild-caught, and cage-free food. Our DFA team handed the clients a “recommendation package” with a summary of the study– problem identification, research, and suggestions for design.

  Explanatory signage that would be hung outside of the truck as a key for tags on food items

Explanatory signage that would be hung outside of the truck as a key for tags on food items

Organization of truck facade facilitates vending and education process

Physical prototypes of the food labels and explanatory signage
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