top of page
Anthropolitan

The Anthropolitan Manifesto

A Vision for the Symbiotic Era

The Anthropolitan Manifesto presents a comprehensive vision for a post-capitalist, ecological civilization rooted in cooperation, balance, and interdependence with the biosphere. It proposes Anthropolis as a new social model — a network of self-sufficient, bioregional villages functioning like living organisms within the greater body of the Earth.

 

In essence:
The Anthropolitan Manifesto is both political blueprint and moral compass — a declaration that the next stage of human evolution is not technological supremacy, but conscious symbiosis with the living world.

 

​​

ANTHROPOLIS-Design Dept-Green.jpg

Pete Ward

This essay embodies the tension between modern alienation and ancestral intuition—the recognition that progress without wisdom is regression. It invites the reader to reimagine civilization not as a pyramid of consumption, but as a network of reciprocity.

Industrial Design

"Industrial Design is a strategic problem-solving process that drives innovation, builds business success and leads to a better quality of life through innovative products, systems, services and experiences. Industrial Design bridges the gap between what is and what’s possible. It is a trans-disciplinary profession that harnesses creativity to resolve problems and co-create solutions with the intent of making a product, system, service, experience or a business, better. At its heart, Industrial Design provides a more optimistic way of looking at the future by reframing problems as opportunities. It links innovation, technology, research, business and customers to provide new value and competitive advantage across economic, social and environmental spheres. Industrial Designers place the human in the center of the process. They acquire a deep understanding of user needs through empathy and apply a pragmatic, user centric problem solving process to design products, systems, services and experiences. They are strategic stakeholders in the innovation process and are uniquely positioned to bridge varied professional disciplines and business interests. They value the economic, social and environmental impact of their work and their contribution towards co-creating a better quality of life." ​ - The Professional Practice Committee

Industrial Design

PETE WARD

Education

1995-2000

California College of the Arts (CCA)

Fall-1998

Ecole Nationale Superieure de Creation Industrielle

San Francisco, California 

BFA, Industrial Design

Paris, France

Semester abroad through exchange program.

bottom of page