Cookie Preferences

This site uses cookies that need consent. Learn more

Mineral 2025/26

Design Researchers in Residence: Alfred Yatlong Yeung, Elise Limon, Rafael El Baz, Rosa Whiteley

The 2025/26 residents will respond to the theme of ‘Mineral’, critically interrogating the UK’s intersecting mineral landscapes.

Minerals, concentrated in the Earth’s crust, are a finite resource. But global demand for critical minerals is accelerating, particularly with the transition to renewable energy systems. The International Energy Agency estimates that by 2040 the demand for key minerals like lithium, cobalt and rare earth elements will be four times greater than today. These materials are integral to the manufacture of clean energy technologies, including wind turbines and electrical networks, which are central to the UK’s net zero goals.

Brickfield Firing by Oliver Udy courtesy of Rosanna Martin.

From kaolin pits in Cornwall to salt mines in North Yorkshire, the UK’s geological landscape is scarred by centuries of mineral extraction. These materials are not only held in geological strata, the mineral composition of soil and water plays a crucial role in supporting biodiversity and regulating ecological processes. Mineral fertilisers are used to provide plants with nutrients to grow. These delicate dynamics, often overlooked, are integral to the health of both natural and agricultural landscapes.

Simultaneously, there is a second mineral landscape in our urban environments: veins of ore embedded in discarded consumer electronics. Post-use materials represent a critical untapped resource.

Can net-zero goals be sustained through the continued extraction of finite mineral resources?

How can design research better understand the UK’s dependence on these minerals?

2025 ©Justine Trickett for the Design Museum

The 2025/26 Design Researchers in Residence are Alfred Yatlong Yeung, Elise Limon, Rafael El Baz and Rosa Whiteley.

Alfred will investigate the reemergence of Cornish lithium mining from the perspective of the mineral-rich county’s local community. Elise will trace the copper embedded in our built environment, identifying untapped stores of Critical Raw Materials. Rafael will test the potential of slag silica waste as a raw material for designers and Rosa will explore the future of the UK’s chalkland landscapes.

From Cornish mines and copper pipes to factory furnaces and chalk aquifers, each resident will critically interrogate the UK’s intersecting mineral landscapes through case studies, field research and by building human and non-human relationships.

Suggested for you

Alfred Yatlong Yeung

Design Researcher in Residence 2025-26

Elise Limon

Design Researcher in Residence 2025-26

Rafael El Baz

Design Researcher in Residence 2025-26

Rosa Whiteley

Design Researcher in Residence 2025-26