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Dr Mehrnoosh Mirzaei

Lecturer
School of Architecture, Design and Planning
Faculty of Engineering, Architecture and Information Technology
Availability:
Available for supervision
Media expert

Dr Mehrnoosh Mirzaei is an interdisciplinary designer, design researcher, and educator. She is a Lecturer in Design at the School of Architecture, Design and Planning, The University of Queensland (UQ). She holds a Bachelor’s and Master’s degree in Industrial Design from the University of Tehran, specialising in Product Design, and completed her PhD at the Queensland University of Technology (QUT) in 2023. Her doctoral research explored the potential of experiential learning and embodiment within disaster risk reduction (DRR) education for children, using Research-through-Design and participatory methods. The study produced a three-step design model for creating child-centred, inclusive, and practitioner-friendly DRR learning frameworks. Her research is interdisciplinary, addressing complex social and environmental challenges through design-led approaches that bridge education, community resilience, and health. Mehrnoosh’s work focuses on enhancing climate adaptation, risk perception, and well-being through participatory and embodied design methods. She leads and collaborates on projects such as the Tropical Bus Stop (TAP) project and Resilient by Design, which connect design research with real-world impact across communities, local governments, and industry.

Beyond academia, Mehrnoosh has extensive professional experience as an industrial designer, with a portfolio spanning the automotive, homeware, and toy industries, and she received the Bronze A’ Design Award (2017) for her work “Escher.” She also partners with government and health organisations to develop co-design frameworks and user engagement tools, including design-driven risk awareness programs for children and healthcare system design improvements. Mehrnoosh integrates these experiences into her teaching, advancing interdisciplinary and user-centred design practice to prepare the next generation of designers for complex societal challenges.

Mehrnoosh Mirzaei
Mehrnoosh Mirzaei

Professor Cara Wrigley

Professor in Design
School of Architecture, Design and Planning
Faculty of Engineering, Architecture and Information Technology
Availability:
Available for supervision
Media expert

Dr Cara Wrigley is currently Professor of Design within the Faculty of Engineering, Architecture and Information Technology at The University of Queensland. Prior to this appointment she was the Jericho Chair of Design Innovation at The University of Sydney, leading an interdisciplinary research group sponsored by the Royal Australian Air Force. This multi-million-dollar engagement brought together the Australian Defence Force and world-leading researchers to investigate the role that design plays in the creation of disruptive technologies for military capability.

During her time at the University of Sydney Professor Wrigley established the Defence by Design Group, where she ran applied research projects in the military domain. This collaboration contributed to the theoretical development of ‘military design thinking’ that has been taught and applied widely throughout the Australian Defence Force. In 2018, she also established and directed the Design Innovation Research Group, leading a research team that focused on design-led exploratory research, conducting applied and theoretical research into people, emotions, strategy and business.

Professor Wrigley holds extensive experience in curriculum development and delivery, during her time at the University of Sydney she developed and delivered a Massive Open Online Course (MOOC) on Design Innovation (2018), rolled out a university wide Design Major (2018) and launched the Master of Design Innovation and Strategic Design (2019) program. This new degree has been reported on in the Book ‘Design Thinking Pedagogy: Facilitating Innovation and Impact in Tertiary Education’ by Routledge published in 2022.

Professor Wrigley has secured over $60M in competitive industry and government grants and is currently Chief Investigator on ARC Discovery and Linkage projects as well as a Medical Research Future Fund. Her research projects have received funding from industry partners such as the Brisbane Airport Corporation, Suncorp Insurance Australia, TAFE NSW, WaterCo Ltd, Bank of Queensland, BiVACOR and the Royal Australian Airforce. She is a reviewer for the Australian Research Council (ARC) and provides advice to organisations and their executives from diverse industries. For this work she has received Australian Good Design Awards.

Professor Wrigley has published extensively on the application and adoption of design disseminated through seven (7) books. Including the Research Handbook on Design Thinking (2023), Design Innovation and Integration (2021), Design Innovation for Health and Medicine (2020) and Affected: Emotionally Engaging Customers in the Digital Age (2018). She has more than 100 refereed research papers in outlets such Design Issues, Journal of Cleaner Production, Energy Policy, California Management Review, ASAIO Journal, and Journal of Cardiovascular Nursing. She is currently the Editor-in-Chief of the leading design research journal Design Studies published by Elsevier.

Professor Wrigley has delivered invited keynotes at prestigious global academic conferences in the medical field including the European Mechanical Circulatory Support Summit (EUMS) Conference (2019, Vienna), the American Society of Artificial Internal Organs (ASAIO) 65th Annual Conference (San Francisco (2019) and the Asia-Pacific Extracorporeal Life Support Organisation (APELSO) Conference (2018). Furthermore, she is a regular invited speaker at the Australian Defence College and the Australian Defence Force Academy in Canberra for her work in Defence.

She is passionate about providing positive student and supervisor experiences and has presented at a number of universities on the topic of academic development and PhD supervision. She has advised a number of colleagues and high degree students on how to develop efficient and successful ways of collaboration, building professional networks and working with industry partners.

Cara Wrigley
Cara Wrigley