The Power of Design Charrettes
By Chris Stine, AIA
April 22, 2026Post Tagged in
Regardless of which creative world you call home, it is a rare experience to find yourself working in a bubble where the first idea, design, or direction that pops into your head turns out to be a eureka moment.In fact, it’s common to see your waste basket fill up faster than your sheet of solid ideas. We’ve all been there. Whether experienced—but just can’t get a detail to work, new to the process—and not confident your design is heading in the right direction, or just looking for a way to bring fresh eyes and unique perspectives to the table…we have a great idea. Host a charrette! A what? By no means a new idea, nearly every day our office turns to the charrette process to jumpstart, inspire, and improve our solutions. The charrette experience, known for its focused, collaborative approach, consistently leads our design teams, problem solvers, and business leaders to more successful, stronger, and more responsive solutions. Maybe it’s time for your team to shake up your creative design or problem-solving process. Maybe it’s time to host a charrette! |
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What is a Design Charrette?The word charrette dates back to the 1800s in France, when architecture students at the École des Beaux-Arts would put the finishing touches on their projects as their drawings were literally wheeled away in a cart (charrette in French). Over time, the term came to represent the idea of a final push, where intense creativity and collaboration happen in a condensed timeframe. Today charrettes take many forms, both inside and outside the world of design, but its core principles of intensive, collaborative, and multidisciplinary participation are usually still present and remain the catalysts leading to breaking through creative roadblocks, moving beyond impasses, and finding design inspiration when it seems lost. Regardless of the format your charrette takes, keep top of mind the goal of quickly gathering fresh, diverse insight and ideas. You will likely find yourself leading a focused, brief, and intense workshop-like session on your way to finding creative solutions for complex problems. Chances are you’ve been part of charrette-like experiences but heard them called “brainstorming” or “problem solving” sessions instead. Often, the typical charrette in our office finds a small group of designers gathered around a pin-up board or monitor, each offering input or challenges to a specific design problem that the design host has just introduced. You could argue that this is the ideal example of the charrette, and you might be right. But let’s look at a few other ways the charrette could bring you benefit. |

