This project began with a question: What happens to children after we stop giving them loose change?
That curiosity led me to Generation Yuvaa — an NGO working in Visakhapatnam to rescue, rehabilitate, and reimagine futures for children who were once on the streets, begging for survival. I wasn’t there to “fix” anything. My intention was to understand the system from within — to trace a child’s journey from the street to a structured life, and to explore how imagination, identity, and dignity are rebuilt along the way.
Systemic Response: A Design Lens
Child begging is often treated as a one-dimensional issue — something to be solved with money or removal. But what happens after rescue is what actually determines the future of a child. Generation Yuvaa’s work is not just logistical or charitable — it is systemic, emotional, and deeply architectural.
By breaking down their methods, I identified invisible frameworks of care:
- Rescue as Entry Point: Field-based trust building, not institutional enforcement.
- Age-Specific Homes: Environments tailored to developmental needs, run with local staff ("Grannies") to ensure emotional stability.
- Routine and Identity Redesign: Children are never labeled as "orphans" or "rescued." They are "Greenhouse Children." Dignity by design.
Field Visits & The Power of Play
At the Gajuwaka branch, I spent time with younger children. We played games — “statue” being the most memorable. But when we said, “The winner gets a chocolate,” the tone shifted. Suddenly, there was competitiveness, eagerness, a kind of narrowing. And then we asked: “Should only one person get the chocolate, or should everyone who plays get one?”
That moment seeded a critical thought: What if the systems we design for children rewarded effort, play, and presence, not just outcome? This insight connects deeply to GenYuvaa’s design: the need for a more equitable reward logic, where support isn’t just transactional but emotional.
Strategic Interventions
To support funding and awareness, I proposed ways to connect with more CSR projects through structured storytelling. Respecting their financial constraints, I designed a low-resource social media framework building consistency through rotating themes without relying on images of children's faces for the sake of privacy.
Reflective Note: Designing Trust
I thought I would learn about rehabilitation. Instead, I learned how much of it is emotional, messy, and made up of decisions no one claps for. I learned that design isn’t always what you add — sometimes, it’s what you refuse to do. Not simplifying someone’s story. Not rushing their healing. Not treating care like a product.
I don’t have all the answers. But I’ve begun to understand the value of sitting with these questions. To design, in this kind of space, is not to arrive with certainty — it’s to stay with complexity. And to recognise that some of the best design doesn’t speak loudly. It simply holds.