The California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR) required a comprehensive design system to streamline engineering workflows while improving transparency and fairness within their parole system. At the core of our approach was embedding human-centered design into CDCR’s processes, ensuring that every decision was rooted in understanding user needs, minimizing harm, and making informed, empathetic choices.
Our work emphasized the importance of user research, frequent testing, and rapid iterations to avoid unintended consequences and mistakes. We delivered a design system that supported both Vuetify and PrimeVue frameworks, enabling engineers to easily implement designs while maintaining a consistent visual language across platforms. This bridged the gap between design and code, allowing teams to focus on delivering solutions without worrying about technical inconsistencies.
Collaboration between engineers and designers was key to the success of this project. By fostering mutual understanding and clear communication, we were able to launch products in weeks that would have previously taken years. This was not achieved by Lost Horse's efforts alone—CDCR has been cultivating a highly capable team, and together we developed a workflow that maximized efficiency and minimized friction between departments.
In addition to building the design system, we provided in-depth training that covered human-centered design methodologies, user interviews, prototyping, and testing strategies. This empowered the CDCR team to conduct user research, rapidly validate ideas, and iterate on designs to ensure they met real user needs.