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Overview & Scope

Feest is a food truck, ghost kitchen, and pop-up restaurant tracking app. I designed this app to help users find the best food truck spots on demand and within a locality.

Year

February 28, 2023

Client

Feest

Services

UI/UX

Role

UX/UI designer

Tools

Figma, Illustrator, Photoshop

The Problem

Despite the rise of food trucks and pop-ups, most mobile food discovery platforms focus on traditional restaurants. There is no cohesive app that allows users to locate, evaluate, and order from these transient and trending food venues efficiently.

The Goal

Create a streamlined mobile experience to help users discover food trucks, pop-ups, and ghost kitchens based on location and preference, complete with ordering, accessibility filtering, and real-time updates.

User Research

I conducted a series of qualitative interviews and online surveys with 5 users. Insights revealed a clear demand for a convenient way to explore mobile and pop-up food vendors.

Users emphasized convenience, the desire to try new cuisines, and the importance of accessibility and real-time updates.

Many users expressed that while they love food trucks, they don't know where to find them unless they stumble across one.

Pain Points

  • Convenience: No centralized platform for reviews, maps, and menus
  • Distance: Users want to limit their travel radius (max 20 miles)
  • Accessibility: Lack of visibility into ADA-friendly vendors and accessible seating options
  • Engagement: No ability to follow favorite vendors or get alerts for nearby activity

Competitive Analysis

The main goal for this audit is to explore and gain insights into how the competitors place themselves within the market and how well each app establishes itself in usability and finding the nearest food truck. By doing this I’ll focus on the UI/UX design elements analyze what works and what doesn’t for the user, and gauge how I might implement insightful ideas into the Feest App going forward.

👥 Personas

Julian – Retail Store Manager

Goal: Discover unique lunch options during short breaks

Pain Point: Limited fast food selection and time constraints

Trang – Operations Manager

Goal: Find inclusive food truck experiences with accessible seating

Pain Point: No visibility into wheelchair-friendly options in other food apps

🧰 User Journey Maps

Julian's Journey: Julian opens the app during his lunch break, uses map view to locate a trending food truck within walking distance, views the menu, places a quick pickup order, and receives directions to the location.

Trang's Journey: Trang filters search results to show wheelchair-accessible pop-ups, finds one hosting an event nearby, views reservation availability, books a table, and receives confirmation with access info.

✏️ Starting the Design

Initial design work started with paper wireframes focused on quick access to vendor locations via geolocation. I prioritized simplicity and clear iconography. In digital wireframes, I introduced accessible design elements such as visual labels for wheelchair-friendly locations and distinct pin types for trucks, pop-ups, and ghost kitchens.

The low-fidelity prototype included 3 key user flows: truck tracking, accessible seating reservation, and mobile food ordering. Each flow was tested for navigation efficiency and intuitiveness.

Digital Wireframes

The app home screen starts theuser at their location on the map,with surrounding food trucks, pop-ups, and ghost kitchens in thearea. The pin elements willindicate what type of vendor is onthe map.
The app home screen starts the user at their location on the map, with surrounding food trucks, pop-ups, and ghost kitchens in the area. The pin elements will indicate what type of vendor is on the map.

Usability Testing

Round 1 Findings

  • Users found the pickup process had too many steps
  • Lack of clear visual hierarchy for navigation and directions

Round 2 Findings

  • Desire for pre-order visibility of menu and prices
  • Need for real-time truck status and availability
  • Simpler accessibility features and reservations flow

🎨 Refining the Design

I addressed usability feedback by enhancing the map interface with stronger visual cues and a "Get Directions" button. I also restructured the vendor card layout to prioritize key actions like viewing menus, checking operating status, and ordering.

View Hi-Fidelity Prototype

♿ Accessibility Considerations

  • All icons use distinct shapes and colors for maximum clarity
  • High contrast mode for critical areas like menus and navigation
  • Dedicated filters and indicators for accessible dining options

💡 Key Takeaways

Impact: Feest offered a joyful and inclusive experience for users looking for spontaneous dining options. The app filled a gap in the market for real-time discovery of non-traditional food vendors.

What I Learned: Good design emerges from continuous iteration. Inclusivity must be intentional. The deeper the user insight, the stronger and more focused the solution becomes.

User Feedback: “Feest is a pretty nifty app. If you have a fleeting appetite and are a food truck junkie—it’s a much-needed and enjoyable app to have in my life!”

🔄 Next Steps

  • Enhance real-time tracking and push notifications for vendors
  • Expand accessibility features to support a broader range of needs
  • Explore community-driven features (e.g., reviews, social food alerts)

Want to learn more about this case study?

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