Showing posts with label 为贫困人民而设计. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 为贫困人民而设计. Show all posts

Monday, June 23, 2008

Hippo Rollers!




H is for Humanity, Habitats, Health, Habitats, and HIPPO! Project H, an organization that promotes, inspires, and delivers humanitarian product design, is funding 50 Hippo Rollers for a series of 17 villages in Kgautswane in Northeastern South Africa. Hippo Rollers, if you haven’t seen them before, they are amazing barrel devices that allow the millions whose livelihoods depend on the daily fetching of water to more safely and efficiently access and transport water. The roller holds 3-4 days worth of water for a family of 7, about 5 times the amount of water that can be moved using traditional methods, which frees up time for more productive economic and educational activities. It’s an amazing product and an amazing story of good design enabling communities.
For $100 you can sponsor the manufacturing and delivery of one roller in your name, which will be personally delivered to a family in Kgautswane this April by Project H Design. If you believe in the power of good design, here’s your chance to show it! Check out the Hippometer to see how many rollers have been funded to date.
SPONSOR A HIPPO ROLLER NOW via Project H Design >>>>>
The rollers will be delivered to the community this April, as a gesture of support and a catalyst for more collaboration on larger water systems projects within Kgautswane. Here are the details:
What Project H is funding: 50 Hippo Rollers for a group of 17 villages in the Kgautswane community of Northeast South Africa- total population 120,000
Deadline: April 13, 2008
Total amount needed: $5000 (50 rollers, $100 each for production and delivery)
Levels of Donation:$100- one roller for one household$500- five rollers for a small micro-community$1000- ten rollers for a village
ABOUT PROJECT H DESIGN:Founded by Emily Pilloton (Inhabitat’s Managing Editor), Project H Design is a charitable organization that supports, inspires, and delivers life-improving humanitarian product design solutions to global communities in need. Project H champions industrial design as a tool to address social issues, a vehicle for global life improvement, and a catalyst for individual and community empowerment.
+ Project H Design

Monday, May 26, 2008

Solar Water Disinfecting Tarpaulin |太阳能净化水袋




这是 2008 Metropolis 杂志 Next Generation 设计竞赛的获奖作品,设计来自 Eric Olsen,Solar Water Disinfecting Tarpaulin(太阳能净化水袋),一个为缺水地区提供健康饮用水,方便简洁的设计。Solar Water Disinfecting (太阳能水净化系统)即 SODIS 是一个简洁有效的水净化方法,简单说就是通过阳光照射(通常只需要一个PET塑料瓶),利用温度和紫外线来杀死里面的细菌,一般照射6小时就可以饮用,作为一种家庭用的水净化的储存方法,这个消毒净化系统得到了世界卫生组织的推荐,并且在很多发展中地区广泛应用。也有很多设计采用这种方法,比如我们介绍过的 INDEX:2007 HOME 类的获奖作品 Alberto Meda 和 Francisco Gomez Paz 设计的 SOLAR BOTTLE
Eric Olsen 的 Solar Water Disinfecting Tarpaulin 采用了激光切割的LDPE(塑料)和涂胶尼龙做成,和雨布一样,褶皱的几何结构来自于saguaro(巨形仙人掌)储水结构的启发,这种结构使它可以很方便的卷起来,运输也更方便(可以像披肩一样),能容下20升的水,简单快捷有效。

Friday, May 18, 2007

Pot-in-Pot cooler罐中罐制冷器

Designer: Mohammed Bah Abba
Manufacturer: local potters
Nigeria, 1995
Earthenware, sand, water
Dimensions: 16” to 22” diameter
In use in: Cameroon, Tchad, Niger, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Burkina Faso

The Pot-in-Pot system consists of two pots, a smaller earthenware pot nestled within another pot, with the space in between filled with sand and water. When that water evaporates, it pulls heat from the interior of the smaller pot, in which vegetables and fruits can be kept. In rural Nigeria, many farmers lack transportation, water, and electricity, but one of their biggest problems is the inability to preserve their crops. With the Pot-in-Pot, tomatoes last for twenty-one days, rather than two or three days without this technology. Fresher produce can be sold at the market, generating more income for the farmers.

LifeStraw 生活吸管

Designer: Torben Vestergaard Frandsen Manufacturer: Vestergaard Frandsen S.A.China and Switzerland, 2005 (current version)
High impact polystyrene (outer shell), halogen-based resin, anion exchange resin, and patented activated carbon (interior)
Dimensions: 10” h x 1” diameterIn use in: Ghana, Nigeria, Pakistan, Uganda
About half of the world’s poor suffer from waterborne diseases, and more than 6,000 people, mainly children, die each day by consuming unsafe drinking water. LifeStraw, a personal mobile water-purification tool is designed to turn any surface water into drinking water. It has proven to be effective against waterborne diseases such as typhoid, cholera, dysentery, and diarrhea, and removes particles as small as fifteen microns.

Bamboo Treadle Pump竹制脚踏泵


Designer: Gunnar Barnes of Rangpur/Dinajpur Rural Service and International Development Enterprises (IDE) Nepal
Manufacturer: Numerous small and medium-sized local workshops Nepal and Bangladesh, 2006 Metal, plastic, bamboo
Dimensions: 5’h x 2.5’w x 7’d
In use in: Bangladesh, Nepal, India, Myanmar, Cambodia, Zambia
The Bamboo Treadle Pump allows poor farmers to access groundwater during the dry season. The treadles and support structure are made of bamboo or other inexpensive, locally available materials. The pump, which consists of two metal cylinders with pistons that are operated by a natural walking motion on two treadles, can be manufactured locally by metalworking shops. Over 1.7 million have been sold in Bangladesh and elsewhere, generating $1.4 billion in net farmer income in Bangladesh alone.