Tuesday, 29 May 2012

Sense of place - Rock Chair



Rationale

The area chosen is Empress park, Hurstville. This park is conviniently located in housing area and is just about 10 minutes walk from main business area. The park includes playground, bbq pit, basketball court and soccer field. Although it has strategic location and can provide various activites, it was observed that many do not stay in the park for long. From observations and interviews, the park goers can be divided into 2 groups, the morning and afternoon goers. The morning goers are mainly the older group of people (60 and above) who accompany their grandchilds (4 and below). The afternoon goers are mainly yound adults or teenagers who play sports there. While the bbq pit is rarely used.

When I interviewed the grandparents why they did not stay for long in the park. Most of them said it was because they were tired of standing and were bored. This is probably because there are very few chairs in the park and these chairs are located far from the playground so they will not be able to keep a good watch of their grandchildrens playing in the playground. Thus, the rocking chair will be built closer to the playground which will enable them to relax while at the same time being able to watch their grandchilds. The rocking chair is also popular, especially amongst the older generation and this can encourage more people to come to the park or stay longer there. This is further supported by statistic which shows that the area has large proportion of older group of people (20% are 60 and above, compared to national average, 16.7%). The soothing and comfortable nature of rocking chair may encourage people to stay around longer and thus this provides more opportunities for them to intereact with one another.

The reason why the younger group does not stay there for long is quite similar too. Most of them said it was because the place is boring. The organic and modern design of the chair will likely interest them to stay around. There will be also a number of these chairs so they can enjoy relaxing and interacting with their friends after their sporting activities. These may also encourage more to have bbq in the area as more seats will be available and the rocking chair will make it more fun and comfortable to hang around.

This rocking chair has the potential to bring not only this park alive but other parks as well. This is because the rocking chair is enjoyed across different cultures and age groups.


Saturday, 26 May 2012

Video Reflections : Who Killed The Electric Car?

The film released in 2006 "Who killed the electric car?" talks about the story of electric car and its unsuccessful journey in society despite its good solution it offers. It also talks about the conspiracy behind the story, featuring how the company played the role behind the unsuccessful launch.

At the beginning the video talks about sustainability in fuel usage and possibilities to replace petrol cars to save the environment. Electric-powered car was considered by some car manufacturers as the solution to this problem. However some concerns were aroused such as consumer skeptics, competition, and limitations of the product. High cost are also one of the reason why electric cars remained unpopular in society.

It is an interesting video as it gives me insight of what is it like in the real-live workforce. Sometimes we as the designer we could propose a great design but at the end it would go through a lot of process before it can be launched and great design does not ensure it will remain successful in the market. A lot of things are affecting the successfulness of a design. Not only its economical consideration, but also the manufacturing process, environmental concern, consumer perception,etc.

Tuesday, 15 May 2012

Social Packaging Project - Memory Pill Bottle























Social Packaging - Peer Comments

1. Felicia Levina's
http://feliciaides1122.blogspot.com.au/2012/05/social-packaging.html

2. Stephanie Cai Min's
http://lovedbyee.blogspot.com.au/2012/05/studio-project-2.html?showComment=1337063826219

3. Antony Daming Chen's
http://daming-ides1031.blogspot.com.au/2012/05/project-2-packaging-design-to-address.html

4. Jan Gerardino's
http://janraymondgerardino.blogspot.com.au/2012/05/accessible-packaging.html?showComment=1337065114297

5. Dongwook Kim's
http://dongkim926.blogspot.com.au/2012/05/pacakging-child-resistant-cap.html?showComment=1337065618511

Monday, 16 April 2012

Packaging Video Reflection

I found the video ‘How It’s Made’ and ‘Giving Packaging a New Life’ very useful as they cover different kinds of materials and manufacturing process as well as recycling process of the materials being used.

The video introduces me to some of the existing materials out there, from corrugated cardboard, paper, aluminium, tetrapak, glass as well as plastic. They also explain the innovation of recycling each of those materials in details, describing each process step by step.

Corrugated Cardboard is featured first, the video explains how is it made and how they use water and starch as the adhesive to keep them safe as well as the manufacturing process of paper.

Packaging tubes and aluminium is covered next. They talk about the making process of packaging tube; which is very interesting to me, and the characteristic of aluminium and how aluminium is recycled.

The following videos talk about tetrapak, glass bottles and plastic. Tetrapak is one of the most sustainable packaging as they are recyclable as a whole and it offers good quality in storing various types of products. Glass is sustainable as well as they are easy to recycle and abundant.

As a designer it is important to watch these videos as they give deep insight to the existing manufacturing and recycling process and they remind us that selecting the most suitable materials could help keeping the environment safe.

Tuesday, 27 March 2012

Peer comments

1. Eugenie Barnet's
http://studio1-bee.blogspot.com.au/2012/03/model-pictures.html?showComment=1332807027135

2. Xiao Ya Zhang's
http://2011jj.blogspot.com.au/2012/03/project1.html?showComment=1332807892877

3. Wei Qian Wen's
http://akiwei.blogspot.com.au/2012/03/model-project-one.html?showComment=1332809500448

4. Shi Xiao Meng's
http://shixiaomeng3361028.blogspot.com.au/2012/03/rationale.html?showComment=1332809605985

5. Shermen Li's
http://laichorming.blogspot.com.au/2012/03/project-one-poster.html?showComment=1332810218884

Monday, 26 March 2012

Bio-inspired storage system final : Spine Bookshelves


Compressed

Expanded

Rationale
This design is inspired from the vertebral body of human. I found human vertebral bones as a good inspiration for designing shelves. Spinal column allows you to stand upright, bend and twist. It is flexible; it allows movement in several places. It is very interesting as they are very rigid, solid and structured but at the same time it also have liquid-like properties that resulted from the S-shape of the whole structure.

The back of the shelves that holds the structure together shows a strong resemblance to the human spinal cord while the ‘leaves’ of the shelves resemble the vertebral bones. It is flat at the back as it is mounted against the wall and from the side view we can see the contours.

The shelves shows some resemblance with human vertebral body, for instance the color, which is white like bones, and the shape and the structure. The interlocking features of the shelves also inspired from the way spine body constructing and interlocking with each other, mimicking the 4 facet joints in each vertebrae body and how muscles, membranes and correct posture maintaining the structure. They are interlocking not only vertically but also horizontally, that what makes them so strong and balance eventhough it is flexible. The bottom part of the shelves shows bigger sizes in resemblance of the lumbar spine area at human spinal column for their weight bearing function.

This shelves is perfect for high density living space. It is mounted on the wall to save floor spaces and it can be dropped down when we are ready to use it. With the interlocking features in this shelves, these shelves can be compressed together and only take a very little space on your wall; in fact it only take around 51cm when it is compressed and when it is expanded it can reach about 103 cm. When you want to use it you can slide the button that connect each shelves through the maze on the 'spine' back and it is ready to used. The height of the shelves also adjustable so it meets many needs.

Technical drawings

Tuesday, 13 March 2012

Honeycomb Inspired Designs

Ampersand Wallpockets by Tim Karoleff 






MDF Honeycomb Wall, Germany

The Accordion Cabinet by Elisa Strozyk and Sebastian Neeb

ciao!

Monday, 12 March 2012

Further Research

These are some of the research I did a few weeks ago before I set my choice to the 3 final concepts. Hope these can help some of you who might need it :)

Save-spacing furniture

Save-spacing furniture

'Cocoon' by Mans Salomonsen

Anti-Gravity by Florian Gross for Konnex

Cocoon couches


Mangrove tree inspired building

Foldable chair - 'Grand' by Sanna Lindstrom and Sigrid Stromgren








The Mini Warp Bookshelf by Onur Müştak 

The Un-Deux-Trois Table by Vito Selma - inspired by spider's web
ciao!