London animal hospital respects the age-old rivalry between cats and dogs

Architecture studio Alma-nac has built a round-the-clock emergency hospital for pets, which is designed to keep cats and dogs away from each other.

London Animal Hospital by Alma-nac

The first of its kind in the UK capital, The London Animal Hospital (TLAH) is designed to offer the best possible care for its animal patients, and to create a relaxing environment for the owners and staff.

It provides all the regular services of a veterinary practice, with routine appointments and consultations. But it also offers surgeries, an isolation ward, X-ray machines and a CT scanner.

London Animal Hospital by Alma-nac

Any pet can be treated at the TLAH, but Alma-nac chose to focus on the age-old rivalry between cats and dogs to bring some light-heartedness into the design and ensure the comfort of the UK’s most popular domestic animals.

This is referenced in the layout, furniture and also in playful signage, which includes a “cats only please” bench.

London Animal Hospital by Alma-nac

For instance, the reception area is divided into feline furniture, which features armrests where owners can secure their cat boxes, and canine furniture, where seats are left open.

Furniture was designed with playful forms to create a sense of cheer,” explained Chris Bryant, director at Alma-nac.

London Animal Hospital by Alma-nac

The layout of this area follows the Fear Free pet-care doctrine, which gives cats and dogs distinct, separate routes to consultation rooms and wards. The cat consultation room also features a box-like playground that can be explored by nervous patients.

The overall layout of the hospital is organised into three sections. The first is for public and reception, the second for animal treatment and the third space is dedicated to staff. The staff area includes a communal area, kitchen, shower and sleeping space for overnight duty.

London Animal Hospital by Alma-nac

Interiors are designed to feel welcoming, as well as to meet clinical needs. All the furniture is custom made by Alma-nac, and interior and exterior features vibrant blue tones offset with white walls and plywood.

The roof of the building, which was originally a print factory, is framed by iron beams that Alma-nac chose to leave exposed – but they are now coated with triple glazing to reduce noise created by patients.

“We wanted to create a relaxing and welcoming environment for the staff, owners and pets so we used material and colour palettes which are not usually associated with medical institutions,” said Bryant.

London Animal Hospital by Alma-nac

The simple footprint and the single-storey layout enable pets to be moved quickly and calmly from the operating rooms to recovery kennels. Alma-nac choose not to use metal bars in the kennels; instead they feature glass doors.

Special attention was given to ensure that any movements relating to terminal care are kept separate from the rest of the patients.

Sustainability was also a major consideration. The roof is used to harvest rainwater, while solar panels contribute to the building’s power supply.

London Animal Hospital by Alma-nac

Alma-nac is led by Bryant along with Caspar Rodgers and Tristan Wigfall. Past projects include a 2.3 metre-wide house extension and a proposal for a park featuring an upside-down building.

Photography is by Jack Hobhouse.


Project credits:

Architects: Alma-nac
Structural engineers: Constant_sd

The post London animal hospital respects the age-old rivalry between cats and dogs appeared first on Dezeen.

This week, BIG designed buildings on stilts and IKEA hacked its own furniture

This week, BIG revealed plans for the Miami Produce Center in Allapattah, and IKEA asked Scholten & Baijings to hack two of its most popular furniture designs.

BIG’s Miami Produce Center will comprise a stack of eight volumes raised on stilts above former warehouses, containing co-working offices, co-living apartments and a hotel.

The complex will also comprise three existing buildings due to be transformed into restaurants, shops, cafes and a school.

IKEA asks Scholten & Baijings to hack two of its most popular furniture designs

A collaboration between IKEA and Scholten & Baijings launched this week, after the Swedish retail giant enlisted the Dutch design duo to create fresh takes on its Klippan sofa and Poäng armchair.

Grenfell Tower: in Memoriam, by JAA Architects
Grenfell Tower reimagined as a black concrete-covered memorial

Fearing that the “tragedy caused through negligence” would not be memorialised sufficiently, JAA revealed a concept to encase the burnt-out shell of Grenfell Tower in a sarcophagus of black concrete.

In Ireland, Steven Holl Architects won a competition to revamp the University College Dublin campus. The proposal features buildings that reference geological forms of the Giant’s Causeway.

Ai Weiwei's Beijing studio demolished
Ai Weiwei’s Beijing studio demolished by Chinese authorities

Famed activist and artist Ai Weiwei took to Instagram this week to share news that his Beijing studio had been demolished by Chinese authorities, despite many of his works still being inside and no prior warning given to him, or his team.

In Seattle doors to the Space Needle observation tower reopened, following an overhaul by American firm Olson Kundig Architects. The tower now features “the world’s first and only revolving glass floor”.

Weaponised drone reportedly used in failed assassination attempt

In tech news, the first reported drone-enabled assassination attempt of a head of state may have taken place this week, as Venezuelan officials claim they thwarted an attack on President Nicolás Maduro that used explosives strapped to drones.

DJI, the world’s largest drone manufacturer, spoke to Dezeen on the matter, saying they had limited ability to control how its technology is used, and that “they deplore any use of [its] products to bring harm to anyone”.

Mysterious Aphex Twin logos appear in destinations across the world

Illustrations of electronic musician Aphex Twin’s logo mysteriously emerged in various locations, including London’s Elephant and Castle underground station and on a Tokyo music store’s signage to promote the launch of his new EP Collapse.

Meanwhile, London’s Design museum complied with the demands of artists involved in their Hope To Nope exhibition by returning a third of the works displayed – after they had protested against the institution’s private event for Leonardo, an Italian leader in the aerospace and defence industry.

Tuft + Paw have launched “the ultimate playground for cats”

Popular projects on Dezeen this week included an eco-friendly prefabricated home design by Studio Arthur Casasa contemporary Russian restaurant influenced by a nearby Danish design school and a jungle gym created for cats.

The post This week, BIG designed buildings on stilts and IKEA hacked its own furniture appeared first on Dezeen.

IKEA subtly redesigns its products for each country/culture

ikea_countries_layout

With its first Indian store launching only a day ago, IKEA proved that it understands its consumers and environment better than any other company in its industry.

Allegedly, IKEA has been planning to open its flagship store in India for years now (I remember getting wind of it as long as 5 years ago). Now that the store is finally up and running, there’s one thing worth noticing and appreciating. In every country that IKEA runs its business, the catalog stays true to the company’s signature low-cost, DIY business model, but differs distinctly in terms of flavor. IKEA invests a lot of time, energy, and money, in understanding the country’s climate, its users, their mindsets, cultural quirks, and socio-economic background. Using that data, IKEA subtly redesigns their products to serve their users better, often pandering to their sense of style, budget, and even taking care of climatic requirements to ensure their products last longer than intended.

An article by Fast Company talks about how IKEA prioritizes user needs more than anything else, successfully differentiating between an American consumer, an Indian consumer, and a Japanese one, based on a variety of factors. With India, for instance, IKEA does away with the pine-wood construction it uses in more cooler climates (like in European countries). Pine cannot withstand the heat and humidity of India’s tropical climate, and IKEA’s furniture had to be tweaked to use a wood more durable for India. In a country as dusty as India, houses are cleaned every day with water. The furniture in the Indian catalog come with their own rubber risers so that the wood doesn’t come in contact with water. Kitchen counters are also redesigned keeping in mind the shorter frame of the Indian woman, be it the woman/wife of the house or the hired help. To accommodate for India’s small houses, burgeoning population, and the resulting cramped lifestyle, IKEA introduced a larger range of collapsible, stackable, and foldable furniture that can easily be stowed away when not in use. This furniture also serves its purpose when guests gather at your place for social occasions. IKEA also is reportedly using solar-powered rickshaws (an icon of public transportation in India) to deliver their products to the doors of consumers, therefore embracing the culture while forwarding the brand.

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The Ekedalen table can be extended to accommodate more people

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The fleet of solar-powered rickshaws that will deliver items to the 6.8 million residents of Hyderabad

Similarly, for the Chinese market, IKEA showcased an entire section on balconies, an important part in Chinese homes. Showrooms in southern China showcased balconies with clothes-hanging apparatuses, while showrooms in northern China used balconies as areas for food storage, therefore highlighting the importance of cultural relevance while moving from country to country and region to region. As far as beds are concerned, IKEA’s a perfect example of understanding the socio-cultural implications of the countries implications of the countries it’s in. Korean beds are smaller, for small homes. American beds are showcased in king and queen sizes, while the rest of the world uses centimeters as a measuring format, and for its Indian market, IKEA showcased a bedroom with a smaller bed for youngsters because parents and children usually share a bedroom in middle-class Indian homes. In the kitchen, IKEA stocks far more rice cookers and chopsticks in its Asian markets, while the Indian kitchen showrooms don’t include knives as a part of the cutlery set since Indians usually use spoons at the table when they’re not using their hands to consume food. A rather bewildering spike in flower-vase sales in America had top executives confused until they realized that Americans were using them to drink out of, since the Swedish drinking glasses were too small for America’s ‘grande’ and ‘venti’ way of living. In every aspect of lifestyle, IKEA’s research has resulted in much more relevant products. Even their food-courts have food that’s much more in tune with the country’s culture and tastes.

ikea_countries_3
IKEA’s food is culturally relevant. Asian cuisines feature rice as a staple, while Middle Eastern IKEA branches serve Halal meats

What’s ingenious on IKEA’s part is that while they beautifully absorb some of the country’s cultures into their catalog, they still manage to forward their brand. IKEA’s catalogs change from country to country, continent to continent, but the store almost always looks the same. A large blue warehouse with the big, bold, yellow and blue logo on the outside is almost an icon of IKEA and is pretty much synonymous with “good furniture beyond this point”, no matter where you are. It also sticks to its universal style of nomenclature, using Swedish names for its products, and inevitably creating a beautiful fusion between what IKEA originally started out as, and the country in which it’s located… a fusion of global and local.

It’s rare to see a company so invested in user research, especially in the fashion/lifestyle/decor industry. Surrounded by competitors that spend time designing products with a one-shoe-fits-all business model, it’s refreshing that a company like IKEA spends so much time, effort, and money in ‘getting it right’. Explains why it remains such an undefeatable force in the furniture and home decor industry!

Source: Fast Company

IKEA subtly redesigns its products for each country/culture

ikea_countries_layout

With its first Indian store launching only a day ago, IKEA proved that it understands its consumers and environment better than any other company in its industry.

Allegedly, IKEA has been planning to open its flagship store in India for years now (I remember getting wind of it as long as 5 years ago). Now that the store is finally up and running, there’s one thing worth noticing and appreciating. In every country that IKEA runs its business, the catalog stays true to the company’s signature low-cost, DIY business model, but differs distinctly in terms of flavor. IKEA invests a lot of time, energy, and money, in understanding the country’s climate, its users, their mindsets, cultural quirks, and socio-economic background. Using that data, IKEA subtly redesigns their products to serve their users better, often pandering to their sense of style, budget, and even taking care of climatic requirements to ensure their products last longer than intended.

An article by Fast Company talks about how IKEA prioritizes user needs more than anything else, successfully differentiating between an American consumer, an Indian consumer, and a Japanese one, based on a variety of factors. With India, for instance, IKEA does away with the pine-wood construction it uses in more cooler climates (like in European countries). Pine cannot withstand the heat and humidity of India’s tropical climate, and IKEA’s furniture had to be tweaked to use a wood more durable for India. In a country as dusty as India, houses are cleaned every day with water. The furniture in the Indian catalog come with their own rubber risers so that the wood doesn’t come in contact with water. Kitchen counters are also redesigned keeping in mind the shorter frame of the Indian woman, be it the woman/wife of the house or the hired help. To accommodate for India’s small houses, burgeoning population, and the resulting cramped lifestyle, IKEA introduced a larger range of collapsible, stackable, and foldable furniture that can easily be stowed away when not in use. This furniture also serves its purpose when guests gather at your place for social occasions. IKEA also is reportedly using solar-powered rickshaws (an icon of public transportation in India) to deliver their products to the doors of consumers, therefore embracing the culture while forwarding the brand.

ikea_countries_1
The Ekedalen table can be extended to accommodate more people

ikea_countries_2
The fleet of solar-powered rickshaws that will deliver items to the 6.8 million residents of Hyderabad

Similarly, for the Chinese market, IKEA showcased an entire section on balconies, an important part in Chinese homes. Showrooms in southern China showcased balconies with clothes-hanging apparatuses, while showrooms in northern China used balconies as areas for food storage, therefore highlighting the importance of cultural relevance while moving from country to country and region to region. As far as beds are concerned, IKEA’s a perfect example of understanding the socio-cultural implications of the countries implications of the countries it’s in. Korean beds are smaller, for small homes. American beds are showcased in king and queen sizes, while the rest of the world uses centimeters as a measuring format, and for its Indian market, IKEA showcased a bedroom with a smaller bed for youngsters because parents and children usually share a bedroom in middle-class Indian homes. In the kitchen, IKEA stocks far more rice cookers and chopsticks in its Asian markets, while the Indian kitchen showrooms don’t include knives as a part of the cutlery set since Indians usually use spoons at the table when they’re not using their hands to consume food. A rather bewildering spike in flower-vase sales in America had top executives confused until they realized that Americans were using them to drink out of, since the Swedish drinking glasses were too small for America’s ‘grande’ and ‘venti’ way of living. In every aspect of lifestyle, IKEA’s research has resulted in much more relevant products. Even their food-courts have food that’s much more in tune with the country’s culture and tastes.

ikea_countries_3
IKEA’s food is culturally relevant. Asian cuisines feature rice as a staple, while Middle Eastern IKEA branches serve Halal meats

What’s ingenious on IKEA’s part is that while they beautifully absorb some of the country’s cultures into their catalog, they still manage to forward their brand. IKEA’s catalogs change from country to country, continent to continent, but the store almost always looks the same. A large blue warehouse with the big, bold, yellow and blue logo on the outside is almost an icon of IKEA and is pretty much synonymous with “good furniture beyond this point”, no matter where you are. It also sticks to its universal style of nomenclature, using Swedish names for its products, and inevitably creating a beautiful fusion between what IKEA originally started out as, and the country in which it’s located… a fusion of global and local.

It’s rare to see a company so invested in user research, especially in the fashion/lifestyle/decor industry. Surrounded by competitors that spend time designing products with a one-shoe-fits-all business model, it’s refreshing that a company like IKEA spends so much time, effort, and money in ‘getting it right’. Explains why it remains such an undefeatable force in the furniture and home decor industry!

Source: Fast Company

A device that provides augmented reality for your ears

Vincent Van Gogh’s vision was much more receptive of yellows than most. A wine taster’s tongue can distinguish flavor profiles others cant. Similarly, everyone has a unique hearing profile. You hear some frequencies better than others, there are some frequencies your ear doesn’t pick up well (and that affects what music you like too), and all personal audio devices should be able to account for that, to provide a listening experience tailored to your ear’s abilities.

That’s where the SnowOwl comes in. The tiny device comes with a lot of capabilities, one of them being, giving you, the wearer, the ability to balance and modify any audio input to your tastes. The wireless wearable straps to your wrist, or can be clipped onto your person. Connecting to your headphones, the SnowOwl lets you control audio playback from your phone, adjusting left-right ear balance and even frequencies, or even lets you listen to the world around you, courtesy an on-board microphone. Imagine trying to listen to a conversation with music or crowd-noise in the background, or to a presentation/meeting while there’s traffic noise. The SnowOwl lets you cut out frequencies that don’t matter, isolating the audio you need from the audio you don’t. A heaven-sent for loud concerts, the SnowOwl also lets you limit the audio coming into your ear (working like earbuds where you can control what you want to listen to and how much of it you want to enter your ear), letting you cut the high decibels so you can listen to the music at a desired amplitude.

The wireless design of the SnowOwl has an additional advantage. It works with any earphone or headphone you have, and since it pairs with your phone through Bluetooth, has the ability to take your corded headphones and give them wireless abilities. Working alongside Clementine Audio’s smartphone app, the SnowOwl augments your hearing, allowing you to boost voices or music, tune out noise, or even regulate frequencies and outputs in harsh environments that would damage your hearing. Oh, and with its in-built directional microphone, it’s a rather neat spy tool too!

Designer: Samplified-Audio Clementine Wear

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Inside Belkin, Part 2: The Industrial Design Process of the TrueClear Pro

After dropping and shattering my expensive iPhone several years ago, I replaced it and took steps to prevent it from happening again. I kept the phone inside an absurdly bulky, tank-like protective case by Pelican, completely obscuring the beauty that Apple’s designers had slaved to produce. 

This case was as indestructible as it was inconvenient. The raised bumpers on the side prevented my finger from using the full width of the touchscreen, making it impossible to advance to the beginning or end of a podcast. Sometimes, depending on the task I was doing, the phone was so bulky that I needed to snap it into a clip and place it on my belt. I would occasionally lose the clip and waste time looking for it. The thickness of the case meant it wouldn’t fit into the pockets I previously liked to carry a phone in, and this actually influenced what clothes I wore.

Eventually I felt I didn’t own the phone, and that the phone owned me.

When enough was enough, I went to the Apple store and bought their super-slim leather case and a Belkin screen protector. At $40, the latter seemed expensive to me, but the store employee assured me it offered great protection, and asked if I dropped my phone a lot. (I do; I’m a butterfingers.)

“We can put the screen protector on for you,” he said.

“No thanks, I got it,” I said. I’m an industrial designer with studio experience. I’ll be way better at putting this thing on than you. Then I remembered trying to put the screen protector onto my dad’s phone for him, and the air bubbles, and the cursing.

“Are you sure?” he said. “We’ve got a machine that puts it on. It only takes a few seconds.”

“Uh, okay,” I said, curious.

The employee returned with a contraption, and then I got to witness this:

I was fascinated by the machine and the procedure. “I am really impressed with how the designers of this object thought through the entire process,” I wrote on Core77 last year. “The first green-skinned film you see being applied to the phone is to remove any dust or lint from the screen, the Apple employee explained to me. After that’s removed they drop it into the machine, and as you can see the tabs keep everything perfectly aligned. It seems pretty idiot-proof.”

At the time, I lamented that the anonymous industrial designers behind this device would probably never receive credit.

Little did I know that those very designers were reading Core77, and that I’d get to share the story of that device with you; Belkin reached out to me after that entry went up, and offered to open the doors to their facilities and allow me to interview the designers. (Full disclosure: Belkin paid for the flight.)

Belkin is located in the “Silicon Beach” area of Los Angeles, the coastal area known for tech startups. An emphasis on design is a priority for the company, and hidden within what appear to be regular office buildings is an industrial designer’s playground filled with studios, shops and machines: Prototyping facilities, conventional workshops, digital fabrication machines, testing facilities, package design mock-up areas, a photography studio. They even had one of those consumer research rooms with the one-way mirrors, where test subjects are asked to open or assemble Belkin items; their ease or difficulty is recorded by overhead cameras, and designers review the footage to figure out how to improve the end user’s experience.

You can see a slideshow of the photos we were allowed to show you here. But we were really there to learn about the people and processes behind the design of the TrueClear Pro, and for that we interviewed the designer at the top.

Oliver Seil is Belkin’s Vice President of Design, and he defies easy categorization: Crisply-dressed and precise, the German expat has the serious look of a European designer–yet the laid-back demeanor of a native Californian. He seems young enough to be a grad student, yet he’s been at Belkin for nearly two decades. After a number of years as Senior Director, Seil assumed the helm of the design group, where he harnesses Belkin’s considerable resources–both human and technical–to execute projects that produce clear rewards, to both the end user and the company, while adhering to Belkin’s motto of “People inspired.”

_______

Core77: The Belkin device that I saw in the Apple Store was designed to solve a problem. What is that problem and how did you first become aware of it?

Oliver Seil: A member of our European team had an insight: Phones are getting larger screens, and people are worried about breaking them. They want screen protectors–but because they’re so hard to put on, people in retail stores aren’t trying to sell them very much, because they’re afraid that they will be asked by the customer to apply them. [The employees] don’t like having to do that because it takes a lot of time, it’s stressful and usually not successful; it’s just not something humans are good at.

So a huge opportunity lies within that. If we were to solve that, we could sell a lot more screen protectors, because we’d have all retail employees feel really great and confident about applying them. And then the consumer gets what they really want: To protect their screens.

Was it obvious to the company that this was an industrial design problem?

Yes. And it was very clear, early on, that there wasn’t an easy way to solve this. When we first heard the problem we were scratching our heads: How do you do that successfully? Various companies had developed a bunch of different products to help people put screen protectors on, but none of them felt retail appropriate. They weren’t durable, or didn’t have the right kind of nuanced design and usability approach. They were very clunky, engineering-heavy solutions.

It took us a while to warm up to the challenge–what happened is, our team had hired a design consultancy in Europe to build [a solution] that was so atrocious that it kicked us awake. We said, “No, we’re not going with that. We’re going to do it.”

What was the first step?

To build a business plan. Ours was created around [a dollar amount that would emerge] if we were to solve it, and it was so compelling that people said, “Oh, that’s a nice number.” Then it quickly became an ID user experience challenge, and we [the design group] took the lead on finding out how to solve those problems. What would be the elements that would need to be resolved? And then it branched into an ID/UX and mechanical engineering challenge.

Speaking of which, what is Belkin’s typical process–when do you bring in the designers and when do you bring in the engineers?

So in general, almost everything Belkin makes goes through ID, UX, ME (Mechanical Engineering) teams.

In that sequence?

Not necessarily, but mostly. We have a multistage design/engineering/development process that goes through a business review, where we begin to understand how complex something is to design and engineer. And then we assign the appropriate amount of resources to design or engineering based on whatever the challenge is. It’s usually ID/UX first, and then quickly joining hands with the engineering teams.

In this particular instance, how did it unfold?

ID/UX took the lead with product management to help understand the challenge, because it was so different from anything else we’d ever made. Normally we know what goes “into the box”– it has a circuit board or a mechanism that is understood, and we can quickly go into ID efforts to wrap it in a nice, appropriate enclosure, perhaps. And then we work with engineering to build that.

But here, it was completely different. We didn’t even know how to solve the problem. The challenge was “We want to apply a screen protector with this level of precision, with this level of ease, onto a customer’s phone in this environment–but we don’t know how. Nobody’s ever solved how to do that.”

So we quickly said, “We can’t lead with ID. We can set some user experience boundaries and then let engineering figure out how to actually solve the problem.” So that’s what we did. We built a set of goals for the outcome. And we said, “Right now we don’t really care what it looks like, we first have to build the internal.” We had to build that engine first, then build the car around it. So then the engineering team went off and did their work on how to actually do this application.

What did the Design department do while Engineering was working on that?

ID and UX were busy figuring out everything surrounding the applicator. We built the knowledge internally about how retail associates work, how they are rewarded, what does it mean for them to be successful in their job, what motivates somebody who works in a retail store around these types of accessories? So that we could start digging into understanding [this new type of] user really well. Our core expertise is regular folks, people like you and I that use mobile electronic equipment, they live and drive and have homes and work and all that stuff. We understand that user very well. But when it comes to understanding how this user would work, it was a different animal.

That was one of the core learnings–this is not for you and me, this is for someone who works in a retail store and has to make money using these tools, and hopefully we can make this so good that they would love using it. So that they would effectively help us bring this product, a screen protector, to the end user.

How and where did you conduct that research?

We have phenomenal relationships in the industry–from telcos to big box retailers to shops–and leveraged them to spend many, many hours around the globe in different retail environments. In Korea, Japan, the U.S., Germany, the U.K. We watched people and asked them “What happens when somebody asks you to put a screen protector on? And what is your process for what happens when you mess up?” We learned that 20% to 30% of applications go awry, it’s very normal. So then they have to do this again and go through a process of return merchandise authorizations and so on. How do we help them get around that so that they would embrace the system, start using it?

We had a lot of help from the global team, as well. We actually didn’t all do this ourselves as a design team; we have a lot of engaged sales folks that are really interested in helping with efforts like this, so it’s pretty easy for us to leverage them as well. We give them a plan, go and ask these questions, come back with these answers, take pictures, feed it to us. It was a great effort. It was fun.

What happened after Engineering emerged from their lab with working prototypes?

We were participating in some of that work as well. But, what happened is we then were able to make a decision on which of the four [prototypes they developed] we would like to work on more. We chose the largest and biggest and bulkiest of the four, for a number of reasons, then said “Now, let’s make this thing as elegant as possible. Make it palatable, so that it can live out in the world, and we are proud to put a Belkin logo on it.”

What led you to choose this prototype over the other three?

The criteria that we wanted to apply: Which is the most practical, works the best, is most reliable, and is most realistically viable in the marketplace? It can’t be ugly, weird or strange–we want it to have form, usability, an appearance appropriate for what we wanted to accomplish. It needed to be professional, and not feel overly theatric; one prototype had an inflatable electric pump that worked quite well to push air bubbles from the middle to the outside, but [it was overly complicated].

The chosen system, which became the TrueClear Pro CX, had interchangeable inserts to accommodate different phones; it was one big central object that doesn’t go anywhere, it just stays in one place, and then you bring to it the boxes [filled with the application materials]. It worked really well, so we worked with the engineering team to take their mechanical solution and make it more aesthetically viable, interesting looking, polished and modern.

So Engineering figured out the mechanicals; how did Design get it the rest of the way there?

We designed the aesthetic around the overlays and helped with the usability, because one of the things that hadn’t been figured out is: How do you make it error proof?

That was accomplished in the next stage. We designed it so that a phone and screen protector cannot be inserted in the wrong direction, there’s guiding pins that have different sizes.

For the screen protector, we designed this sleek envelope package that is very inspired by food packaging. It’s very sanitary, there’s no dust in it. It’s pulled open like a fresh package of something that has never been opened.

We devised the desktop box, which is that green box that opens up to reveal the product, the cradle [for the phones], the interchangeable components, the tools, and a work surface.

We devised instructions, taking inspiration from McDonald’s and Taco Bell–places where people don’t get a lot of training, but visual instructions to avoid the need for language and translations. We designed it so that the user never takes the wrong part and and tries to put it in the wrong way, accidentally looking bad in front of the customer and having to do it over. We wanted to eliminate errors. The goal was to ensure that anyone who uses this always feels good about themselves.

What are some aspects of the design that are not, and would never be, obvious to the consumer?

We designed an entire lineup of logistical components dealing with packaging that would allow you to easily refill depleted stock. Because, don’t forget, the packaging here lives inside of these boxes, it’s not meant to hang on planograms.

There was a whole ‘nother thing that needed to be sorted out: When a store runs out of the screen protectors, how do they reorder it, and how does that reorder package quickly get integrated into the system? That was another really fun aspect to dig into, the backstory of how something ends up in a store. We figured out, for a number of large retailers, how that works.

How did you gather the data?

We went there, talked to them. We learned how it looks in the “back of the house,” how they get the stock, and from where. It was a phenomenal learning exercise.

It’s interesting that you started off designing a screen protector for consumers, and the ID trail leads you down this path where you’re putting a lot of design attention on a supporting device, and entire system, designed for a retail user.

It’s such a premium to be able to get into the hearts of retail associates, because if they like your product, they’re going to sell it for you. So we wanted to design something a retail employee would genuinely appreciate: “This helps you be better at your job. It helps you be more successful, make more money, look better to your customers, have a better time at work.”

It’s a win-win for everybody: It’s a better product for the end user of the screen protector; In the process of having it applied, they like their experience better in the retail environment that they’re in; and the retailer profits, they sell more screen protectors, it works for everybody.

We could only do that by understanding all the reasons for what motivates people. We dug as deeply as we had to in order to make that whole experience seamless and easy for them. And that can only happen when you leverage really smart design thinking–user experience that’s truly empathetic, that really thinks about the lives and the working environments of people. When you then connect that with a great engineering capability, and then the logistics backbone, we were able to bring all of that together. So it was a really great, interesting experience, one that there’s not a lot of equals to.

In the years since you debuted the device, your sales of screen protectors went up by a factor of eight. Can you tell me what that translates to, in terms of dollars?

Last year, [redacted] dollars.

Holy COW! Can I print that number?

PR Handler: No!

Inside Belkin, Part 3: A Slideshow of the Prototypes for the TrueClear Pro

In Part 2 of our Belkin visit, we interviewed VP of Design Oliver Seil on the developmental story of their TrueClear Pro, which seamlessly applies screen protectors to smartphones. Arriving at the final iterations of the product took a lot of prototyping! Here’s how they went from crazy idea to market-ready solution.

Eden and CNC prototypes for Apple ScreenCare+ applicator on a desk in Belkin’s design studio

Eden and CNC prototypes for Apple ScreenCare+ applicator on a desk in Belkin’s design studio

Eden and CNC prototypes for Apple ScreenCare+ applicator on a desk in Belkin’s design studio

System evolution from early Eden and CNC prototypes (left) to final prototypes (right, green colored). The leftmost two are early mechanical prototype concepts that were not taken further. The green one at right is the final first generation True Clear Pro machine. The one just to the left of the green is an early version (development prototype) of the final one

Same group as previous, different angle

EDEN print prototype of the TrueClear Pro second generation tray. Just to the right of the EDEN print tray is an EDEN print prototype cradle.

EDEN print prototype of the TrueClear Pro second generation tray. Just to the right of the EDEN print tray is an EDEN print prototype cradle.

EDEN print prototype of the TrueClear Pro second generation tray. Just to the right of the EDEN print tray is an EDEN print prototype cradle.

Development prototype for in-store test of second generation TrueClear Pro system

Development prototype opened to reveal integrated applicator and tools, making the system portable

View the full gallery here

IKEA makes deliveries with solar powered rickshaws from first Indian store

Swedish home furnishing giant IKEA has opened its first Indian store in Hyderabad, complete with a fleet of colourful electric rickshaws for deliveries.

Photos on social media show the branded rickshaws painted in IKEA’s signature blue and yellow, with brightly patterned canopies and cushions.

The three-wheeled vehicles are charged by 4,000 solar panels installed on the new store’s roof, reports electric vehicle magazine Electrek.

A post shared by OYOxDesign (@oyoxdesign) on Aug 9, 2018 at 1:24am PDT

Like all rickshaws their narrow dimensions make them suitable for navigating congested roads and narrow streets, however, these battery-operated vehicles are less polluting than standard auto rickshaws that run on fossil fuels.

The electric vehicles will make up 20 per cent of the Hyderabad store’s delivery fleet.

Excited customers queued for hours to visit the shop, causing such large traffic jams that Hyderabad’s traffic police, which blamed the snarl-up on IKEA for “insufficient parking”, had to issue a warning.

A post shared by IKEA India (@ikea.india) on Aug 2, 2018 at 5:34am PDT

Rather than serving up their traditional Swedish delicacy of pork meatballs, the cafe at India’s first IKEA will serve samosas, chicken balls and biriyani to cater to Hyderabad’s majority Hindu and Muslim population.

Alongside firm IKEA favourites such as the Billy bookcase and Lack table, the 37,161-square metre store will stock culturally relevant products such as masala boxes, rice cake makers, pressure cookers and a mattress made using coconut fibres.

Excess power produced by solar panels on the roof will also be used to power the shop’s LED lighting.

“At IKEA, the people, the community and our contribution to the planet is the biggest priority,” said IKEA India manager Peter Betzel.

Last year IKEA, which has been selling solar panels since 2013, launched its own brand solar battery packs to allow customers to reduce their reliance on the energy grid.

IKEA reportedly plans to open 25 shops in India by 2025. The Swedish brand is celebrating its 75th birthday this year by relaunching some of its most famous pieces from its back catalogue, including its first Klippan sofa and the retro Ekenäset armchair.

Earlier this year IKEA launched its seventh Innehållsrik collection, featuring hand-woven textiles made by artisan women artisans in India.

Main picture from IKEA India.

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Beauty Shoppe furnishes Cleveland co-working space with local products

Pittsburg design studio Beauty Shoppe has created a space for collaborative work with a public cafe in Cleveland, Ohio, as part of its growing number of co-working projects.

Beauty Shoppe, an agency founded in 2011 that specialises in shared workspaces, has opened this outpost as its first outside Pennsylvania.

Foyer in Cleveland by Beauty Shoppe

It occupies the ground floor of the historic brick Seymour Building, which is at the heart of a $60 million (£46 million) mixed-use development for the area in the Ohio City neighbourhood. Other plans involve an apartment building, school and grocery store.

Beauty Shoppe’s co-working space and adjoining Foyer cafe were created with the goal to create a space for the community to meet and gather.

Foyer in Cleveland by Beauty Shoppe

“Originally constructed in 1876 and formerly home to Ohio City’s beloved Kiefer’s Tavern, the Seymour Building has a long tradition of bringing people together,” said the studio. “Beauty Shoppe brings that to the fore in the design and programming for Foyer.”

“We thrive on reinvigorating historic buildings and participating in the revitalisation of urban neighbourhoods,” the team added.

The 12,000-square-foot (1,115-square-metre) project involved the creation of the public cafe, lounge and work areas, alongside private work areas that include 22 offices and smaller breakout spaces, which are sized for one to six people.

A dusty maroon coffee counter forms a focal point for the communal area, with restaurant-style booth seating and a navy-coloured conference room in other areas. White walls and light wood floors keep the interiors bright and play-up the artistic details.

Foyer in Cleveland by Beauty Shoppe

Beauty Shoppe collaborated with Pittsburgh-based furniture maker Zach Kruszynski of Bones and All to create custom booths and work tables. “Zach is a Cleveland native, so this project was very dear to his heart,” said the studio.

A combination of blush, dark and light blue, and soft green are used in the cafe. Soft pink drapery was custom made by Pittsburgh designer Leah Patgorski, and adds a cosiness to the dining area.

Foyer in Cleveland by Beauty Shoppe

Local makers and businesses are represented in the space, including a contemporary painting by artist Lauren Noel, and greenery and floral arrangements by Plantscaping & Blooms.

Other pieces were sourced from Cleveland vintage store All Things For U, and Springfield Antique Show – a flea market in Columbus.

Foyer in Cleveland by Beauty Shoppe

In addition to showcasing local crafts, Foyer also has a strong focus on sustainability and aims to produce no more than one bag of garbage per week. Recycled and compostable containers are used alongside ceramics, with compostable paper straws from Aardvark Straws.

The cafe also partners with Cleveland’s Rust Belt Riders for compost collection, and plans are for Foyer to serve as a Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) delivery location for Lettuce Heads, a farm based in Wellington, Ohio.

Foyer in Cleveland by Beauty Shoppe

Co-working spaces are increasingly popular across the US, as self-employment continues to rise and working remotely becomes more common. Other recent projects in the country include Canopy in San Francisco with an outdoor patio by Yves Behar, Amir Mortazavi and Steve Mohebi and female co-working club The Wing in New York’s Soho by Chiara De Rege.

Photography is by Lexi Ribar of Beauty Shoppe.

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An Unrestrained Masterpiece

If there was ever such a thing as too pretty to drive, this might be it. The latest from Eadon Green’s iconic collection of vintage-inspired concepts, the Zeclat looks like it might be more at home in a museum than on the road.

The coupe’s curvaceous shape, reminiscent of 1930s aero cars like the Figoni or Chapron, are a nod to the dramatic design during the Art Deco period. However, its carbon-nano-composite paneled chassis, carbon fiber body shell, and a 6.2 liter V8 are anything but old-fashioned.

Though it might look as if it were designed to meander down a country road, its wide tires, robust stance, and engine roar say something entirely different. Its performance DNA is continued throughout the interior with an aggressive and sporty wrap-around cockpit clad in hand-stitched leather, carbon fiber, piano black gloss panels, and polished aluminum detailing.

Designer: Eadon Green

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