Reader Submitted: How a Ukrainian NGO is Improving Post-Soviet Children's Hospitals Through Design

For The Vlada Brusilovskaya Fund, contemporary interactive design is a way to improve service of post-Soviet children’s hospitals. The charitable foundation has been collaborating with both young and experienced Ukrainian designers for three years, aiming to change the relationship between doctors, patients and their parents for the better.

Post-Soviet interior sickness nursed by therapeutic design

Children’s hospitals built in the Soviet Union from 1950s to 1980s are easily confused with any other official governmental building of that time. Austere concrete, gloomy dirty-green corridors, uncomfortable waiting chairs on thin metal legs and aggressive red posters on the walls ordering patients around or, more often, prohibiting something… hospital interiors could be associated with a prison rather than with a place where help is found.

However, the first impression is not far from the truth. In Soviet times, architecture was part of ideology. It was aimed at suppressing freedom of will and destroying the sense of self as an independent person.

Most Ukrainian hospitals today look exactly the same as in the 50s or 60s. Since the 1990s, less than 10% of medical institutions in Ukraine have been built or reconstructed.

Children suffer from Soviet official interior design the most. They easily become stressed and depressed. Prolonged treatment in old hospitals leads to mental injuries that are not immediately apparent, but remain for life. This is seen in particular, in adulthood, when they try by all means to avoid professional treatment or get suspicious of doctors and medical institutions in general.

Our organization has undertaken the mission to make the environment of old hospitals friendly, to inspire doctors and provoke the hospital directors to change the appearance of their institutions.

CUBA BUBA #1
pioneer box-like play centre for Ukrainian Children’s Hospitals, 2017

CUBA BUBA #2
All CUBA BUBA play centres have the same size (2,4?1,7?2,3m). Architects invented the standard, having studied the Soviet engineering standards for children’s institutions.

CUBA BUBA #1

CUBA BUBA #2
second box-like play center for entertainment and treatment, 2017

CUBA BUBA #2
climbing ropes to create patterns on the walls of the play centre

CUBA BUBA #3
the third play centre is a home-like version of the first one, 2017

CUBA BUBA #4
the team expanded the CUBA BUBA environment to include the whole room, 2018

CUBA BUBA #4
a huge bamboo percussion instrument inside CUBA BUBA #4, 2018

CUBA BUBA #4

CUBA BUBA #5
a working project of the hospital ward

View the full project here

An Inflatable, Floating Laptop/Camera Bag That Uses Air For Protection

?????Conventional thinking: To protect delicate goods in a bag, use foam padding.

Unconventional thinking: To protect delicate goods in a bag, make the bag inflatable.

Product design firm Imagination Farm USA, formed by Italian designers ?Enrica Vagliani Gray and Max Mellano, devised the latter approach for their Capsul4 bag. Rather than going the traditional route of using ballistic nylon and foam inserts, the duo created their bag from TPU (thermoplastic polyurethane) panels connected via high frequency welding, and reinforced with CSPE (chrolorosulfonated polyethylene, essentially synthetic rubber). Their bag is not only watertight, but can be inflated to add what they reckon is an unparalleled level of protection.

?And it floats, for those of you engaged in water-based activities:

The Capsul4 comes in both camera and backpack varieties, with optional interior capsules–also waterproof–that you can add to maximize organization. It’s already been successfully Kickstarted, but there are still 33 days left in the campaign.?

Design Job: Milwaukee Tool is Seeking a Staff Industrial Designer in Brookfield, WI

Observe users on jobsites to develop understanding of customer requirements and gain inspiration for new product opportunities. Drive concept generation through brainstorms, competitive assessments, market opportunities and unmet user needs. Develop ideas through rapid 2D. Communicate the design intent through visual storytelling to gain acceptance by project stakeholders. Thrive in a fast-pace design environment, with the agility to work between several projects concurrently.

View the full design job here

Snowboard Bindings Designed to Transform Into Snowshoes  

???Snowboards are perfect for carving through powder, whereas snowshoes are perfect for traipsing atop it. To have access to both of these on the mountain, a snowboarder would typically have to wear one while carrying the other. Entrepreneur Alex Swaynie saw an opportunity to simplify this arrangement with clever design.

Swaynie and his company, Ross Snow Tech, conceived of a snowboard binding that could quickly detach from the board, and serve as a snowshoe.

?It sounds crazy, but they got it to work:?

RST’s Convert Bindings will be ready to roll out in Fall 2019.

 

Stove Burners That Hang on the Wall When You Don't Need Them

Plenty of urban dwellers can, and do, live without ovens. I was one of them, and my friends in New York that did have ovens often used them to store sweaters. But few can live without a stovetop.

The problem with stovetops in a space-tight apartment is that they take up so much dang space. Most city apartments have tiny kitchens and every square inch counts. So Adriano Design’s Ordine, a stowable dual-burner induction hub system, looks like it would come in handy.

A revolution that changes the concept of the kitchen top, a cooking hub you can place when and where you need it, and then, once fulfilled it its purpose, you can hang it like a pan.

More freedom to arrange the cooking space, modularity, scalability, like a building block to build a cooking narrative, unthinkable magical scenarios of a new architecture to come. Ordine transforms and creates a new order … in the kitchen.

Another of the company’s offerings is the Cucinotta, designed for spaces where there isn’t even a counter to spare. And it comes with a self-contained hood:

A simple wooden structure supports an induction hub, a utility drawer (that may be transformed into a fridge) and a hood, all easily transportable to anywhere, attached only to a discreet red power cord.

Check out more of Adriano Design’s kitchen innovations here.

Currently Crowdfunding: A Little Something for Space Enthusiasts, a Multifunctional Hammock and More

Brought to you by MAKO Design + Invent, North America’s leading design firm for taking your product idea from a sketch on a napkin to store shelves. Download Mako’s Invention Guide for free here.

Navigating the world of crowdfunding can be overwhelming, to put it lightly. Which projects are worth backing? Where’s the filter to weed out the hundreds of useless smart devices? To make the process less frustrating, we scour the various online crowdfunding platforms to put together a weekly roundup of our favorite campaigns for your viewing (and spending!) pleasure. Go ahead, free your disposable income:

If you’re a space enthisiast, this one’s for you. The Apollo 11 Contingency Lunar Sample Return Bag is a reproduction of the bag used by NASA to collect lunar samples in case of emergency. A cool bag filled with some cool history! Lunar samples not included, though.

Kickstarter veteran Oscar Lhermitte has returned with Simple Corkscrew, which is exactly what it sounds like. The designer was tired of coming across corkscrews that were too complex and featured more functions than necessary. 

  

Mantis: The above video says it all. Happy camping!

  

The Meridian bag allows you to transition from true shoulder bag to backpack without removing the bag—the clever one-piece strap slides through rings, leaving no hanging material behind.

  

Love alcohol? Love alcohol on the goHalflight 375 Flask is a tumbler and flask in one that is able to store up to a half bottle of your favorite spirit at once. Sip and hike responsibly, friends. 

Do you need help designing, developing, patenting, manufacturing, and/or selling YOUR product idea? MAKO Design + Invent is a one-stop-shop specifically for inventors / startups / small businesses. Click HERE for a free confidential product consultation.

Move by LAYER and Airbus Aims to Improve the Horrible Economy Class Flight Experience

Benjamin Hubert of LAYER recently collaborated with Airbus to redesign economy class airline seating, and after flying from NYC to Portland on a very uncomfortable Alaska Airlines flight (at least Delta loads you up on cookies to numb the pain), all I have to say is: finally. Move is an app and seating prototype that gives passengers more control of their flight experience and encourages them to move throughout the flight. So in true traveling fashion, let’s unpack the details. 

  

The seating itself is consists of a lightweight perforated frame made from aircraft grade aluminum and carbon fiber that reduces the on-board weight of the aircraft. On top of the frame rests a one piece digitally knitted polyester wool blend sling that includes integrated conductive yarn within the knit. 

The knit seat cover features zones of various density that offer customized levels of support to the body and automatically adjust throughout the flight based on weight and movement. This is made possible by passing current through the conductive yarn to vary the seat tension.  

Passengers can also turn to the accompanying Move App, which when connected with the smart textiles is what gives passengers control over factors we often relinquish to the Airline Gods–like seat tension, temperature, pressure and movement. Passengers can also select presets like “massage”, “mealtime”, or “sleep”. 

Airline Gods: I promise I’ll stop kicking the seat in front of me if you give my next three-hour domestic flight massage functions.

  

According to LAYER, each passenger’s data is monitored through the smart textiles and then analyzed by the Move App, which then “sends targeted messages to the passenger encouraging them to move in order to improve comfort. These messages include prompts to get up and move around the cabin to improve circulation, when and how to do in-seat stretches, and reminders to stay hydrated to regulate temperature.”

  

On a more design minutiae note, other issues the Move system addresses include:

A fixed seating position, which addresses a lack of legroom range caused by passengers unnecessarily reclining on shorter flights. Why recline when you can control the tension of your seat and understand how to attain inflight bliss through an app? 

The digitally knitted seat cover reduces the amount of less-sustainable foam materials and increases the ability of airlines to easily change or update color or pattern, as well as wash the material during cabin changeover. This is actually a pretty big deal, considering my flight the other day had carpet on the walls. I repeat: carpet on the walls.

  

The tray table is stowed vertically, is height adjustable and can act as a surface on which to rest while sleeping.

Laptop storage is located between the seats, and The Move app notifies passengers if they have left a device in the pocket after landing through pressure sensitive yarn.

The armrests are completely stow-able, offering the option of a bench-like seating if you’re, you know, into that.

Next time I take a domestic flight that doesn’t include cookies and massage functions, I’m flipping the tray table.

This USB-C To Lightning Cable Gives Your Apple Device Superpowers

Unless you’ve been living under a rock, you’d know that the USB-C standard is one of the biggest and best things to happen to consumer gadgets. The port is universal and is capable of doing quite a lot, including both power and data transfer. USB-C can power anything from a smartphone to a laptop, is capable of much higher data transfer speeds, and probably the most important feature yet… fast charging.

Companies are eager to jump onto the USB-C bandwagon, with big players like Griffin, Belkin, and Anker making announcements at CES of their future plans to release their own cables, but I see no point in waiting for them, because the Cascade USB-C Cable to Lightning Cable is Apple MFI approved, and more significantly, it’s here.

The Cascade Cable is a conveniently long, rugged, woven cable with a Lightning connector at one end and a Type C connector at the other. It may seem like quite a simple cable, but it’s capable of a lot. For starters, unlike the USB cable that comes in the box along with the iPhone, the Cascade Cable lets you connect your phone directly to your MacBook by plugging it into the Type-C port. This allows you to charge your iPhone without having to look for a spare plug point (a legitimately difficult thing in my household), and also lets you perform data transfers between your MacBook and your iPhone. However, if you’re intent on looking for a plug point, and you will want to at some point, the Cascade Cable comes with an optional adapter that lets you conventionally plug the iPhone into a power outlet and harness the cable’s fast-charging property that promises to top off your entire phone in just above an hour. That’s twice as fast as the out-of-the-box charger you get with the iPhone.

The Cascade Cable’s USB-C connector gives it a rather interesting third advantage. You can now plug your iPhone directly into the new iPad Pro. The iPad Pro 2018 boasts of a ‘charge your iPhone’ feature, allowing your phone to draw power from your iPad, so whether you’re at a coffee shop, a bus, or anywhere without a power outlet, your iPad Pro, in its infinite uses and capabilities, also serves as a power bank for your iPhone.

Designed to serve its purpose to the best of its ability, the Cascade Cable is a whopping 6 feet in length and has a rugged woven exterior that promises to last MUCH longer than most Apple cables. The woven design also prevents the Cascade Cable from getting tangled up, a problem smartphone users are all too familiar with. To ensure they’re the kind of cables that aren’t just about function, the Cascade Cable come in a variety of eye-catching colors, making them vibrant, great to look at, and incredibly easy to spot in a crowded backpack. And with that, I rest my case.

Designer: Eastern Collective

Click Here to Buy Now: $22 $29.99 (26% off). Hurry, less than 24 hours left!

Cascade Cable – fast charge your Apple Devices with Apple MFI Lightning to USB C Cables. They make dongles redundant!

The Cascade Cable features Apple’s brand new c94 Chip, which allows third party manufacturers to now produce Lightning to USB C cables. The new chip c94 also now enables Fast Charging through USB C for select iPhones and iPads. This means you will be able to charge your device up to twice as fast when using a Cascade Cable and 18w charger compared to the cable and charger that comes with your iPhone.

cascade_cables_for_apple_02

Whether you are heading out the door in 15 minutes or you have an hour to grab a charge, get more out of your battery with the Cascade Cable.

Since Apple switched their Macbook line to strictly USB C ports, thousands of Apple users were forced to use dongles to connect their iPhone when using the cable that came in the box. It’s time to ditch the dongles!

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The Cascade Cable withstands more bending as you use it with your devices. The wear and tear during your daily routine is minimal and they remain tangle free unlike the white plastic chargers!

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The Cascade Cable features the signature rugged woven design. Each cable is wrapped in a tough nylon fabric material to add additional durability.

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The Cascade Cable is 6-feet long, which is two times longer than the Lightning Cable that comes with your iPhone.

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Whether you are on the go, charging at home, or powering up at the office – always have the perfect size cable for any situation!

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Protect your iPhone with your favorite case and still fit your Cascade Cable without having to remove it to keep charging!

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The Cascade Cable features four vibrant colorways with unique patterns. Pick the colorway (Admiral, Galaxy, Anchor and Black Magic) that best fits your style or simply get one of each.

Click Here to Buy Now: $22 $29.99 (26% off). Hurry, less than 24 hours left!

Your Furniture Design Moodboard: Winning Furniture Projects from A’ Design 2018

The purpose of this post is twofold. Not only is it a roundup of ten award-winning works that are worthy of your design inspiration mood board (go ahead and bookmark the page for use later!), it’s also a reminder that this is the last call for entries for the A’ Design Award and Competition, a competition that covers almost all categories of design. Furniture consistently ranks in the top 3 of A’ Design’s award categories, and we’ve pulled 10 noteworthy design from a hefty bunch.

We look at the top Furniture Designs from last year, creating a compilation of what A’ Design’s stellar 211-member international jury panel is worthy of winning the A’ Design Award. While we’re at it, do check out what winning an Award does for your Design Career, and don’t forget to head down to the A’ Design Award and Competition page to register to submit your design entries for the Award. The last date of submission is the 28th of February 2019, and the awards will be announced here on YD on the 15th of April!

LAST CALL! Register to participate in the A’ Design Awards now! Deadline: 28th February!

A’ Design Award 2018 Furniture Moodboard
01. Cocoon Lounge Chair by Timmy Kwok
Sitting on the Cocoon is a strangely comforting yet new experience. It looks a little revolutionary, no doubt… but sitting on it gives you an experience that’s difficult to actualize in words. Rest your body against it, and it feels like a hammock, with its woven fabric. However, it doesn’t consume you, like a hammock would. Lie down in a hammock, and the fabric gives in to the shape of your body… lie in the Cocoon, and it feels like you’ve still got some lumbar support. It feels more like a recliner than a hammock. And then there’s experience number three. Designed with a curved frame, the Cocoon swings to and fro, unlike a hammock that swings side by side. The Cocoon somehow manages to combine rocking, lounging, and relaxing all into one beautiful seating device perfect for a lazy afternoon with a cup of hot cocoa.

02. Renaissance Armchair by Zaria Ishkildina
Playing beautifully with a visual illusion called Moire, the Renaissance Chair styles itself on the form of the curule chair, an Ancient Roman chair design that was reserved for the highest of dignitaries, and was often a symbol of status and power. Designer Zaria Ishkildina took the chair’s form, altering the material from wood to multiple stainless steel tubes welded together. The result, although is a wireframe, feels less like one, and more like a modern, minimal (in terms of material choice, rather than abundance) throne.

03. Exo Chair by Svilen Gamolov
The Exo Chair’s memorable postmodern-esque design is quite worthy of being on the mood board because it looks completely unique from the top, front, and side. Designed to look like a rectangle from the front, an intersecting square and circle from the top, and a relatively abstract shape from the side, the Exo’s experimental design immediately looks eye-catching and inviting.

04. Petalis Sound Amplifier by Ismail Gunes Otken
The Petalis is a decorative element with an unusual function. Formed out of thick aluminum sheets, the flower-inspired Petalis works like an acoustic mirror, directing sound-waves to a user, or to a specific area. Televisions or speakers with 360° sound are often at a disadvantage when placed near or mounted on a wall. The Petalis helps guide the sound being thrown towards the sides, curving the sound-waves (much like the cone of a trumpet or gramophone) and helping amplify it by focusing the waves rather than letting them scatter. The Petalis comprises multiple individual ‘petals’ that can be wall-mounted in any way that works for you, both aesthetically and acoustically.

05. Joseph Felt Chair by Windels Lothar
The Joseph Felt chair, interestingly, is made from a single sandwiched sheet/ply of felt and foam. Folded in its clumsy, crumply style, the sheet (although pretty thick) turns into a 3D form, forming an armchair complete with a backrest and two armrests. The entire chair is held together by three well-positioned rivets, and is highly reminiscent of a chair sketch by Nick Baker!

06. The Dialogue Clock by Evgenia Dymkina
The Dialogue Clock’s unique design draws attention to a few things. Firstly, its immediate separation of the usually concentric coaxial watch hands. Not only do the watch hands now exist one beside the other, they also turn the positive space into negative, making the hand a cutout in a white dial. This allows the two dials (hour and minute) to look like pacman-ish faces that rotate in their place, only facing each other twice in the entire day (at 3:45). The rather unusual design of the Dialogue clock also opens it up to a lot of other explorations. Can you think of a few?

07. Darkside Stool/Side Table by Romulo Teixeira and Cintia Miyahira
Serving a reminder that inspiration can be found anywhere, even in the ever nourishing domain of art, the Darkside Stool/Side-Table pays tribute to one of the most influential music albums of our time, and its album art, that is an icon in itself. Made from Stainless Steel and Acrylic, the stool has all the visual elements from the background. The triangular prism finds itself at the base of the stool, made of stainless steel and colored black, while the prismatic material forms the acrylic seat on top. Lastly, the seven colors of the spectrum form supports for the acrylic seat (although there are only six here, to give the seating bilateral symmetry).

08. Dodo Multifunctional Chair by Mohammad Enjavi Amiri
‘Do’ means dual, or two, in Urdu and Hindi. The Dodo, by that definition perfectly describes this absolutely ingenious shapeshifting piece of furniture that shifts between two forms, and can go from chair to stool to coffee table, simply by folding one edge inwards on itself. Designed from individual beechwood slats, with stainless steel joineries and hinges, the Dodo chair can exist in two forms (open and closed), and just by doing that, can serve multiple purposes, from a barstool, to chair, to table, to even a bookshelf! Truly versatile piece of furniture, I say!


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LAST CALL! Register to participate in the A’ Design Awards now! Deadline: 28th February!

The Parting of the Furniture

So it’s come to this: BILLY is joining the gig economy, and he’ll hold your books and whatever else you see fit until you upgrade to KALLAX or HEMNES, or you finally bring yourself to KonMari all your worldly possessions away.

IKEA recently announced that it is looking to launch a subscription model, in which customers effectively “lease” furniture and trade it back via credit system; depending on the condition, the Swedish behemoth will either refurbish or recycle the used items. Initially limited to the office market, the scheme conjures dainty visions of a low-rent WeWork, all LINNMON tabletops and ADILS legs, and maybe some TRÅDFI smart lightbulbs for good measure. If all goes well in Switzerland, where IKEA is reportedly piloting the service starting this month, you’ll soon be able to rent your kitchen — in Northern Europe, cabinets and appliances are regarded as movable furniture, which the occupant buys and takes with them — and maybe even your next NORDLI.

At first blush, it sounds like another case of the subscription model taking finer slices — or in IKEA’s case, an EKTORP-sized chunk — of modern life, from the latest Drake album and The Great British Baking Show to weekly/monthly essentials like groceries or razor blades to seasonal frills like couture. As subscribables go, most articles of furniture fall somewhere between a pragmatic nice-to-have (but not to own) like a car, and an unglamorous necessity like underwear. The initiative not only gives new meaning to the phrase “part of the furniture” — as in piecemeal ownership — but it also just makes sense to shed the deadweight, transubstantiating anchor into ballast. On one hand we covet hygge; on the other hand, we live, work, and play in the cloud. The new model promises the best of both worlds: no longer the angst of “either/or” but the joy of “both/and.”

Moreover, given the rise of adjacent life-slicers like Airbnb and upstarts like Wayfair, at least a couple other startups offer the very same. In fact, IKEA’s foray into virtual ownership might also be likened to WeWork for another reason: The idea has existed for decades. Outlets like Rent-A-Center have long offered a rent-to-own financing model for “brand name” furniture, not to mention the countless vendors for office furniture rentals (the coffee machine in the kitchen of my workplace bears a barcode-sticker from one called “Office Essentials”).

Of course, there’s little basis for these comparisons (not least because details remain scant). None of those other companies comes close to processing 1% of the world’s lumber and cotton every year; nor do they have a catalog circulation that rivals the Bible, Koran, and Harry Potter. Yet even at thousands or millions of times the scale of any putative competitors, IKEA sees the same twofold upshot. First, as the consumer-facing proposition described above, tapping into a segment of the population who prefer to lease (or “share”) and not own, whether due to evolving taste, eco-consciousness, or simply because so many of us young people are so transient these days. Secondly — and more importantly — as a Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR, in business lingo) campaign, in keeping with the broader “People & Planet Positive” sustainability strategy it launched in 2012. As executive Torbjorn Loof told the Financial Times, IKEA is looking to “reduce its climate footprint by 15 per cent in absolute terms, which translated into a 70 per cent reduction per product by 2030 due to growth.” Victor Papanek would be proud.

A circular economy won’t come cheap — it’ll certainly be more change than you’ll find between your sofa cushions when you swap it for another one…

Which is all to the good, until you start to ponder the as-yet-TBD logistics of the whole enterprise. Does it include or entail delivery and/or installation, or was that in the PowerPoint slide about upselling white-glove concierge service as an additional revenue stream (here it’s worth noting that IKEA acquired Taskrabbit in 2017)? Will customers still be forced to subject themselves to chaotic parking lots and aggravating queues to rotate their POÄNGS, or will the distribution hubs be dedicated sites in up-and-coming industrial parks? Just how many pulverized, reconstituted FROSTAs does it actually take to make a brand new PAX? If pick-up and delivery are included, will subscriptions inspire a second-order “IKEA Effect,” a self-esteem-boosting pseudo-DIY microdose via monthly MALM? And how much would it cost per annum to subscribe to just the tiny wooden dowels and those vanishing pegs for mounting the shelves of said PAX — parts of the furniture, as it were? (To this last rhetorical question, the answer is that IKEA is also reportedly considering launching a replacement-parts service.)

But those are just the easy questions, the superficial ones; even if the Swiss live more austere lifestyles than Americans, those issues can ultimately be A/B-tested and focus-grouped away. The bigger picture has less to do with how we regard the domestic sphere — cloud-hygge — than with IKEA as a prism for how we consume stuff today.

The Colossus of Almhult

The crucial difference between IKEA and the companies listed above (with the exception of Gillette, and maybe Netflix) is that it actually produces the things it will be leasing. The sui generis giant is a veritable case study on economies of scale and the positive feedback afforded by supply-chain savvy, from the trees to hex-wrench-wielding customers like you and me (or, if you prefer, a Taskrabbit).

As much as this globalized apparatus enables it to deliver on its promise of affordable quality — the original dream of modern design — the reality is that the products are often regarded as temporary, if not outright disposable. Keeping step with the relentless march of obsolescence, it’s a reputation that IKEA won’t shed any time soon, oft-derided as it is for statistically significant rates of user error and materials that are flimsier than jokes about them. (In fairness, I’ve found many IKEA products, from kitchen cabinets to my personal fave, the BEKVAM stepstool, to be sufficiently sturdy.)

IKEA-spotting in Brooklyn

In theory, it is precisely the nasty, brutish, and short lifecycle of such products that makes them prime candidates for the circular economy; one could argue, vis-à-vis Papanek, that the 21st-Century amendment to quaint visions of high-quality, mass-produced goods for everyone would be a circular, guilt-free approach to consumption — again, the best of both worlds. In practice, it seems absurd to amortize the cost of, say, a $13 side table over the duration of its average lifespan (“yours for less than a dollar a month!”) precisely because it’s so cheap and cheerful — less than the cost of a decent cocktail in Manhattan, or your Uber ride home from the bar. All else equal, it’s just plain simpler to toss that LACK when you’re done with it than to assume the opportunity cost of reselling (much less refurbishing) the damn thing.

This is the double-edged sword of a dominant multinational consumer-goods brand-cum-retailer operating at post-industrial, mass-market, high-volume/low-cost scale: IKEA’s superlatively value-engineered products are widely and cheaply acquirable, generally serviceable, guiltlessly disposed of. Insofar as BILLY is a minimum viable product designed for maximum marketable profit, IKEA is a krona-making machine; its margins neither razor-thin nor overstuffed but sufficiently plush, cleverly vacuum-packed yet still offering plenty of cushion for the bottom line. A circular economy won’t come cheap — it’ll certainly be more change than you’ll find between your sofa cushions when you swap it for another one — and it remains to be seen as to whether IKEA will eat its profit margins or try to squeeze the difference out of its customers. (Duly noted that IKEA also derives its success from questionable labor practices, complacency in consumer safety, and sketchy non-profit governance, but those are topics for another time.)

A Circular Argument

Circling around to the far side of the product lifecycle, it’s worth relating an ongoing crisis in the waste management industry (drowned out by various more strident headlines of late). As of last year, China — by far the world’s largest processor of post-consumer recycling — is no longer importing Western waste, effectively strangling the outflow of scrap paper and plastic from Stateside operators. It’s too complexly wicked an economic problem to summarize here (thankfully the likes of the New York Times and Wall Street Journal have done so), but the short version is that your local blue/green-bin hauler used to turn a profit by selling your Amazon boxes (properly broken down, please) and discarded clamshells to China, and now they’re probably paying for the privilege — or, more likely, quietly dumping it in landfills (at least until the robots come).

What does that have to do with IKEA taking back your MELLTORP, replacing a screw, and shunting it to the as-is section? Nothing, and everything: Besides a friendly reminder that the first R is “reduce,” it seems that even the greenest of intentions are beholden to the unforgiving logic of free-market economics.

Hence, a paradox: On one hand, only a company with IKEA’s heft, insulated as it is from the vagaries of market volatility, can meaningfully combat climate change, i.e. by bringing its prodigious efficiencies to bear on the problem. On the other hand, the calculus of a circular economy simply may never equal the unquantifiable — and frankly inconceivable — scale of what’s at stake. In its very thorough analysis of China’s “National Sword” policy (as the scrap stoppage is known), the Financial Times compares the annual gross tonnage of recycling worldwide to “the weight of 740 Empire State Buildings,” but I couldn’t tell you what that means in terms of impact per person, much less what I as an individual can do to help. (The easy answer would have been to properly clean and sort our recycling, but we literally missed the boat on that one.)

IKEA, for its part, publishes annual reports with sales and environmental impact figures; per the latest statistics [PDF], raw materials were by far the biggest contributor to its total greenhouse gas emissions at 38%, followed by a vague category called “Customer product use” at a notable 23% (also notable: the methodology isn’t provided). Perhaps even more surprising is the fact that “Customer transportation to stores” comes in next at 14%, slightly higher than “Production” (12%), and shockingly more than three other categories — “Goods transport,” “IKEA stores” and “Product’s end-of-life” — combined (4% each). The subscription model might chip away the beginning and end of the lifecycle, but it turns out that we, the end users, are responsible for nearly as much of the footprint.

Indeed, it’s business as usual on the Western front, climate science be damned. Sure, we shudder and quake at the latest special reports and assessments; we applaud the international accords and agreements (and more recently the Green New Deal); some of us even strive to be more conscientious about our consumption habits. The tragic irony is that the natural world — the backdrop of life long before furniture was invented — is not only literally “part of the furniture,” in the form of raw materials, but also that its destruction is equally part of the contemporary environment, in chair and air alike, and is all the more invisible for it (at least until the next superstorm/megafire/polar vortex cometh).

To that point, IKEA has co-opted the macro-trend of sustainability for several years now — whether you call it greenwashing or baby steps — and a recent sequel to its best-known TV spot duly captures the change of heart in a kind of #16yearchallenge. Where the original 2002 ad ended with a punchline equating new with better, the follow-up flips the script: “Many of you feel happy for this lamp. That’s not crazy — reusing things is much better.” It’s certainly clever for the brand to acknowledge the second, third, and nth lives of its products; heirlooms they ain’t, but, having bought and sold many IKEA products over the years, I can attest to the demand for a secondhand SÖDERHAMN as well as the dubiousness of a cheap KLIPPAN on Craigslist (either way, they tend to depreciate faster than you can unpack them).

Conversely, if advertising presents one face of the company, it’s also worth looking beyond the CSR, PR, FSC, etc., to its actual growth strategy: where it’s placing big bets. As of last year, that happens to be India, where it opened its first store in August (just a month before “Lamp 2” aired in Canada); if Bloomberg’s Billy Bookcase Index is any indication, IKEA is right up there with Big Macs and Starbucks — indicators of purchasing power parity — as a bellwether for a solid middle class. As with China’s chokehold on recycling infrastructure, the move is equally symbolic and symptomatic of largely opaque socioeconomic and geopolitical forces. More tellingly, IKEA’s calculated gamble on India affirms that profit remains its number-one priority, with sustainability coming in second, third, or nth place — it’ll have to wait in line behind all of those giddy new customers, carts piled high with shiny new stuff.

Bringing It All Home

Here in New York, a visit to the big yellow-and-blue box entails navigating a similar housewares maze but slightly different huddled masses, from college kids to three-generation families to young couples of every race, color and creed bickering about the decor of their first place together. If nothing else, IKEA assembles a truly diverse — perhaps even representative — constituency of shoppers: students, parents, hipsters, yuppies, immigrants, residents, liberals, conservatives, tired, poor, rich young old white black Hispanic Asian gay straight both neither all-of-the-above, all groping the upholstery and sucking down soft serve, all struggling with unwieldy flatbed carts with one wayward wheel, all spending more than they thought they would because what’s another 5-10-15 bucks, all losing themselves in the endless aisles and bins (or dare I say sunken place) of consumerism.

The real question, then, is this: How do you convince them — which is to say us — not only to recycle their things when they’re done with them, but also to reduce, reuse, and treat things better in general? Or more specifically, how do you incentivize them to pay a premium, a.k.a. a subscription fee, to cover BILLY’s pension plan and life insurance, when they have their own to worry about? After all, the vast majority of IKEA customers are looking for functional forms at the lowest possible pricepoint; nothing more, nothing less. Is it even possible for the budget-friendly Scandinavian titan to upsell sustainability as “part of the furniture” (to recycle the metaphor one last time — see what I did there)?

A cynic might respond that a more appropriate idiom would be “rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic” — to hell with Spaceship Earth, those TÄRNÖs are a bargain at $15 a pop. As Papanek, a notorious doomsayer himself, put it (writing about a packaging concept in Design for the Real World): “Much more than these Swedish experiments will have to be done to save us from product pollution.”

All told, the significance of the gesture — and that’s all it is for now — has little to do with aesthetics (Scandi-lite), quality (passable), or optics (what do you get when you mix blue and yellow?); rather, it’s the fact that IKEA, itself a product of the machinery of late capitalism, is drawing a line in the sand in order to turn back the tide of globalized consumerism. A Herculean task if not a Sisyphean one, this undertaking will require far greater investment than virtue signaling — it demands a wholesale transformation of IKEA’s entire business model, bending the linear logic of revenue growth back upon itself; not merely seeing the forest for the trees, but seeing the environment for the furniture; seeing the whole for its (ahem) parts.

To bring it full circle back to BILLY, he was “dreamed up in 1978” — seven years after the publication of Design for the Real World — “by an IKEA designer called Gillis Lundgren who sketched it on the back of a napkin, worried that he would forget it.” The 2017 account in BBC continues: “Now there are 60-odd million in the world, nearly one for every 100 people — not bad for a humble bookcase.”

From the consumer’s point of view, that’s either a lot of storage space or a lot of expendable junk; from IKEA’s perspective, that’s an impressive sales figure or a bumper crop of recyclable material. But to the extent that the latter dichotomy is not mutually exclusive — not “either/or” but “both/and” — we all share the responsibility for the things we consume.

If BILLY can do his part, each of us can do our part too.