Detroit's Giant Slide, Over-Waxed, Leads to Gnarly Accidents

While Jenison, Michigan has a gigantic Slip ‘n Slide, Detroit’s Belle Isle Park features an enormous slide made of steel.

The Giant Slide, as it’s called, has been in operation since 1967. So you’d think the park would have its maintenance down to a science. This month, however, workers apparently over-waxed the slide, leading to disastrous rides like this one:

There’s more footage here, though I can’t recommend watching it; it looks to me like children sustaining concussions and perhaps spinal damage.

As complaints spread on social media, the park temporarily closed the slide to institute a fix. “We have scrubbed down the surface and started to spray a little water on the slide between rides to help control the speed,” they wrote, upon reopening the slide. “It seems to be working well so please come out and give it a try.”

They also released this, which is perhaps the first instructional video I’ve ever seen for how to ride a slide:

Using Construction Industry Dust Control Machines to Keep Music Festivals Cool

BossTek is a company that makes dust control machines for the construction industry. When a building is being demolished, workers and nearby residents are protected by gigantic misting cannons like the kind produced by BossTek. Atomized water droplets make contact with “fugitive dust,” bringing the particles to the ground rather than into people’s lungs.

In recent years, however, BossTek has picked up a new client: Festival organizers, like the ones behind NYC’s annual Electric Zoo Festival, held over Labor Day Weekend on Randall Island. The heat experienced by festival crowds under the sun is no joke, according to Rutger Jansen, Director of Production and Operations of SFX Entertainment. “When a crowded and active area is in the direct sun with no wind, even though the forecast says 80 degrees, the temperature can seem like it’s over 100 degrees,” Jansen says. “That’s when we get the most activity at our medical aid stations.”

In a bid to reduce dehydration, heat exhaustion and sunstroke, since 2016 the EZF has employed BossTek’s KoolBoss atomized misting machines.

“The KoolBoss has a spray manifold on the front end of a heavy-duty barrel design with a powerful internal ducted fan in the back. The ‘cannon’ propels a long cone-shaped plume of engineered mist as far as 100 feet (30 m) through the air. Attached to the manifold, specially designed atomizing nozzles fracture pressurized water into millions of droplets approximately 50-200 microns in size – roughly the diameter of an average human hair and light enough to travel long distances on ambient air currents. As the droplets move through the air, they evaporate — beginning with the smaller sizes first — raising the relative humidity of the area and significantly lowering the temperature.”

With a 359-degree oscillating head, the KoolBoss can cover a staggering 31,000 square feet, or roughly half of a football field. And “Although the crowd surrounded the units,” the company writes, “attendees found that the noise they emitted was not disruptive to the music in a festival setting.”

The festival organizers confirmed that they’ve seen “an overall reduction in heat-related illnesses” since incorporating the machines, and Jansen says that sweaty festival-goers like getting sprayed. After first turning the machines on at the festival, he says, “The crowd literally turned away from the DJ and started dancing in the spray.”

More Information on that Dutch Bike Rack that Keeps the Saddle Dry

Last week we posted a shot of a peculiar Dutch bike rack I’d not seen before, with a hinged sheet that folds down to keep the saddle dry when it’s raining.

Its provenance was largely a mystery, with English-language searches returning no results. Helpfully, reader and designer Dries Wiewauters wrote in with illuminating background information on the design. Here’s what we’ve learned:

The racks were installed at a public library in the Dutch city of Apeldoorn in 1984, under a local initiative for the creation of street art. Still, this art would have function: Gijs Bakker, a furniture designer and jewelry artist commissioned by library architect Hans Ruijssenaars, was tasked with designing a bicycle storage solution that would keep 180 bicycles dry. In the common understanding, this means a roofed structure. However, the creative Bakker thought differently about the solution, as he explains in a statement (machine-translated from Dutch):

“I did some initial sketches, and quickly discarded the idea that the bicycles could only be kept dry with a shelter or enclosed space. The narrow width of the street in front of the library simply doesn’t have the space for an additional structure. It became clear to me that I had to aim for an open construction with a linear effect, and that keeping a bicycle dry simply comes down to keeping your butt dry.

“At that moment came the moving lids in the picture, which the cyclist can adjust to the weather. Next to their practical function, I found the lids especially attractive as a visual element: an aspect of mobility against the static character of the building.

“The design was also a response to the horizontal and vertical lines of the building. The facade makes a curvature at a certain point, and that in turn determines the point where the bicycle parking had to end. Similarly, the color scheme of the racks are directly related to the main colors of the library. The beige covers refer to the sand-coloured facing brick, the white tubular frame corresponds to the white window frames. Only the clear opaque blue of the bicycle clamps was selected purely for emphasis. Finally, for the lids, a solid core plastic sheet was used.”

And in the end, Bakker writes, the design “had to be something that strings bicycles together in a playful way.”

Comments on the original post, which was light on information, were critical of Bakker’s design. Now that we have the designer’s intent, and an explanation of the context, I’m guessing the object looks very different indeed.

A special thanks to Wiewauters!

Machining a Solid Disco Ball on a Five-Axis CNC Mill

This fascinating tool, made by Detroit-based precision tool manufacturer Cogsdill, is called a DBFM (Diamond Burnish Face Mill tool).

It mounts into a standard milling arbor, and each of the posts have a spring-loaded diamond insert in the tip. When the tool comes into contact with the metal workpiece, the springs force the diamonds against it, and it then produces a mirror-like finish.

As an example, the top half of the workpiece below shows a merely milled surface, whereas the bottom half has been finished with the DBFM.

Titans of CNC Machining got their hands on a DBFM, and used it to finish a disco ball that they milled out of a chunk of aluminum:

ScanLAB Projects’ Astounding “Framerate: Pulse of The Earth” Immersive Installation

Poetic landscape-scale visualizations born from 3D scanning, set to debut in the immersive division of the 79th Venice International Film Festival

Making its world premiere in the Venice Immersive division of the 79th Venice International Film Festival, Framerate: Pulse of The Earth is a spatialized film told across multiple screens in one enveloping installation. Each scene knits together time-lapse footage captured through a LiDAR 3D scanning system by directors William Trossell and Matthew Shaw, the founders of the UK-based creative studio ScanLAB Projects. Framerate: Pulse of the Earth is a powerful, poetic shared experience that tells a story of landscape-scale change. It also happens to be a demonstration of immense technology and built upon real scientific data. With all of this aswirl, ScanLAB’s architectural “machine vision” opens a wormhole into the future of photography and cinematography.

Fundamental to ScanLAB’s work is their expertise in 3D scanning. “We’ve always been really interested in technology and tools,” Trossell tells COOL HUNTING in advance of the Venice installation. “Until you understand a tool at its limits, you don’t really understand that tool. One of the first things we ever organized was a ScanLAB week. We were scanning rainbows and mist and smoke, all right at the edge of what we were told was possible.”

For me, being right at the edge of a tool’s ability, that’s the creative space

“For me, being right at the edge of a tool’s ability, that’s the creative space,” Shaw adds. “That’s where accidents happen and surprises happen. The best use of our kind of skillset is setting up the opportunity for something beautiful to happen but never being exactly sure what that will be.”

Trossell and Shaw are referred to as filmmakers, but also data scientists and sometimes scanning experts. There’s evidence enough, however, that they are defining the future of photography. “I think this comparison stems from some of the similarities that we share with the history of photography and image-making,” Shaw says. “Early photographers in Yosemite were using the vastness of what we call ‘nemesis landscape.’ They were trying to photograph the impossible, like a sky or a waterfall that’s moving too fast for the exposure of an early camera. They were taking cameras into places that were almost impossible to get them to.” ScanLAB embodies this same sense of exploration and the data sets they capture are precise representations down to the millimeter.

There is a point in their practice where spatial data and artistry overlap. ScanLAB orients their data accumulation into stories about climate change and humanity’s provocation. This begins quite early on in their process. “In a practical sense, where you put the scanner is very much as important as where someone would put their camera for a photo—what happens to be in the frame and out of it,” Trossell explains. “The scanner seeing in 360 degrees doesn’t function exactly the same, however. It will follow shadows: if something is in the way, if cannot see beyond it. Mirrors, glass and water all have really interesting reflectivity. In a more theoretical sense, where the focus is and what we choose to highlight is very important. There’s a very delicate balance.”

The filmic project Framerate: Pulse of the Earth is part of ScanLAB’s larger Framerate exploration and data capture. “It isn’t just about getting test data,” Shaw says. “There is a practical conundrum. We ask ourselves ‘What is landscape-scale?’ and ‘What changes with the regularity that we need?’ Then it becomes ‘What story does that mean we are telling?’” With Framerate: Pulse of the Earth, “We are telling a story about landscape-scale change. We ask ourselves, ‘What are the things that are influencing that?’ There’s change that would happen without us—naturally occurring change. There’s change that humans are provoking.”

“There’s also been the longstanding theme running through our work of memory and memory spaces,” Trossell adds. “That got kickstarted by our project Frozen Relic,” which came from a “fortuitous trip to the Arctic.” ScanLAB was invited on the trip to support the science with their technology. Afterward, aware that the landscape was changing, they built an exhibition around pieces of ice that they measured that will never be there again.

In advance of the Venice Film Festival, ScanLAB Projects helped paint a picture of their entire Framerate: Pulse of the Earth multi-screen installation for us. “We spend quite a bit of time trying to get people to pause before they start the experience,” Shaw says. “The purpose of the piece is to try to get people to think on different time scales. The first step toward that is to try to take them out of the time scale they’re in at the moment, which probably has to do with rushing to get to the next ticketed event. When you enter Pulse of the Earth it’s fully blacked-out. Within, there are eight screens that hover in the darkness. They’re arranged in portrait, landscape and horizontally, either on the floor or embedded in the ceiling. These are picture planes like traditional artworks hung in a gallery.” They are also OLED 4K screens so they seem to disappear, allowing the Pulse of the Earth imagery to float in the room.

Each screen acts as a portal into the featured landscape. “It’s the same landscape on all the screens at one time, so you might be entering the beach, or the flower garden or a city. But, all of the screens display a unique perspective of that landscape,” Trossell says. “And all of them are impossible to frame with a traditional camera.”

Though the piece was designed as a 20-minute loop, guests can come and go. During developmental screenings, some people passed through in minutes, others stayed for hours. For the duration of the experience, the layered audio accompaniment was carefully considered. It’s an immersive track by composer Pascal Wyse that responds to the visuals, sets tone and harmonizes the surroundings.

It was very important to the creators that Framerate: Pulse of the Earth be experienced by multiple participants at once. “One of the things we felt in the headset or individually oriented projects we’ve made in the past is that you are missing out on the collective experience of the work and the ability to bear witness,” Shaw says. “Framerate has this generosity of not being one film, but being this film that’s exploded across a room where you can spend a long time with a shot—which would have flashed away in a traditional film—while, in your peripheral vision, the rest of the film carries on and other people are exploring that.” This shared immersion lets participants find their most resonant perspective or the intersection between two moments. They can savor it or share it with friends and strangers.

Ultimately, ScanLAB’s founders have very big picture hopes. “One of the crucial things about Framerate is that it’s a glimpse into the future of a perpetually documented world where we have this phenomenal level of three-dimensional, resolutional versions of the real world that are captured every single day or every minute, intentionally by humans as well as autonomous vehicles, mapping systems, satellites and mobile phones,” Shaw concludes. “We go to a ridiculous length to build a data set or scan something that we think will be regularly scanned. Framerate is about making these first temporal data sets knowing that in five years time Google maps might be there doing this and it will be updated every year or even every day.” Unlike Google or other technology companies capable of harvesting such spatial data, ScanLAB’s work is anchored in artistry and asks questions that could very well lead to societal change.

Images courtesy of ScanLAB Projects

This skeleton pocket watch is not just a watch, it’s a landscape horological work of art

Back in 2008, when I was only starting out to write about watches, the horological marvels from MB&F were real mind bogglers for novices like myself. The master horologists at MB&F had back then come up with the Horological Machine No.2 with it’s distinguishing rectangular shape. Ambitious and innovative watchmakers have come up with familiar and unacquainted notions since, but there wasn’t another design to challenge the HM 2. To that accord, the first glimpse of the Code41 Mecascape Sublimation 1 was enough to transport me back in time. I wanted to know more about this work of art which on its intrinsic value is a league beyond the traditional concepts of a watch or clock as we know them.

If you have, for the inventiveness in watchmaking, followed Code41 through the years, you would know that the watchmaker has never feared to experiment. This ambitious affair has given birth to some peculiar mechanical timepieces but the Code41 Mecascape Sublimation 1 is a beauty to behold with a design that’s far and beyond what we have seen before. The independent Swiss brand founded by Claudio D’Amore in 2016 is based out of Lausanne and designing watches with movements tailored to their fancy, at times, challenging needs.

Designer: Code41

The watch movements have really powered devices in the traditional layout where vertical layered construction has remained a favored choice. For the Mecascape Sublimation 1, Code4 has going slightly wide in approach. The watch face is spread out into a rectangular form factor – like a credit card – for which the company has had to tailor the movement to power the contraption with it’s landscape setting. Measuring 108mm x 71mm, this 8mm thick timepiece feature a grade 5 titanium body, and draws power from a mechanical manual winding movement offering 8 days of power reserve.

As mentioned, the watch – if we can call it that – looks like a titanium credit card with a skeletal face and can be used to display time on a stand or be carried in the pocket. Despite the way it can be used, the Mecascape Sublimation 1 is for watch lovers who desire more than the regular wristwatch. This new entrant in the world of horology is likely to get a mixed reaction but from how I perceive it – it’s intended to be a pocket watch – and that’s what I appreciate its incredible layout. For utmost protection from scratches and scrapes in the pocket, it comes with a leather case as you get for credit cards. The case has a kickstand, which one can use to set up the Mecascape Sublimation 1 as a clock on the table.

For the inquisitive, the watch has a skeletonized watch face that allows one to peek through the gear. The dial inside the titanium body is divided into two separate subdial systems. The main time is shown on the two subdials (big for minutes and small for hours) on the left half while the right half of the rectangular dial features GMT (second timezone) laid out over a world map engraved below. A semicircular dial on the top right depicting the power reserve wraps up the dial layout. Flipping the watch over displays a circular aperture that gives you a glimpse of the movement inside. Code41 Mecascape Submimation 1 is slated to retail from $9360.

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Splat Side Table

Jaunty and rounded, the Splat Side Table successfully plays with conventional furniture design. It’s made by Brooklyn-based designer Sophie Collé, whose practice encompasses her love of queerness, toys and the dramatic. Available in different heights and a range of colorful and classic hues, the side table stuns on its own or can be stacked alongside others for whimsical combinations.

This Porsche inspired speedboat is an amphibious 911 for automotive collectors

The Porsche 911 has stamped its authority on the roads all these years with the unique design and power to keep fans interested. So, what more could that Porsche 911 cabriolet be? A speedboat riding the waters in that sublime Porsche style, perhaps!

This Amphibious 911 is a Craig Craft 168 Boss up and nicknamed the Porsche Boat. The speedboat is up on Bring A Trailer for auction and given its appeal, the ride could go for a high price tag.

Designer: Bring A Trailer 

You could call this a speedboat with Porsche skin as everything is not related to the iconic car in any way. That’s because it is powered by a GM-sourced 4.3-liter V6 engine, and hooked to a Berkley jet drive unit (with hydraulically-actuated reverse bucket) capable of forward and reverse propulsion. The twin Bosch round headlights are raised above the bow and elements like the mirrors, windscreen and curvaceous lines replicate the brand’s appeal. The badging and logos on the outside and inside also instill faith in its Porsche origin.

The fiberglass hull is clad in black and yellow color for a classic German automotive influence, and is well complimented by the matching interior. On the inside, this four-seater speedboat gets a premium stereo system, ski pylon, bucket seats and front storage for stashing up your essentials on a long water drive. That 80 mph speedometer, tachometer and gauges further add the element of nostalgia. Without a semblance of doubt, fat-pocketed buyers who already own the black 964 or 993-generation 911 cabriolet will want to get this home.

According to the listing the boat was stored for over 27 years, and last year got a V6 engine replacement. The seller also claims the Porsche Boat has been only used for cruising for around three hours. That includes the run time when it was with the previous owner. So, practically speaking, this speedboat is as good as new in that sense. At the time of writing, the bid has reached up to $21,500, and it’ll be interesting to see how much more it finally auctions for.

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This simplified cooking curifier absorbs oil fumes for easy desktop cooking

Not all apartments or condominium units have proper ventilation, especially in the kitchen (if there’s a kitchen at all). So during the pandemic when a lot of people were stuck in their places and were cooking inside these spaces, the air, smell, and cleaning all of that became a problem. There are now a lot of devices and gadgets that try to solve this issue for desktop cooking since a lot of people are still choosing to cook for themselves rather than eat out or have food delivered.

Designers: Hong-Ta Shen, Yan-Ton Chen, Tsung-Yu Wu & Yu-Ting Chang

The Kokãir Cooking Curifier is a device that you use with your desktop cookers if the room you’re cooking in doesn’t have proper ventilation. It is able to absorb the fumes when you’re cooking with oil. There is an internal fan cyclone that uses centrifugal force to collect the oil into a cup underneath for easy disposal and cleaning later on. The oil fumes go through the HEPA filter for cleaning. This will be a huge help especially when you cook a lot in your small space.

The cooking curifier actually looks like a smart speaker if you didn’t know what it was at first glance. It’s small enough that it will not crowd your desktop cooker whether you place it on the side or above the cooker, depending on where you have space or where you need it to absorb the oil fumes. The controls seem to be easy enough to manage, with the power button and the plus and minus buttons beside each other on top of the device.

While there are several air purifiers specifically made from the kitchen, most of them are pretty big and may not be perfect for desktop cooking. Some will use just a “regular” air purifier so this product concept may be more useful for cooking purposes.

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TikTok’s favorite levitating moon lamp gets a rather vibrant galaxy-inspired makeover

James Webb called, they want their colorful floating nebulas back.

Meet the Gingko Smart Galaxy Lamp, a vibrant take on their popular floating moon lamp that took TikTok by storm last year. Designed to look like an alien planet of sorts, the Smart Galaxy Lamp is a levitating ambient light with a rather vivid color scheme combined with a mottled, cratered planet-like surface. Switch it on and it both literally and metaphorically brightens a space with its awe-striking colors and fascinating levitating ability!

Designer: Paul Sun of Gingko Design

Click Here to Buy Now: $169.15 $199 (15% off with coupon code “YANKO-SGL”). Hurry, deal ends on Sept 2nd.

The Smart Galaxy Lamp is a visual upgrade to UK-based Gingko’s pretty popular levitating moon lamp, and is for people who want their levitating light with a splash of color. Styled like a kind of planet you’d probably see in a galaxy far far away, this planet comes 3D printed from PLA filament, complete with a textured surface and a colorful allure you’d expect from the kind of gases, particles and topography this so-called alien planet has. The mini planet hovers above its wooden base using magnetic levitation, and rotates on its imaginary axis ever so gently, creating a warm, inviting ambiance in any room.

This imaginary otherworldly planet measures 140mm or 5.5 inches in diameter, with the base being a 120mm x 120mm square block of black wood. A strong rare-earth magnet inside the base allows the planet to float, and LED lights within the planet receive energy through the base through a wireless medium.

You’ve got 3 light temperatures to choose from – warm white (3500k) and white (5000k), and a special yellow warm (2700k), depending entirely on what vibe you’re looking for. Each Smart Moon Lamp comes with its base and a 12V- 1A AD adapter to power the entire experience. Plus, Gingko offers a cool 2-year warranty that should quite literally feel ‘out of this world!’

Click Here to Buy Now: $169.15 $199 (15% off with coupon code “YANKO-SGL”). Hurry, deal ends on Sept 2nd.

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