Anti-Terrorism Product Design: The Hub 20/20 Bin

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Post 9/11, terrorism changed the flying experience immediately, prompting the introduction of a host of new rules and regulations (some of dubious efficacy). Product design has been much slower to react. It’s been nearly ten years since the WTC tragedy, and today there are still some subway platforms here in New York where I can’t find a garbage can to throw rubbish into, as they’ve been removed from certain locations for fear of bomb packages being inserted into them.

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An Australian company called HUB Street Equipment has designed a trash receptacle, the 20/20 Bin, out of an unspecified clear material—we’re guessing Lexan—for installation in busy places.

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Flotspotting: "Engrain Tactile Keyboard" by Michael Roopenian

While Coroflot regulars may have noticed increased activity in terms of featured work and portfolios, we’re also pleased to announce a new Twitter feed expressly for sharing the Best of Coroflot: @bestofcoroflot. We’re currently featuring about 20-25 new works per week, so we’ll try our best not to flood your feeds!

At risk of sliding down the slippery slope of shameless self-promotion, I’ve been sifting through hundreds of thousands of work on Coroflot, our sister portfolio site, in my role as the “curator” of the Featured Work section (not an official title). As such, I come across several particularly interesting projects every week—which earn Featured status—and at least a couple that merit further recognition. Hence, Flotspotting.

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The latest piece of ID work to catch my eye is Michael Roopenian‘s “Engrain Tactile Keyboard.” It’s an interesting—if not necessarily practical—approach to the straightforward brief to improve the typing experience.

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Michael Cornelissen Updates the RP’d Pod a Porter

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We’ve posted on some cool Shapeways-produced designs by Michael Cornelissen before, and now the Utrecht-based designer has updated his Pod a Porter product from last year.

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Train Track Ikeahack

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We’ve seen tables hacked with monitors and videogames before, so it’s nice to see one that’s been modified to accommodate a more analog form of entertainment: A good ol’ fashioned train set.

An Ikeahacker named Jaxan took an Ikea Liatorp coffee table, painted and stained it, and had a plastic drawer custom-made to replace the four-sectioned one it came with. He then downloaded a train track layout program from anyrail.com, acquired the necessary components, and soon Coffeetableville was complete:

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The "21st Century Beetle" Debuts

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There’s a scene in the excellent Danish crime series Forbrydelsen in which Sarah Lund, the beleaguered homicide detective, is forced to take her elderly mother’s car. It’s a ’50s-era VW Bug. From a production-design standpoint, the choice of the car is meant to show how far the discredited protagonist has fallen from her department-issued Saab, but I was stunned at how good the VW looked, even driving through Copenhagen where it seems no car is older than five years.

I’m not the only one who’s noticed the old model still looks good, of course. On Monday, Volkswagen pulled the wraps off of their updated “21st Century Beetle,” and as PSFK’s Dave Pinter reports, the designers went back into the car’s heritage by parking a 1950s Bug in the studio for inspiration.

The new model reflects this, dialing back the bubble-like cutesiness of the Beetle we’ve been seeing for the past decade and hewing back to the flatter shape of the ’50s version.

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The interior has been updated—well, retro-updated—as well:

The 2012 Beetle gets a heritage derived passenger compartment that is more harmonious with the exterior. With the new windshield angled back further, the dashboard doesn’t extend far forward like the second generation. This immediately makes the interior look more familiar and less like a spaceship. Wrapping the doors and dash are color matched panels relating to the exterior. This again has a 50s inspired look especially with the silver trim.

The debut event was held simultaneously in Berlin, Shanghai and New York. Read more coverage here.

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Design Guessing Game: What is This an Interior of?

See if you can guess, from the few design cues in these photos, what this is an interior of: A shipping container? A luxury helicopter? A submarine?

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Urban Planners Take Note: Here’s a Fun Way to End Gridlock

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I’m not willing to risk my life to do something in an actual car that we did with Hot Wheels when we were five. And that’s why I’m not British stuntman Steve Truglia. The UK wheelman somehow convinced his insurance company it would be okay for him to drive a Fiat 500 through a loop-de-loop as part of a Shell promotion in Holland.

Viewing the video, I was surprised at how slowly the car was going and how manageable Truglia makes it all look. Which makes me think this would be an awesome way to provide stop-free Manhattan intersections. Put up a loop-de-loop for the north-south traffic, and have an elevated east-west road threading the needle.

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Volvo Unveils the Concept Universe

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Volvo’s latest design, dubbed the “Concept Universe,” marks the evolution of the storied car-maker’s refined approach to the luxury vehicle. Chief Designer Jonathan Disley and his team hope to achieve a quintessentially Scandinavian design (check out his Tumblr for some vintage car porn) with a touch of Chinese inspiration.

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BLOCK Amplifier by Mateus Glowka

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Mateus Główka produced this bad-ass old-school-meets-new-school BLOCK hi-fi amplifier as one of his class projects while studying ID at Poland’s Academy of Fine Arts. The BLOCK is made from stainless steel and aluminum, wears its tubes on its sleeve, so to speak, and features working electronics designed by collaborator Marian Kopecki.

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More Circuit-Bonded Furniture from BRC Designs: "Binary Chairs 01 & 02"

Two weeks ago, we brought you “Binary Table 01” by BRC Designs, a coffee table made out of salvaged electronics. Designer Benjamin Rollins Caldwell is back with the next two pieces in the Binary series (though we can’t promise he will continue on a binary release schedule), chairs 01 and 02 (short for BNR011000110110100001100001011010010111001001- 00110001 and BNR011000110110100001100001011010010111001001- 00110010, respectively).

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Like the table, the chairs are made from re-purposed computer equipment—veritable fossils of the Information Age—inside and out:

The Understucture for both the Binary Chair 01 and Binary Chair 02 are made from the same outdated industrial printer which was disassembled and then riveted together and bent to the proper form. The surfaces of the chairs are completely covered with a collage of motherboards, computer chips, lcd screens and hard drive disks held in place by sheet metal screws. The chair also has an interactive quality as the hard drive disks can be spun, the telephone keys and other buttons can be pressed, and the antennae raised and adjusted. The Binary Chair 01 also has a glass panel showing the inside of the chair which can be revealed by removing the back seat cushion.

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