Tuesday

The ill-fated update to the Magic Bus


An idea that started way back in 1994 and sadly never went anywhere is designer Alexandre Verdier's Westfalia Verdier Solar Power vehicle. Like VW's fabled Magic Bus, Verdier hoped to build a culture around a recreational vehicle that would attract the countercultured. Features of the VSP:

- Rooftop sun-tracking solar panels

- Pneumatic suspension for better stabilization in a stationary position.

- Sliding half-door on the passenger side with integrated folding staircase

- Passenger seat that mechanically transforms into stairs to provide access to second-stage area

- Swivel cooking range enables both indoor and outdoor cooking

- In the second stage area, a dividing wall with a sliding door and multiple windows

- Multimedia computer

The design won Germany's Caravaning Design Award in 2006...and promptly dropped off the face of the Earth. Their poorly-done media kit, filled with grammar errors, typos, and bad layout, serves as a reminder that these days, having a good concept without the business acumen behind it just isn't enough.

via | Core 77

cradle-to-cradle ::.

CRADLE-TO-CRADLE
A phrase invented by Walter R. Stahel in the 1970s and popularized by William McDonough and Michael Braungart in their 2002 book of the same name. This framework seeks to create production techniques that are not just efficient but are essentially waste free. In cradle-to-cradle production all material inputs and outputs are seen either as technical or biological nutrients. Technical nutrients can be recycled or reused with no loss of quality and biological nutrients composted or consumed. By contrast cradle to grave refers to a company taking responsibility for the disposal of goods it has produced, but not necessarily putting products’ constituent components back into service.


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