Wednesday, July 25, 2007

Making Energy Visible: The Power (and Limitations) of the Ambient Orb

Yes, the ambient orb is cool, and it does change behaviors, but what it doesn't do is give people a sense of granularity or accumulative patterns in their consumption. This means that it can't help you PLAN for conservation, leaving you with one basic reaction to a red-glowing orb: turn stuff off. This issue aside, I do like the Wattson idea from DIY Kyoto (below), since competitive conservation can shift behaviors much more effectively than preaching.

From WIRED:

Mark Martinez couldn't get Southern California Edison customers to conserve energy. As the utility's manager of program development, he had tried alerting them when it was time to dial back electricity use on a hot day — he'd fire off automated phone calls, zap text messages, send emails. No dice.

Then he saw an Ambient Orb. It's a groovy little ball that changes color in sync with incoming data — growing more purple, for example, as your email inbox fills up or as the chance of rain increases. Martinez realized he could use Orbs to signal changes in electrical rates, programming them to glow green when the grid was underused — and, thus, electricity cheaper — and red during peak hours when customers were paying more for power. He bought 120 of them, handed them out to customers, and sat back to see what would happen.

Within weeks, Orb users reduced their peak-period energy use by 40 percent. Why? Because, Martinez explains, the glowing sphere was less annoying and more persistent than a text alert. "It's nonintrusive," he says. "It has a relatively benign effect. But when you suddenly see your ball flashing red, you notice."

...

The design firm DIY Kyoto (as in Kyoto Protocol) recently began selling a device called the Wattson, which not only shows your energy usage but can also transmit the data to a Web site, letting you compare yourself with other Wattson users worldwide. In a Borg-like way, users can see how much they've collectively reduced their carbon impact.

Saturday, July 21, 2007

Go Green Contest

Treehugger, Instructables, and PopSci team up:

"We want to know how you're reducing your environmental footprint, and hopefully saving some cash in the process! Are you modding your gear, simplifying your life, or building something awesome? Tell us what you're doing to go green, and teach us how- share what you know!"

Details here.

Friday, July 20, 2007

frog's Many Shades of Green

In San Francisco on July 26th, frog design follows up on their Kyoto Treaty of Design with a panel discussion on "how an NGO, a corporation, and a set of individuals are each making it their mission to battle global climate change."

The Many Shades of Green (RSVP)
Thursday, July 26, 2007 at 6:30 PM
frog design, inc.
420 Bryant Street
San Francisco, CA, USA

Wednesday, July 18, 2007

Packaging Doubles as TV Stand

A masterful re-purposing from designer Tom Ballhatchet. And, of course, even the instructions are cool.

Monday, July 16, 2007

Wind-to-Light Installation

Thanks to Core77.com, another amazingly simple and beautiful environmental visualization from Jason Bruges studio.

"this experimental site-specific installation illustrates alternative, sustainable ways of harnessing energy that will explore the power of the wind in the city, visualising it as an ephemeral cloud of light.

the installation is custom built, using 500 mini wind turbines to generate power, which illuminates hundreds of mounted leds, creating firefly-like fields of light, with wind visually interpreted as electronic patterns across the installation.

wind around the southbank generates the power, creating a unique and thought-provoking light art piece that will delight all ages."

Similar work can be seen in previous post.

Buckminster Fuller Challenge


As if Fuller's work weren't inspiration enough, the Buckminster Fuller Institute is offering a 100K prize for "design science solutions within a broad range of human endeavor that exemplify the trimtab principle. Trimtabs demonstrate how small amounts of energy and resources precisely applied at the right time and place can produce maximum advantageous change." More here. For those at a loss, I'd like to recommend starting by building a geodesic dome...inspiration is sure to follow. The ideas are up to you.

Sunday, July 15, 2007

Smart Metering Common in US within 5 years

Thanks to Treehugger for some digging (and wise-cracking consumer perspective) on what looks to be a huge change in utility metering in the next 5 years. Aside from trust and privacy issues they raise, it will be interesting to see what kinds of technological / design innovations smart meters enable.

"ConEdison has 20,000 homes in the New York metro area participating in a demand-management program using the Sky-Tel paging infrastructure to remotely control air conditioning in homes equipped with Carrier’s ComfortChoice two-way communicating thermostats...ComEd in Chicago has one of the country’s most advanced metering programs, with 65,000 customers under remote air-conditioning control. Its Load Guard program and Web site, wattspot.com, let customers see real-time electric prices and determine the prices they want for cycling their air conditioning."

Platts has some fascinating market projections for smart meter growth. "The installation of smart meters by utilities is projected to grow rapidly in the coming years, increasing from the current penetration of 6% of households in Europe and North America to 41% in Europe and 89% in North America by 2012, research firm Datamonitor said Thursday.

love your earth graphic design competition

love your earth
create a graphic artwork to raise awareness - it's a perfect way to declare your support.

as each day goes by the problems facing the earth become more and more apparent, its quite clear that many things must change and sooner rather than later. throughout history graphic design has proved itself as one of the best means to instigate a change in society and communicate the urgency of action. we are looking for graphic artworks that will raise awareness of the environmental issues affecting our delicate planet. your graphic design should provoke a positive change in the many things that are
compromising our biosphere.

awards
- 1st prize: ¥500,000 YEN
- 2nd prize: ¥200,000 YEN
- 3 x 3rd prizes: ¥100,000 YEN (each)

shortlisted designs will be used for flags, stamps, posters etc. and exhibited throughout the city of tokyo and inside the 100% design tokyo venue, during the design week (from 31 october to 04 november, 2007). as always designboom will publish an exhaustive results report.

Friday, July 6, 2007

Reclaiming Design

Re-purposing, re-appropriating, re-using...lots of ideas seem to be floating around the design world along these lines.

Picnic Green Challenge















PICNIC’07 happens in September in Amsterdam. It’s Europe’s top event for cross-media creativity and innovation. "During PICNIC, Amsterdam becomes the capital of the international creative industry," says Bas Verhart, co-founder of PICNIC and CEO of Media Republic. "Creative leaders from different countries and industries come together to create a wonderful event experience. A passion for creativity is what binds us together". The PICNIC Green Challenge, fueled by the Postcode Lottery , is part of the fun for the first time this year.

The world needs creative people's help to embrace a greener lifestyle. Invent a carbon-reducing product or service consumers will love, and you could win €500,000.

Design Concept: Visualizing Power Usage

New concept power adapters from Gilles Belley monitor power usage and use a cool pattern of LED's to indicate when something is on standby. This is also an indicator that you have 3 minutes to press the nearby button before the power is switched off to the device--a great way to provide people with tangible and appealing means of understanding their consumption patterns, and taking action to conserve.

These are displayed as part of a larger exhibit titled So Watt! at Espace Electra in Paris. More here.




Monday, July 2, 2007

"There is no magic bullet, no single a-ha moment, no “iPod” of the green movement."

frog (a design firm housing some former Apple folk), has issued its "Kyoto Treaty of design" in the latest issue of mind. Some excerpts here:

By creating independent “green design” practices that exist adjacent to traditional industrial design, engineering, and digital media design offerings, we only marginalize the issue. To effect real change, we need to apply a green lens to all of our activities, not just some of them. Environmental intelligence needs to be fully assimilated within the entire design process, across the entire field.

frog has initiated a Kyoto Treaty of design – a call to arms for the creative community around environmental stewardship. Our initial thoughts and conversations have led to these basic tenets, but these are just a start. We ask each member of the the design community to commit to these principles and join with us in building upon them:

Collectively:

  • Helping craft a larger social equity protocol for the design community
  • Publicly ratifying that agreement, and committing to its compliance
  • Contributing to the communal knowledge base for sustainable design
  • Advancing the intellectual understanding of environmental issues from a design perspective

Individually:

  • Offering green analysis to clients, or partnering with others to conduct this analysis
  • Providing material alternatives for sustainable product development
  • Investigating manufacturing processes and rewarding green innovation
  • Minimizing environmental impact from prototyping or model-making activity
  • Publicly reporting the carbon footprint of our firms
  • Becoming educated about the environmental impact of our work

Drainpipe Hotel


Check out Inhabitat's piece on Dasparkhotel...

Rising Environmental Concern in 47-Nation Survey

From Pew Global Attitudes Project:

"The Pew survey finds a general increase in the percentage of people citing pollution and environmental problems as a top global threat. Worries have risen sharply in Latin America and Europe, as well as in Japan and India. Many people blame the United States – and to a lesser extent China – for these problems and look to Washington to do something about them."