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Bicycle

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Has the wheel been reinvented into a square?

Not really, but it is quite an engineering feat, to create a bicycle that can still pedal, using square, upright ‘wheels’.

EngineerΒ Sergii Gordieiev is the mad man behind this design, and he shows how the process of building a square wheel works.

Indeed, closer inspection shows that the square frame was made into treads, almost like those of a tank, but in bicycle form.

Check out the video below. Via LaughingSquid:

“Please meet almost normal bicycle but with one modification – square wheels! This concept is fully working and you can ride and make turns. Creating and installing square wheels on bicycle has been one of the most craziest projects we’ve ever built.”


-Sergii Gordieviev

 

Fuoripista002
Adriano Design has a striking new stationary bicycle, and it’s like nothing else we’ve ever seen. Unveiled for Milan’s Design Week, this acrylic and wood design would look just as good in a museum as in your home gym. Called the Fuoripista, it features a Brooks saddle and iPad integration, and gives this bike both a classic and futuristic look, all at once. Β No word on pricing, but judging from the looks, it’s not going to be cheap.

Fuoripista003Fuoripista004Fuoripista006

P-Cycles_914x627_B_1024x1024

We’re big fans of Pop Chart Lab, and their latest info graphic/poster is all about Bicycles. Β From the strangest and earliest Draisienne to the Avatar 2000, this poster is a beauty, and a must-have for any bike enthusiast. $27, from their website.

P-Cycles_914x627_B_f35f25e9-7ecd-48ae-9147-cee53fca540b_1024x1024 Screen Shot 2013-09-08 at 12.14.15 PM Screen Shot 2013-09-08 at 12.13.59 PM

Hot on the heels of a story of a cardboard bike comes something a little more high tech, but similarly ingenious. Just two blocks from my office is a bicycle in a front window that won the 2011 Oregon Manifest award. The bicycle in question is called the Faraday, and it is a collaboration between IDEO and Rock Lobster Cycles. After winning the audience award at the prestigious bike design show, the designers went back to work fine-tuning this 21st century cycle. With an integrated lighting system, front rack and electric assist, this bike is a beautiful example of forward-thinking design and creativity. Available Spring of 2013 for $3,500.

From Faraday: The Faraday Porteur is the ultimate electric propelled utility bicycle – the first electric bicycle built by, and for, cyclists. Dubbed “the ultimate modern utility bicycle” by the Oregon Manifest bicycle design competition, the Faraday Porteur is an elegant, powerful electric bicycle – a high-quality city bike that is comfortable and effortless to ride – with or without the electric motor.


The Faraday Porteur, now available on Kickstarter. from Faraday Bikes on Vimeo.

The Faraday Porteur, now available on Kickstarter. from Faraday Bikes on Vimeo.

Izhar Gafni is definitely someone I’d like on my side if the Apocalypse ever hits. An engineer by training, this Israeli set out to prove that a cardboard bike isn’t just technically feasible-but that it can look cool at the same time.

Via Cnet:

Gafni ran his idea by some engineers who told him to give up the dream, that it was impossible. He tried it anyway. The result is an attractive, working bike that costs as little as $9 to make. Of course, that price tag doesn’t include the immense amount of R&D time Gafni put into it.

The bike went through a tremendous amount of prototyping and tweaking. The finished piece is dipped in a coating material that gives it a shiny outer shell and protects the material from the elements. You wouldn’t know it was cardboard just by looking at it.

Here Gafni is describing the ‘origami-like’ folding that results in a surprisingly strong, durable cardboard frame.

Izhar cardboard bike project from Giora Kariv on Vimeo.

The finished bike has a modern, almost futuristic look, despite it being somewhat on the chunky side. No word on the weight of the bike, or whether we could ever expect it to be available for sale, but as a design/engineering exercise, it’s extremely impressive. And for $9 worth of raw materials, this could be a fantastic form of transportation in the developing world.

Bikes are amazing. Quiet, lightweight and fast, they are the real future of sustainable transportation. But for those of us who have our bikes crowding our small apartments, stacked alongside a wall, waiting for people to trip over them, they can sometimes get in the way. Luckily, a number of designers have tackled this problem.

Via Treehugger:

Ways To Hang Your Bike On The Wall Like A Work Of Art

by Lloyd AlterΒ  Design / Interior Design

Knife and Saw
All the blogs are agog right now over Chris Brigham’s Bike Shelf that we showed on TreeHugger a while back. It is one of a number of designs that we have seen recently that kill a couple of birds with one stone: They give you an elegant way to store your bike inside in small spaces;
They display your pride and joy artfully;
They often have additional storage for your helmet or your keys;
They just look lovely.

Available from Knife and Saw for US$ 299 in walnut.

 

Cycloc

Perhaps the granddaddy of all the simple, elegant designs is the Cycloc, designed by Andrew Lang and a hit since 2006 when Warren showed it on TreeHugger. The UK Design Council gushed: β€œThe Cycloc is a minimalistic triumph of form, function and social awareness”. It is so minimal that Lang was worried; according to the Guardian:

Despite citing his creative vision as one that celebrates design simplicity; “paring products back to their fundamental elements,” he wasn’t initially convinced the idea had legs. “At first, I thought that’s too simple, so I explored a few options before coming back to it as the most elegant.”

Being mass-produced out of plastic, is it relatively cheap at Β£59.95 at the online store and is available in America as well.

 

PedalPod
British Designer Tamasine Osher has integrated a lot of storage into her PedalPod; there is room for everything. She takes her design seriously:

The intention is to rekindle the human relationship with objects, encouraging an interaction of the visual with the tactile, expressing the simplicity of materials and honest construction – perhaps to stimulate curiosity and awaken emotions using contrasting forms and elements.

No indication of price. More at Tamasine Osher Design.

 

The Bike Valet
The Bike Valet is a new design from “Steven Tiller, Stephanie Birch and baby Bennett” of Reclamation Art + Furniture. It recently made a splash at Kickstarter, where the designers describe the problem:

We live in a small downtown apartment, and if we happen to be dense enough to leave our bikes outside they wouldn’t last more than a few days, even with the priciest lock around. We lost a beautiful, vintage, hand-made Kleine in just such a way a couple years ago. So we bring our bikes inside. Given our storage issues, this makes navigating the entry hall difficult. I personally have tripped over or snagged a pair of dress pants on an awkwardly placed bicycle more than once. The solution? The Bike Valet.

The design works on the same simple principle of leverage as the Cycloc, but the metal is, I think, a little more elegant. Available on Etsy for $75.

 

Pallet Bike Rack
Chris Meierling recycled old shipping pallets into a lovely home office and bike storage system that I showed on TreeHugger here. The pallets provide an interesting background for the bikes (as does the red paint) and can also support other types of storage. He writes (without explaining exactly how the bikes are hung):

The pallets shelves were rough and dirty. I picked 4 pallets up off a nearby street, made the shelves, and screwed them directly into my drywall with drywall anchors. Each pallet had about 10 screws across the pallet to distribute the weight; each anchor had a 40 lb hanging capacity.

More on Flickr.

 

Bike Rack Birdhouse
I must confess that I am a soft touch for humour in design; that is why my personal favourite is the Bike Rack Birdhouse from Lauren Thomas and Jennifer Karam of Dimini , seen on TreeHugger here. The designers write:

The bikerack birdhouse mounts on the wall easily and securely offering a innovative indoor storage solution for your bike and helmut. Made of Mahogany plywood and finished by hand with all natural non-toxic beeswax and linseed oil, this piece will lighten the storage load and brighten your home.

Available for about C$ 200 from Dimini

 

The Bicycle Thief by Vittorio De Sica
The Bicycle Thief by Vittorio De Sica

The Times reviewed the Bicycle Thief,Β Vittorio De Sica’s Neorealism picture from 1949 this week. I remember my uncle Mark describing his love for the movie, and how he wanted to jump up at the end and shout “let me buy you a bike, for the love of god!!” . It’s both a tragic and beautiful movie, and one that I plan on revisiting soon.

I tried in vain to post the video here, literally for over an hour. Alas, it couldn’t be done. But the screenshot will take you to the video. Thanks!