James Dyson Award: eco-Bicycle
Mirco Pasqualini
Focused on Interactive Advertising, Digital UX, TV2.0 - IpTV UI, Branding & Design, Web Strategies, Web Technologies & Architecture, Application UX & Interface @ New York - Linkedin Profile

Developed by a small team of students at the SENSEable City Lab, MIT, The Copenhagen Wheel is a new emblem for sustainable urban mobility that improves the cycling experience, offers a cost-effective transportation alternative to cars and fosters a community of cyclists in cities.

Smart, responsive and elegant, it transforms existing bicycles quickly into hybrid electric-bikes with regeneration and real-time sensing capabilities. Its sleek red hub not only contains a motor, batteries and an internal gear system – helping cyclists overcome hilly terrains and long distances – but also includes environmental and location sensors that provide data for cycling-related mobile applications. Cyclists can use this data to plan healthier bike routes, to achieve their exercise goals or to create new connections with other cyclists. Through sharing their data with friends or their city, they are also contributing to a larger pool of information from which the whole community can benefit.

Inspiration
Visitors to Copenhagen are always struck by one thing: the number of people who cycle. However, although this city has the infrastructure and policies in place, the percentage of people who ride daily (36%) has remained virtually constant for the last ten years. Inspired by creating more livable and sustainable cities, our team began working with the municipality of Copenhagen in 2008 to investigate how small amounts of technology could improve the cycling experience and how the four main obstacles to getting people on bikes – distance, topography, infrastructure and safety – could be overcome. What has resulted is the Copenhagen Wheel: a new type of electric smart-bike which utilizes a technical solution for overcoming distance and topography (a motor and batteries with regeneration capabilities that can provide riders with a boost when needed) and a real-time data network and series of applications to support infrastructure creation and foster a sense of safety.

To know more visit http://www.jamesdysonaward.org/

Mirco Pasqualini
Mirco Pasqualini
Published June 26, 2011
Category: Cheap News, Devices, Interaction

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