Dominic Hargreaves, 23, a design student at the College has had three bikes
stolen since he moved to the capital.
And Dominic’s not alone: on average 52 bikes are stolen in London every day.
Looking at this modern urban problem as a design challenge, the young
student realised that the only way to overcome the problem was to lock the
bike somewhere out of the reach of thieves. His solution? A bike lock
located 8 feet above the ground.
How does it work?
The bike cradle can be fitted to any wall and is attached to an electronic
hoist which lowers to the ground when triggered by the owner’s remote
control. The mechanism can also be programmed to read an oyster card if
located at a tube station, or indeed any public location. Once the bike is
placed into the cradle and locked in position, the user then activates the
hoist to pull the bike up onto the wall. The bike is then safely out of the
reach of thieves and their bolt cutters. Dominic believes the idea would
work on domestic dwellings such as houses or blocks of flats as well as
public spaces like railway or tube stations.
The design is one of three winners in the £15,000 iQ Design Challenge set by
Toyota to Royal College of Art students and alumni to create products that
respond to modern urban life.
The other winning entries include Yu
Type, a computer aid designed to help “two-finger” typists increase their
speed and accuracy, designed by Yusuf Muhammad and Quicksnap, by Graeme
Davies, a quick-release, hygienic ice cube tray that avoids the perennial
problem of cubes flying out when the tray is twisted. These are being shown
at an exhibition in the College galleries, alongside nine other shortlisted
innovative design ideas.
All the shortlisted ideas offer an array of design solutions for
contemporary urban living. And given the fact that art and design students
tend to be a pretty cash-strapped lot, it’s not surprising that many of the
ideas also involve significant thinking-outside-the-economic-box. Just right
for these credit-crunch times…
At the awards ceremony, Lance Scott, Chief Engineer of ED2, Toyota, praised
the designs, saying said that while all three main winners offered
outstanding solutions to everyday urban issues, the judging panel were
extremely impressed with the high level of entries across the board.
The exhibition is open to the public and continues until 22 January.