The Crown Plaza Hotel in Copenhagen , Denmark ,
is offering a free meal to any guest who is able to produce electricity for the
hotel on an exercise bike attached to a generator. Guests will have to produce
at least 10 watt hours of electricity - roughly 15 minutes of cycling for
someone of average fitness. They will then be given meal vouchers worth $36 (26
euros).
Disco pub gets electricity produced by people
dancing at specially modified dance floor
All the flashing strobes and pounding speakers
at the dance club are massive consumers of electrical power. So Bar Surya, in
London, re-outfitted its floor with springs that, when compressed by dancers,
could produce electrical current that would be stored in batteries and used to
offset some of the club's electrical burden. The club's owner, Andrew
Charalambous, said the dance floor can now power 60 percent of the club's
energy needs.
University constructs a green roof as a
gathering place
Green design is an enormously popular trend in
modern architecture, just take a look at this amazing green roof at the School
of Art , Design and Media at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore .
This 5-story facility sweeps a wooded corner of the campus with an organic,
vegetated form that blends landscape and structure, nature and high-tech and
symbolizes the creativity it houses. The roofs serve as informal gathering
spaces challenging linear ideas and stirring perception. The roofs create open
space, insulate the building, cool the surrounding air and harvest rainwater
for landscaping irrigation. Planted grasses mix with native greenery to
colonize the building and bond it to the setting.
Designer creates a sink that uses wasted water
to grow a plant
Made of polished stained concrete, the Zen
Garden Sink has a channel that allows the water used while washing your hands
to water a plant. Created by young Montreal designer Jean-Michel Gauvreau the
sink comes in single or double basin model. The sink is designed in a way you
won't get your plants all soapy. There is a main drain at the bottom of the
basin for soapy grime. Your little plant friend just gets whatever you choose
to dole out.
Designer creates a shower that forces you to
leave when you've wasted too much water
20% of our total domestic energy usage is from hot
water for showering and bathing. That's over 6 times the energy usage of
domestic lighting. So designer Tommaso Colia came up with his eco-friendly
shower design that will force you to get out when you take too long and waste
much water. The eco_drop shower features beautiful concentric circles that will
rise to force you to stop showering when you take too long, and accordingly
save water.
Designer creates light-switch that changes
colors to teach children how to save energy
Teaching the importance of energy conservation
is the goal of this design from Tim Holley. He calls it Tio, and it's a
ghost-shaped light switch that gives kids a visual reminder of how much energy
they've used by leaving lights on. Tio starts out green and smiling. If the light
is left on for more than four hours, he turns yellow and looks shocked. And if
you dare to leave that light on for more than eight hours, sweet little Tio
turns into a raging red hulk, complete with frowny mouth and angry eyes. But he
won't just visually remind your kids about their energy habits; information
from the light switch is sent to Tio's computer program so the entire family
can see how they're doing. In a brilliant piece of visual positive
reinforcement, Holley's program lets kids grow a “virtual tree†which gets
bigger and healthier the more energy they save.
Environmental company creates a staple-free
stapler to avoid staple pollution
Staples are supposed to be so bad to the
environment that a company decided to create a staple-free stapler. This
product promises to make collation eco-friendly. Instead of using those thin
metal planet-killers, the staple-free stapler "cuts out tiny strips of
paper and uses the strips to stitch up to five pieces of paper together."
You can even order them customized with your corporate logo so you can, you
know, brag about what your company is doing to stop the staple epidemic.
Company creates a desktop printer that doesn't
use ink nor paper
Who says printers only use paper to print
documents? It's time for you to meet the PrePeat Printer then. Different from
conventional printers, PrePeat adopts a thermal head to print on specially-made
plastic sheets. These plastic sheets are not merely water-proof, but could be
easily erased, just feed the sheets through the printer again, and a different
temperature will erase everything or just write over it. Also claimed by the
manufacturer, such one sheet could be used up to 1,000 times so that you'll
reduce your expenses on paper for sure.
Designer creates an iPhone charger powered by a
hand grip
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