Jeff Chapin's blog details the process of designing a cheap, desirable latrine for use in rural Cambodia.
Wandering Jefe is the blog of Jeff Chapin. Jeff works at IDEO, and he went on sabbatical in January of this year to travel for a few months to Phnom Penh, Cambodia. There, he's working with IDE, designing a low-cost latrine for use in rural settings.
He summarizes the problem here from a series of longer reports available here. I'll summarize his summary.
Very few rural Cambodian homes have effective latrines. This problem is compounded by the fact that some NGOs have given away a very small number of very nice latrines in these rural areas. These latrines are of such quality that a standard Cambodian family could only afford one on the open market if the purchase was prioritized very highly. Such high prioritzation is rare, and so many Cambodians families end up neither purchasing cheap, functional latrines (which are not seen as desirable) nor desirable, expensive ones.
The design problem is this: "Build a desireable (sic), upgradeable latrine system that has an initial investment of 10-20USD and that can be upgraded over the years in subsequent, similar-sized investments."
Since January, Jeff has detailed some of his research and ethnography, and he's just moving into the ideation phase of the design. It's been very much worth a read so far, and promises to get even more interesting in the coming months.
These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
Paul — May 6, 2009
Gary Hustwit, director of Helvetica, has announced his second film, Objectified, a documentary about industrial design.
A production still from Objectified showcases an interview with Dieter Rams.
Gary says "...it’s about the manufactured objects we surround ourselves with, and the people who make them." And it features a pretty star-studded cast, including perennial DLB favorites Naoto Fukasawa, Jonathan Ive, and IDEO.
These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
Paul — Jul 31, 2008
In our continuing quest for design inspirado, DLB pleased to present you with some of our favorite examples of doing less to get better results. In this installment: Packaging design for food.
In a market (ha!) saturated with "zing! pow! zoom!-esque" design, London-based R Design and IDEO founder Naoto Fukasawa show us the path to cut through the noise, and create powerful, harmonious packaging design with less.
We'll let London-based R-Design speak for their design for Selfridges & Co. products: "...this colour coding of black shines on shelves that traditionally blind us with lurid rainbows. One color. One typeface. One point size. Packaging good enough to eat."
Couldn't have said it better myself.
Taking design restraint one step further, the inimitable Naoto Fukasawa never ceases to amaze with this lovely package for banana juice. It is hard to extol this design enough: Fukasawa uses a communicative surface to actually remove the need for any type or graphics whatsoever. Nirvana.
Thanks to our friends at The Dieline Package Design Blog for the heads-up.
These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
Paul — May 28, 2008