Posts Tagged ‘Transportation’

Canstruction: Incredible Sculptures Made From Canned Food

Thursday, August 6th, 2009

aia new jersey, american institute of architects, canstruction, community food bank of new jersey, competitions, architecture competitions, exhibitions, buildings made of cans, structures made of cans, statues made of cans

Bridging the gap between good design and giving back to the community, Canstruction, the annual international design/build competition where architects, engineers, designers, and students compete to design and build gigantic structures made entirely from full cans of food, is coming to New Jersey in October!



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Contortionist Folding Bike Rolls Up Smaller Than a Wheel

Wednesday, August 5th, 2009

sustainable design, green design, transportation, contortionist, bike, folding bike, james dyson, dominic hargreaves

There’s a reason you don’t see too many people toting around folding bikes; many have small wheels that make for an uncomfortable ride, and the ones that don’t tend to be too clunky when folded up. Enter the Contortionist, a sleek folding bike that uses full-size 26 inch wheels. Designed by Dominic Hargreaves, a student at the Royal College of Art in London, the bike contains pivots in its frame and a lockable universal joint in the front fork that let it roll up to an ultra-compact size that fits within the width of its wheels!


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Bill Calls for Transportation Revolution, Obama Prefers to Wait

Sunday, August 2nd, 2009
oberstar transportation plan image An outline of the bill, hand-scribbled by Rep. Oberstar. (image via Blueprint America) America's "happy motoring" days are over; now is the time for a "transformational" transportation policy. On this point, the Obama Administration and Representative Jim Oberstar agree. However, while the Administration seems content to Read the full story on TreeHugger

Nissan Unveils the All-Electric LEAF to the World (Exclusive Photos)

Sunday, August 2nd, 2009
Nissan LEAF EV Photo
Nissan drew back the curtain today on its ambitious all-electric LEAF. Along with a small parade of international journalists, I've been in Yokohama for the past three days meeting with executives, getting technology briefings, and driving the electric platform. Although we had been given a chance to see the LEAF with our own eyes the day before, we went camera-less and all images were embargoed until this morning when, at Nissan's glimmering new super-green headquarters, the car was revealed. It was driven onstage by Nissan CEO Carlos Ghosn and other notables, including the former ...Read the full story on TreeHugger

The Solar Forest: Charging Station And Shady Spot For Electric Cars

Thursday, July 30th, 2009

by Christa Morris

The approaching age of electric vehicles presents us with a secondary, albeit significant, challenge: building accessible recharging stations with renewable energy. While we’re at it, can our parking lots be shady, please?

openforest.jpg


One solution may already have arrived. In Neville Mars’s dreamy design, appropriately dubbed the Solar Forest, large, leaf-shaped photovoltaic panels on branching “trees” will provide both shade and power-up plugs for electric cars relaxing on the parking lot underneath.

The viral spread of this design would suggest this is a novel idea. But between the years of 2005 and 2007, Envision Solar cultivated its own Solar Grove in Kyocera’s San Diego parking lot. With the same goal of shading cement parking lots while capturing solar energy, this forest came to life with large, flat and rectangular PV “trees.” The solid technology promised to repay costs of installation within five years, but the clunky array looked more like helicopter landing pads than trees. Although functional, the Solar Grove failed to draw as much attention. sfonetree.jpg

In contrast, the blog-storm in the past week has focused little on the science behind the Solar Forest, and instead has been fueled by the trees’ organically striking visual appeal. In order for companies to fork up the initial installation costs, it is crucial that solar-parking-lot solutions are not just convenient and sustainable, but attractive as well.

The final question is whether the structure truly translates into function. Like many others, I was initially concerned whether the shade of overlapping PV leaves would waste surface area. However, Mars assured Mike Chino of Inhabitat.com that the leafy canopy design was not a goal, but the best solution to maximizing shade for the cars and sunlight for the PV panels—much like the dogwood tree in my backyard, the Solar Forest’s leaves will tilt and rotate with the sun.

If the Solar Forest can be modular and economical as well as effective, it will be worldchanging. Think of how much under-utilized, sun-baked parking lot space exists alongside a single strip mall! In any event, the excitement this idea has generated brings attention to the vital role of biomimicry in sustainable design, as well as the key goal of transforming the unsustainable (and downright ugly) spaces of the world into useful, beautiful, and bright green landscapes.

solarforest.jpg


Learn more about, biomimicry, solar projects and EVs in the worldchanging archives:
Biomimicry 101
Solar Carbon Payback
Project Get Ready Aims to Create Electric Vehicle Revolution

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(Posted by WorldChanging Team in Transportation at 2:44 PM)

Brooklyn Eco-Film Geeks Build Awesome Truck Farm Proving You Really Can Garden Anywhere

Thursday, July 30th, 2009
truck farm photo I know what you're thinking: A garden on wheels, what's the deal? Having met the brains behind the "truck farm" in question myself, I'd urge--don't let this weird yet somehow idiosyncratically charming documentary-making CSA truck throw your garden/truck schema off kilter, instead embrace its sheer visceral awesomeness. ...Read the full story on TreeHugger

Making the Most of Your Clunker Cash

Thursday, July 30th, 2009
rusty rancho photo Rusty Chrysler. Image credit:AllPar You’ve probably seen the onslaught of car dealership TV commercials promising you endless benefits from the new government Cash for Clunkers program (or Car Allowance Rebate System – CARS). The dealers have set out all their signs and wacky personalities and inflatable monkeys – all to get you to trade in your clunker for a better car right now. I’ve spent some time discussing CARS with Ann Mesnikoff, head of the Sierra Club’s Green Transportation Campaign, and she’s really got this progr...Read the full story on TreeHugger

Toyota Might Not Make a Yaris-Based Hybrid After All… For Now

Thursday, July 30th, 2009
toyota yaris based hybrid hsd photo Photo: Toyota Broken Dreams Like many of our commenters, I was very excited when Reuters reported that Toyota was readying a Yaris-based low-cost hybrid. Finally a full hybrid that is also small and inexpensive! But UK-based Autocar is reporting that a source at Toyota denies this (more details below...Read the full story on TreeHugger

Algae Oil Running in Big Rigs, With Small Emissions

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

Pond scum just got an upgrade.

SunEco Energy is working with J.B. Hunt Transport Services, a leading transportation company, to run trucks on biodiesel mixed with algae oil.

SunEco says a blend of 20 percent and 50 percent algae oil with petroleum biodiesel has cut particulate emissions by 82 percent.

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From Treasury to Electric Cars: Hank Paulson Invests in Coda Automotive, Joins Advisory Board

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009
coda automotive electric car photo Image: Coda Do I Smell a Future Bailout? Coda Automotive is very ambitious: It plans to launch a $45,000 (before the $7,500 tax credit) Chinese-built electric sedan next year and claims that it will be the most affordable electric car at the time. But to get there it needs cash, which is why it just raised $24 million in a series B round of financing, with one of the main investors being the (in)famous former treasury secretary Henry "Hank" Paulson. Mr. Paulson also joined Coda's advisory board. Aside from his cash, what will he contribute to the company?...Read the full story on TreeHugger