Archive for the ‘Announcements & News’ Category


June 1st, 2010

FOR SALE: Our road show trailer, 1972 Airstream

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Now that our adventure is over, we’re hoping the spirit of the design revolution will live on… And so, our 1972 Airstream trailer, 27-feet long, with pink stripe, open plan, bedroom space, and 30 of the 40 products featured in the exhibition, is now UP FOR AUCTION on eBay! Delivery is available within the continental US. Whether you’re an Airstream aficionado or design fan, this one’s for you…

BID ON IT NOW >>>

May 25th, 2010

A big thank you to all…

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Matt, Junebug, and I would like to give a final shout-out to all the schools, students, educators, funders, designers, family members, friends, RV park owners, kind souls, crazy passers-by, Subway veggie delight sandwich makers, sturdy Ford truck parts, Airstream lovers, press entities, and massage therapists who made our trip not just possible, but a once-in-a-lifetime experience. THANK YOU for the support, in whatever form, however small or big. We’ll see you next time around (or via email or Skype, as we’re done driving for a while).

May 21st, 2010

Recap: Finale at ICFF in New York with Metropolis

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After stops at 36 schools, we added one more to the list: a grand slam finale at the enormous International Contemporary Furniture Fair (ICFF) at the Javits Center in New York. We said yes to the final event for two main reasons: 1) Metropolis Magazine would be hosting our trailer in their booth (Metropolis Books is our publisher, and we just love Metropolis in general for being such inspiring supporters for the past few years), and 2) ICFF is where this whole adventure was set in motion. In 2008, I spoke at ICFF and met Diana Murphy after my talk. She was interested in the material, and also happened to be the editor of Metropolis Books. Project H was 4 months old at the time and I had just returned from 2 of our first projects in Africa. Fastforward to August 2008, and I had signed a book contract to write Design Revolution, which then inspired the road show. We owe a lot to Diana and the whole Metropolis team, and we were thrilled to close out our adventure in style as their ICFF booth.

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With Diana Murphy, my book editor!

On May 14th we shimmied the beastly trailer into the Javits Center, which takes up about 8 square blocks and every year is filled with thousands of exhibitors and hundreds of thousands of visitors. ICFF brings about 22,000 visitors each year (we estimate bout 10,000 went through the trailer). After negotiating with the Union guys about the best way to get the trailer in place, we were good to go for a grand opening the next day, May 15th.

Over the next four days, thousands of people visited Metropolis’ booth and walked through the trailer, including David Byrne, one of our musical heroes! We only had one hiccup: the Subtle Safety ring was stolen on Sunday, but we tweeted the crime to our 70,000 files and hope the perpetrator will be shamed into sending it back or at least into never wearing it for fear of reliving the immorality of such an act :)

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My one comment about ICFF, which I have every year, is that it seems odd that such an event even still exists. Amidst all the conversations of responsible, life-improving design that minimizes waste and maximizes opportunity, ICFF (and trade shows in general) produce a ton of waste, require tons of transportation for people and goods, and use an immense amount of electricity and other resources to make it possible. While ICFF highlights great work and continues to be an event I don’t often miss, it felt like an odd juxtaposition to be talking “revolution” in such an antiquated gathering (isn’t the trade show SO 20th century?).

At the end of the four days, we shimmied the trailer OUT of the Javits, which involved a forklift, about 10 Union guys, and Junebug looking on from the truck window (see video below). We hit the road, thanked our friends for housing our temporary home, and took to the open road once again, this time headed to rural North Carolina, which we would soon call home. A special thanks to Kim, Eve, Mason, and Susan from Metropolis Magazine, and the show producers GLM for the financial and organizational support in getting us there.

Hauling the Airstream out of ICFF 2010 from Emily Pilloton on Vimeo.

April 19th, 2010

An encore appearance at ICFF in New York this May!

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While our scheduled road show adventure has now come to a close, we are THRILLED to announce an encore stop at New York’s International Contemporary Furniture Fair (ICFF), May 15-18. Metropolis Magazine (our book publisher is Metropolis Books) will be hosting our Design Revolution Road Show trailer as part of their exhibition booth at the Jacob Javits Center on the West Side during the well-known design trade show, so if you missed us on the road, come on down and check out the trailer. This will be our last stop before making the move to Bertie County, North Carolina to teach Studio H, where the Airstream will likely be renovated yet again into a mobile fabrication lab. I’ll also be doing a quick book signing on the 15th at ICFF at noon, outside the trailer.

The closing stop at ICFF with Metropolis is actually the perfect bookend to our adventure, as it began in the exact same spot two years ago. It was at Metropolis’ one-day conference event at the ICFF where I met Diana Murphy, editor of Metropolis Books, who was interested in my lecture material as potential book concept. Two months later I was signing a book contract and had 90 days to write Design Revolution: 100 Products that Empower People.

Metropolis Magazine has been one of our die-hard supporters from the beginning. Metropolis’ editor, the legendary Susan Szenasy, was in fact one of the people who inspired me to pave my own way and launch Project H in the first place (I remember a particular meeting with her over coffee). In fact, Susan wrote her Editor’s Note in this month’s issue about our road show, in support of our “Traveling Activism.” Read her piece here.

Long story short, we can’t think of a more perfect way to end our adventure. Hope to see you all in New York in May for the big finale.

Get all the details here.

March 9th, 2010

Top 10 Moments On The Road Thus Far

(This post was originally published on March 8, 2010 on Core77 – our media sponsor!)

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Now over a month into our Design Revolution Road Show adventure, I’m looking back thinking how quickly it has gone by, and how chock-full-of lessons, inspiration, frustrations, and surprises it has been. On February 1st, my Project H partner-in-crime Matthew Miller and I set out in a renovated Airstream trailer on a cross-country “design for social impact tour.” What began as a book tour for my book, Design Revolution: 100 Products that Empower People, grew into a 75-day, 8000-mile traveling exhibition of humanitarian product design, lecture and workshop series at 35 design schools and high schools all over the US.

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Photo: Stephen Heller

Our goal, aside from an awesome road trip, was to inspire the next generation of creative problem solvers, and to provide them with the tools necessary to embark on meaningful, community-driven design projects in their own back yards. We’ve had run-ins with undiscovered geniuses, total nutjobs, 4-year olds and 84-year olds, and pretty much everything in between.

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Photo: Stephen Heller

We started in San Francisco, headed down to Los Angeles, then across the South (we’re now in North Carolina). With about 15 schools under our belts and 20 left to go, here are our top 10 moments (in no particular order) of the first leg of our journey:

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10) Launch party at the Academy of Art, San Francisco
Aside from the cupcake truck, taco truck, and mobile pizza oven that filled the Academy of Art’s parking lot, over 400 friends joined us, in the rain, for the official launch of the road show on February 2nd. In attendance were hundreds of students, the guys from Public Architecture, Rob Forbes (formerly of Design Within Reach, now launching Public Bikes- he gave us a sweet Dahon for our trip!), Stephen Jenkins, lead singer of Third Eye Blind, and folks from my publisher and distributor, Metropolis Books and DAP. And of course, my parents and sisters were there, hovering over the free food carts. Read Jeannie Choe’s recap here.

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9) Hippo Roller vs. bucket races at Redwood High
The journey began at my alma mater, Redwood High School, north of San Francisco, where it took students less than 30 minutes to concoct a racetrack for the Hippo Roller water transport barrel (we set out to prove that the Hippo Roller was a far more efficient way to carry water than two 5-gallon buckets, and it won every time). Watch the full race video here.

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8 ) A new solar rig
Before leaving California, we met a guy named Matt from RayTracker, a company that installs large-scale commercial solar arrays. He also had a ton of leftover smaller modules, one of which he gave to us to power our battery that then powers our lights in the trailer. After figuring out the right configuration between inverter and converter and DC and AC, we are now totally solar and able to run our entire operation off the grid.

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7) Living the RV park life
As our Airstream lacks a bathroom and kitchen, but does have a bed “pod,” we have been spending most nights at RV parks around the country. Our dinners often consist of chinese food and drinking wine straight from the bottle, using milk crates as both seating and counter space. In Alabama, we met some characters at the Bar W RV Park outside of Auburn, and mastered the art of the game cornhole, then drank beer huddled around an oil-drum campfire that night. It’s like summer camp every day!

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6) University of Louisiana
At the risk of sounding like I’m picking favorites, our day at the University of Louisiana in Lafayette may have taken the cake. As we didn’t know much about the area or the program, we did not know what to expect from the somewhat “underdog” school. We were greeted by almost the entire department and professor Owen Foster, and spent the entire day getting to know the students in the small industrial design department, discussing their work, nixing a formal lecture for an outdoor picnic with pizza. We also showed up 2 days after Mardi Gras, and it was fascinating to hear about the local culture and how design might play a part in both the preservation and improvement of the surrounding community.

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5) Our canine “impulse buy” in Texas
My partner Matthew and I have been looking for a Project H mascot for a while now, and it just so happened that the serene backroads of Texas’ hill country turned out to be the moment of commitment. While driving towards Austin along Route 290, we were inspired by a roadside sign that read “Border Collie Pups.” Our conversation went something like this. Matt: “Hey, you want a border collie?” Emily: “Sure!” Forty-five minutes later, we continued our journey with a third passenger, six-month-old Junebug, who has made the trip that much more interesting!

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4) Project H meets Project M at PieLab
Our friends at PieLab, the brainchild of Project M-ers John Bielenberg, Brian Jones, and others, invited us to set up our Airstream exhibition in downtown Greensboro, AL in front of their shop. One of our first “Main Street” stops, Greensboro proved to be a fascinating place where our conversations ranged from design for rural development to the best way to prepare catfish. And I ate four pieces of pie in about nine hours. Read more about PieLab’s unique approach to community gathering and design for the greater good here.

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3) Debate in Alabama
We have been posting a daily “snapshot” on our blog, and this particular image enraged an elderly white woman in Alabama, who showed up at our Auburn University stop to yell at me for “irresponsible representation of her home state.” She viewed the photo as unrepresentative of housing in Alabama, which of course, is a valid statement, as it is just one home. But is in fact, a house that a family lives in, and in my mind is worth documenting as a demonstration of poverty in our own back yards. What do you think?

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2) An evening at Art Center with GOOD
On February 8th, we spent the day at Art Center in Pasadena, which culminated with a lovely evening event in one of their sound stage areas, hosted by GOOD and Art Center’s Alumni Association. Our friends Casey Caplowe and Max Schorr of GOOD, and design writer extraordinary Alissa Walker were in attendance, along with our Project H Los Angeles team leader Kim Karlsrud.

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1) Design High School
At the incredible Design High School charter school in downtown Los Angeles, we had one of our toughest audiences: about 75 low-income, at-risk youth, most of whom are struggling to stay in school. The Design High School prioritizes hands-on learning and problem solving, and our day spent with the students was incredibly rewarding as we made the case that “cool design” and “solutions for people” are not mutually exclusive. Crowd favorites included Adaptive Eyecare glasses and the Whilrwind Wheelchair. The students particularly loved the clip of my recent appearance on the Colbert Report. Our other high school stops have been just as inspiring. To use design as a lens through which youth can see a brighter future is a phenomenal experience.

Stay tuned next month for another installment of top 10 moments (we’ve got 20 schools left!). In the meantime, check out our full itinerary of upcoming stops, or follow our daily postcards and quotes from the road on our blog.

February 17th, 2010

We’ve gone solar – thanks RayTracker!

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Catchin’ rays in an RV Park in Scott, Louisiana

Last week at our stop at Art Center in Pasadena, we met a great guy named Matt Schneider who works for RayTracker, a company that installs large scale commercial solar module systems. RayTracker’s set-up is a single-axis tracking system that adjusts its angle to capture the most rays throughout the day. While the company’s installations are intended for large commercial arrays (one of their projects an installation at The North Face’s California distribution center), Matt did mention that he had several smaller modules leftover from related projects.

At the time, we had been using the Weza foot-treadle pump to power a battery (we asked exhibition visitors to help us power our lights for the night by giving the Weza a few pumps- see video here), but really wanted to go solar. The next day during our stop at the Design High School in downtown LA, Matt dropped by with a used 90-watt photovoltaic module for us to rig up.

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For now, we have the module hooked up to a 12-volt deep cycle marine battery, which charges during the day, then powers our lights at night. When we get to Bertie County in North Carolina, where we have some space and shop access, we will build out a frame to hold the panel in the back of the truck, so that we can charge the battery as we drive.

For electrical geeks, here’s how it works- the 90-watt solar module harvests energy through a solar controller that charges the 12-volt deep cycle battery. The battery is then connected to an 800-watt inverter that turns the power into a 110-volt AC charge, which plugs into the Airstream to power our lights.

Once we have a full setup in the back of the truck, we’ll post some updates. In the meantime, thanks to RayTracker for making our trek more efficient and green!

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Powering our lights at night!

February 4th, 2010

VOTE to help us win $50K to launch Studio H!!

This is semi-unrelated to our road show, but Project H is in the running for a $50,000 grant from Pepsi to launch Studio H, our design/build high school program in the poorest county in North Carolina. If you have a Facebook account, you can vote for us in 3 simple clicks – and, you can vote once per day every day in February. Please help us secure this seed money to start a program that would provide new creative opportunities to youth in need.

VOTE NOW >>>>>

More info about Studio H here.

January 23rd, 2010

3 Road Show Send-Off Parties: Come Celebrate With Us!

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PARTY #1: JANUARY 30TH – VIP PREVIEW in San Francisco
Be the first to see the exhibition, and join Project H’s founder and project manager (the two roadsters!) for an afternoon of amazingly prepared food, wine and beer, and great gift giveaways including a gift certificate from Branch Home, Timbuk2 bags, and Design Revolution goodie bags (with books and T-shirts). Hosted by Stable Cafe, tickets are $75—BUY YOUR TICKET NOW!

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PARTY #2: FEBRUARY 4 – DESIGN REVOLUTION PARKING LOT PARTY at the Academy of Art, San Francisco
Join us from 6-8pm for the road show’s official send off: street vendor food carts (can you say cupcake truck?!), friends, and refreshments aplenty. T-shirts will also be available for sale! View the invite here, or RSVP here.

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PARTY #3: FEBRUARY 8 – DESIGN REVOLUTION RECEPTION at Art Center, Pasadena
GOOD and Art Center College of Design host our Airstream exhibition for an evening of refreshments, book sales, and mingling at Art Center’s hillside campus. View the invitation here.

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January 20th, 2010

Project H’s founder Emily Pilloton on the Colbert Report!

The Colbert Report Mon – Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c
Emily Pilloton
www.colbertnation.com
Colbert Report Full Episodes Political Humor Economy

Project H’s founder (and Design Revolution Roadster) Emily Pilloton was on the Colbert Report this past Monday, January 18th. She sat down with Stephen to discuss the book Design Revolution, why humanitarian design is necessary, and measuring our success with the Triple Bottom Line. View the video above or via Colbert Report here.

December 28th, 2009

Be the FIRST to see the Exhibition! VIP Preview Jan. 30

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If you live in San Francisco and want to catch a glimpse of the Design Revolution Road Show’s exhibition before we hit the road (and before anyone else sees it!), join us on January 30th, from 3-7pm at Stable cafe for a sneak peak! We’ll be serving masterfully prepared culinary treats and organic wine, and giving away free gifts including the book Design Revolution and other great items. Tickets are $75 per person.

>>> BUY TICKETS TO THE VIP PREVIEW EVENT ONLINE <<<
More info >>>