Oscar
Farinetti, the founder of Eataly, recently reversed an established
principle: “today, we must act global and think local”. The same
principle applies to Raiooo, which employs local knowledge and
materials to export worldwide a product in which technology, aesthetic
and function are design paradigms.
Conceived by MA Integrated Design students of Viana do Castelo Polytechnic, Raiooo
is a vehicle driven by reflections on the world of mobility and its
designers believe that an inclusive society must promote a new concept
of urban cycling in social groups normally excluded from it.
Promo Raiooo from Viana3D on Vimeo.
Raiooo
Project design: Ermanno Aparo, Manuel Ribeiro (coordinatori)
Design Team: Studenti del 1º anno del Master in Design del Politecnico di Viana do Castelo, 2014
The name comes from the combination of the word RAI (spokes) and OOO, which stands for the three wheels. The intention was to design a means of transport for visitors who prefer to pedal around the shops and local residents who want to move about freely. On the one hand, the search for stability and ergonomic comfort prompted the designers to opt for a three-wheel configuration.
On the other, they placed the emphasis on elegance and character; this led to a choice of materials such as wood, leather and cork, fairly uncommon materials in the cycling world but familiar in the Portuguese culture. They added to the mix aluminium, eco-friendly plastic and mechanical components typical of traditional bicycles to create a hybrid but sustainable and local product.
An example of research applied to production and a metaphor for the current industrial transition, Raiooo
is the product-sum of several different macro- and micro-production
realities. The aluminium components of the gears and seat/pedal tubing
are produced on an industrial scale but the leather bags are made by
local craftspeople; the parts in agglomerated cork and the plywood
panels forming the tricycle’s seat and frame are shaped by CNC machines
and the mudguard brackets and covering over the are made with 3D
printers in the Polytechnic’s digital fabrication lab.
The base structure of the tricycle is formed of two plywood panels
sandwiched together and bolted to the steering box and seat-pedal
tubing, both in aluminium. The casing extends to the rear-wheel axle and
this shell contains the batteries and controller; all the wires and
cables also pass through here. The two panels are then closed with
shaped strips of agglomerated cork. The front fork and elegant
curvilinear handlebars are made of thin sheets of woods such as beech,
mahogany, eucalyptus and sucupira. The rear has a block of two wheels
with a differential gear for motor traction.
The tricycle is completed with a number of accessories, including a rear basket in wood, plywood and leather and two front leather bags that fit one inside the other. The smaller one holds an emergency tool kit and the larger one can easily be detached to carry small objects.
Raiooo is the fruit of six months’ work that passed through several phases: from the design of virtual and polystyrene models to ergonomic analyses, the lab testing of materials and the design of details, leading up to the construction of a first working mock-up and, eventually, the prototype. Five Portuguese companies – including the cork supplier Amorim – and a Spanish one were involved in both the design process and the manufacture of certain parts of the tricycle.
The intention is to transfer the experimental design of Raiooo
– an eco-friendly and technological means of transport– from the
academy to companies and this will involve a new development model and
an updated concept of mobility better suited to today’s urban needs.
A group of cyclists-philosophers or mental athletes claims that when we ride a bicycle we listen to our heartbeat and savour the road, wind and exertion. They believe that pedalling unravels the thoughts that torment us and that Epicurus would have loved the bicycle as it enables us to attain happiness by chasing our demons.
from domusweb