An industrial designer has suggested that old technologies – such as wind-up shavers, pedal-powered tools and manual lawn mowers – could make a comeback in order to make society more sustainable.
In his new book, Re-Imagining Alternative Technology, Brook S Kennedy envisions an innovative revival of underused and abandoned ideas, alongside new creative ones, to tackle global challenges such as climate change, natural resource management and pollution.
‘With the global challenge of climate change, managing finite natural resources and pollution, everyone is focused on the biggest and most energy-hungry technologies. I’m suggesting that smaller, cumulative changes in our everyday lives could make a huge difference,’ Kennedy explained. ‘Rather than starting from scratch and face looking at an impossible task, I am suggesting design could focus on “modernising” technology we already know works. With some updating and refinement to aesthetics, performance and usability, these technologies could easily be brought back into re-use.’
Kennedy is an award-winning industrial designer and associate professor in the School of Architecture, Arts and Design at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. His research focuses on sustainable design and materials, appropriate technology and biodesign.
Some of the nostalgic technologies he believes could make a valuable comeback include passive wind-harnessing cooling systems, human-assisted powered tools and appliances, and reusable, repairable durable goods that have become disposable in today’s context.
He also makes the case for ‘reimagining’ other domestic appliances, including examples such as manual carpet-sweepers and water collectors, as well as advocating for a return to reusable, durable products such as razors that you can sharpen and shoes you can re-sole and repair.
As well as looking to the past for inspiration, Kennedy also looks at warmer climates to see if we can learn from other cultures. ‘If many of these so-called forgotten alternative technologies are still common and in use mainly outside the USA, why can’t we make some changes and apply them here?’ he asked.
He suggests that Persian wind catchers could be used as a passive, low-energy house-cooling technique, and fog-catchers like those used in Chile and Morocco could be adapted for large-scale water-harvesting.
For public transport, Kennedy suggests the popular bicycle highways of the 1900s, as seen in Pasadena, could make a comeback, as well as water-powered funicular trains and ferries.
‘There are so many more examples in transportation, architecture and product design,’ he said. ‘Designers could help bring contemporary relevance to passive and ecological technologies, from awnings, manual carpet sweepers and more, which would have a cumulative effect on energy consumption and waste across the built environment.’