Crime Bot lifejacket uses waste plastic bottles to prevent drownings - Children's lives worth MAYBE about six leaky 50oz coke bottles

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People in flood-prone low-income countries can use discarded plastic bottles as flotation devices with the Bot lifejacket, invented by recent design graduate Ewan Morrell.

Morrell set out to create a design in response to rising sea levels for his final-year project at Northumbria University. After he read that more than 19,000 children drown annually in Bangladesh – an average of 53 a day, and worse during the flooding season – Bot began to take shape.

"I started researching into the effects of rising sea levels, flash floods and flooding in general as where I live in the UK suffers from quite severe flooding," Morrell told Dezeen.
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The Bot lifejacket is designed to be filled with empty plastic bottles
"That's when I saw how severe the problem was in countries like Bangladesh and other Asian countries and from there, I felt like I would be able to do something that could provide aid," he continued.

A key part of Morrell's design is that it involves the large fast fashion companies that manufacture in the region. They would make and distribute the Bot lifejackets on a charitable basis, using their fabric waste.


According to Morrell, these companies currently tend to burn their waste material, to the detriment of the environment, or to sell it cheaply for insulation. By comparison, Bot represents a high-value solution that could cost the companies minimally.
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There are secured pockets at the front and back for the bottles
"The fashion industry in Bangladesh houses 7,000 factories and employs four million workers," said Morrell. "They take so much from the country and pay the people that they hire an unfair wage."

"These companies also currently give very little back to the people of the country when problems, in some cases, could be solved with very simple solutions."

The designer spoke to representatives from clothing companies such as Primark as part of the project and said they have indicated that such a charitable scheme could be viable for them.

For buoyancy, Morrell made use of another resource that is abundant in the region – plastic waste. Four empty plastic bottles need to be inserted into the vest to turn Bot into an effective flotation device.

This design keeps costs down, means almost any fabric can be used, and makes Bot compact for easy distribution. The vest on its own rolls up to a size smaller than a 500-millimetre bottle, so Morrell suggests it could be packaged within a multipack of bottles for distribution.

Bot can be made using a single sewing machine and six patterns, and is secured using a low-cost buckle. This could also be further simplified with two straps or a belt that can be tied in a knot instead.
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The lifejacket is designed for flood-prone low-income countries with a high rate of drownings
Morrell, who was in Northumbria University's Design for Industry bachelor programme, tested the product in Kenya, England and India.

Other designs for disaster relief have come from creative agency Red Antler, which created emergency kits called Judy, and design studio Nendo, whose back-up portable battery can be charged by swinging it around.
 
>Invented by recent design grad

Sure looks like the quality you can expect from a UK university. I get it's supposed to be simple in order to have a cheap way for exploitative fashion companies to act like they care by manufacturing them, but it is literally just a life jacket with no decent flotation, and instead four pockets that probably won't be built to any sort of spec and fail constantly. The little tab that secures the bottles will no doubt fail all the time. I also love how they act like this will somehow solve a pollution issue, when this will just allow these companies to offload plastic fiber by way of these jackets, and there will end up being far too many of them causing yet another issue. Not that I see this program surviving more than a few years. Any of these miraculous cheap inventions are powered either by grifts or wishful thinking.
 
>Invented by recent design grad

Sure looks like the quality you can expect from a UK university. I get it's supposed to be simple in order to have a cheap way for exploitative fashion companies to act like they care by manufacturing them, but it is literally just a life jacket with no decent flotation, and instead four pockets that probably won't be built to any sort of spec and fail constantly. The little tab that secures the bottles will no doubt fail all the time. I also love how they act like this will somehow solve a pollution issue, when this will just allow these companies to offload plastic fiber by way of these jackets, and there will end up being far too many of them causing yet another issue. Not that I see this program surviving more than a few years. Any of these miraculous cheap inventions are powered either by grifts or wishful thinking.
They probably make great magazine pouches for child soldiers, though.
 
So who wants to bet this'll get used as a cheap way to prevent migrants from drowning when they sink their own boats to force the coast guard to pick them up in europe
It would be a very unreliable way to do so. Not all of the images from the article were grabbed here. For one, this is how tiny this piece of crap is without bottles.
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(The second image on here also shows the size difference, missed that)

They'll still give refugees the expensive stuff. Notice how they don't mention anyone else that's a part of this guy's project. It's all "Morell did" "Morell tested" I wouldn't even trust he's actually convinced the fashion companies to do anything.
 
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Reactions: WonderWino
Couldn't you produce an actual life jacket for the price of that fancy water bottle holder vest?
Almost certainly. $10 will get you a Type II PFD that will assuredly float you and has been tested by the coast guard to ensure it is unlikely to also drown you. I can see about half a dozen ways the "Bot" would rapidly become an encumbrance and not beneficial in the slightest. If you want to help these people figure out how to re-spin the scraps into some cord to tie shit together. There's probably a million more useful things to do before you make a bootleg PFD but at least you could if you wanted to.
 
Sure looks like the quality you can expect from a UK university. I get it's supposed to be simple in order to have a cheap way for exploitative fashion companies to act like they care by manufacturing them, but it is literally just a life jacket with no decent flotation, and instead four pockets that probably won't be built to any sort of spec and fail constantly. The little tab that secures the bottles will no doubt fail all the time. I also love how they act like this will somehow solve a pollution issue, when this will just allow these companies to offload plastic fiber by way of these jackets, and there will end up being far too many of them causing yet another issue. Not that I see this program surviving more than a few years. Any of these miraculous cheap inventions are powered either by grifts or wishful thinking.
nah, those look like they work. the real question is, why do they need western help to "invent" something like this? just tape the bottles to your chest like a real redneck...
 
So we get a drowning victim AND four more bottles to go toward the gigantic fucking plastic-fueled environmental disaster.
The best part will be when animals start choking on the plastic waste while trying to eat the corpses. Eventually it will just turn into a floating mass of plastic and various species of corpse, then the environmentalists can complain and we can shut down another pipeline so Europeans continue to freeze to death, because fuck Europe.
 
nah, those look like they work. the real question is, why do they need western help to "invent" something like this? just tape the bottles to your chest like a real redneck...
They look like they could work - in the highest quality prototypes that this guy was willing to showcase. Seeing as the plan is to shove the manufacturing off to companies that could give less of a shit, but want to appear humanitarian, they will fail. But that will be unlikely to ever be covered.
 
They look like they could work - in the highest quality prototypes that this guy was willing to showcase. Seeing as the plan is to shove the manufacturing off to companies that could give less of a shit, but want to appear humanitarian, they will fail. But that will be unlikely to ever be covered.
well he is some kind of retard and has 2 left hands or something like that. but you can built a very good lifejacked with a roll of tape, 2 pieces of wood and 8 plastic bottles.
Its not rocketscience, the problem is that a tard tries to teach stoneage niggers how not to drown...
 
Wait what the fucking fuck.

I was already wondering how the bottles were supposed to be secured up top. It's literally just straps which I guess is better than velcro..

But this stupid motherfucker could have just had the top of the pockets closed off and had straps fastening at the bottom, obviating the obvious failure mode where water bottles rocket out the top and rockfish rocket to the bottom of the river.
 
I'd like to see one actually get made with local tools and local materials.

  • I've seen really thin and crinkley bottles in America, I wonder how sturdy bottles in other countries.
  • The back of that pictured best looks like an awfully large swathe of new fabric. It might not be enough to make something fashionable for humans, but surely it could be used for say... Doll's clothes.
  • Are sewing machines easy to access in the target regions? Without working at a factory I mean.
  • And good quality thread. I'm no expert tailor but I know some needles and threads are more heavy duty than others and presumably you only want the best for these purposes

If you want to help these people figure out how to re-spin the scraps into some cord to tie shit together.
I don't know about the fabric scraps, but there's a kick starter for turning the bottles into cord. Unfortunately it's for the low low price of $100 USD MSRP.
 
I'd like to see one actually get made with local tools and local materials.

  • I've seen really thin and crinkley bottles in America, I wonder how sturdy bottles in other countries.
  • The back of that pictured best looks like an awfully large swathe of new fabric. It might not be enough to make something fashionable for humans, but surely it could be used for say... Doll's clothes.
  • Are sewing machines easy to access in the target regions? Without working at a factory I mean.
  • And good quality thread. I'm no expert tailor but I know some needles and threads are more heavy duty than others and presumably you only want the best for these purposes


I don't know about the fabric scraps, but there's a kick starter for turning the bottles into cord. Unfortunately it's for the low low price of $100 USD MSRP.
To be fair, as far as $100 tools to hold a $0.05 blade go, that's probably one of the nicer ones I've ever seen. Projects like this are a masturbatory exercise from stem to stern.
 
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