Nichola Trudgen, a student in her fourth and final year studying for a Bachelor of Industrial Design at Massey University in Auckland, New Zealand, has developed a novel seat that could help.
Her so-called Wanderest seat, which could easily attach to existing circular or octagonal lamp posts situated around rest homes and retirement villages, has been shortlisted for this year’s 2010 James Dyson Award.
The seats themselves can be installed at a perching height and attached either directly with a bolt or clamped onto lamp posts with a steel strap. Lamp posts were chosen as a base for the seat to be installed on as they are usually placed at equal intervals along a footpath.
But the seats could also be depolyed in areas where the elderly have to wait for short periods of times, such as banks and hospitals.
The panels of the Wanderest seats themselves are injection moulded from a recycled wood plastic composite material, which is durable, cheap and rot-resistant.
英國鐵路公司如何推動凈零排放
It would be better if the trains had good coverage of the country. Large areas have no easy connection and so cars (or buses?) and lorries are still...