2018. április 27., péntek

You can relax: A man in China did not just discover the world's largest mosquito

Crane Fly Holorusia mikado against a black background

This week, a scientist in China made news across the internet for claiming to have caught the world’s biggest mosquito with a wingspan of over 10 inches. At first the news gave us nightmares about massive mosquitoes snuffing out our citronella candles with their giant wings (or was that just me?) – but it turns out that the insect Zhoa Li caught isn’t the bloodsucking kind, but a massive crane fly instead.

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A giant mosquito with a wing span of 11.15 centimeters is shown at the Insect Museum of West China in Chengdu, capital…

Posted by China Xinhua News on Tuesday, April 24, 2018

Zhoa Li is famous for discovering the longest insect in the world – a two-foot-long megastick insect. Now he has identified a massive insect in China’s Sichuan province and declared it to be the largest mosquito ever. The specimen Li located could possibly the largest of its type on record, but it isn’t a mosquito. The insect’s scientific name is Holorusia mikado, it originated in Japan and it’s known to be the largest crane fly species in the world. The confusion seems to have arisen because some cultures refer to crane flies as “big mosquitoes.”

Related: Recycled tire traps are seven times more effective than traditional mosquito traps

Both the mosquito and the crane fly belong to the Nematocera suborder of flies, but from there the insects differ. The insect Li discovered belongs to the crane fly family (Tipulidae). “Different countries have different ways to call and define insects, but from a biological perspective, Holorusia mikado are categorized as mosquitoes,” Li told the Daily Mail. We beg to differ – any “mosquito” that doesn’t draw blood to survive isn’t going to keep us up at night. And entomologists agree.

Image via Wikimedia



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Breakthrough polymer could lead to 'infinitely' recyclable plastics

An infinitely recyclable polymer developed by Colorado State University chemists

Even though we’re aware of the environmentally damaging effects of plastic, many people still use the material because it’s long-lasting, convenient, and inexpensive – but plastic can only be recycled a few times. Four Colorado State University chemists just made a breakthrough that could allow for a plastic-like material that’s completely recyclable. They discovered a new polymer that could be infinitely recycled without intensive procedures in a laboratory or using toxic chemicals.

A green recycling logo with plastic water bottles and batteries

The infinitely recyclable polymer is strong, heat-resistant, durable, and lightweight. Its discovery marks a major step towards materials that are sustainable and waste-free, according to Colorado State University — and could compete with polluting plastic in the future.

Related: Scientists accidentally create mutant enzyme that chomps plastic for lunch

Polymers are characterized by chains of chemically bonded molecules called monomers. The university said in this new research, which builds on a chemically recyclable polymer demonstrated by the laboratory of chemistry professor Eugene Chen in 2015, a monomer can be polymerized in environmentally friendly conditions: “solvent-free, at room temperature, with just a few minutes of reaction time and only a trace amount of catalyst.” The material created in this process possesses mechanical properties “that perform very much like a plastic.”

The polymer can be recycled to its original state in what the university described as mild laboratory conditions, with a catalyst. With this breakthrough, published this week in the journal Science, the scientists envision a future with green plastics that can be “simply placed in a reactor and, in chemical parlance, de-polymerized to recover their value — not possible for today’s petroleum plastics.” This would bring the material back to its chemical starting point, so it could be utilized again and again and again. Chen said in the statement, “The polymers can be chemically recycled and reused, in principle, infinitely.”

What’s next for the team? Chen emphasized this polymer technology has solely been demonstrated at the academic laboratory scale, and more research is necessary to polish the patent-pending processes of monomer and polymer production. The chemists do have a seed grant from CSU Ventures, and Chen said, “It would be our dream to see this chemically recyclable polymer technology materialize in the marketplace.”

+ Colorado State University

+ Science

Images via Colorado State University and Depositphotos



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This charming old-fashioned caravan tiny house is 100% self sustaining

Image of old time caravan, clad in red pine

This caravan tiny house is a blast from the past. Designed and constructed by father-and-son builders Nick and Aaron Troisi (The Unknown Craftsmen), the tiny home on wheels is 100 percent self-sufficient. The wandering caravan includes a curved roof, custom woodwork and round windows. The home also has LED lighting, and it’s designed to operate completely off-grid.

Exterior of an Old Time Caravan

The home’s exterior is clad in pine panels painted red. A deck, built with raw-cut wooden logs, leads to the charming curved door. The father-son duo strategically designed a double-height roof to create a sleeping loft. The curved roof greatly enhances the tiny home’s interior and has three circular windows to bring in natural light.

wooden features in the Old Time Caravan

interior living space of old time caravan

Related: Steve Areen’s incredible DIY wagon home built with mostly recycled materials

Inside, the home resembles a hobbit-esque cavern. Lined with wooden beams, the high ceiling allowed the builders to add a quaint sleeping loft, accessible by stairs. The living area includes a curved reading nook with a small sofa, bright throw pillows and a cute window that lets in light.

reading nook in the old time caravan

view of the sleeping loft in the old time caravan

The designers incorporated a number of repurposed items into the home, including a brass bucket used as the kitchen sink. The round windows are actually repurposed theater light lenses — a feature that pays homage to the owner’s long career in the performing arts.

window open in the old time caravan

Wooden furnishings in the Old Time Caravan

Custom woodwork abounds — from the panels on the walls to the kitchen counter top, which was made from an apricot tree. The home was crafted with several types of wood cut from the owner’s own yard: pine, apricot, cherry and more. Aaron Troisi explained that the inspiration behind the wood-heavy design came from a desire to “explore the natural beauty of the organic world.”

+ The Unknown Craftsmen

Via Tiny Living

Images via The Unknown Craftsmen

image of the front door of the Old Time Caravan

Dual roof of old time caravan



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2018. április 26., csütörtök

11 inspiring designs we loved at Milan Design Week 2018

Woman touches the OLED panel inside the Sila lamp.

Designers awed and inspired attendees at this year’s Milan Design Week with fresh takes on contemporary design. From unexpected uses for wood and recycled materials to advanced lighting technology, we spotted countless incredible projects throughout the event — read on for 11 of our favorite designs from Milan Design Week 2018.

Sila lamp by Zsuzsanna Horvath

Helsinki-based Hungarian architect Zsuzsanna Horvath developed the Sila lamp – an elegant lamp that emerges from a two-dimensional plane of laser-cut birch plywood. The lamp’s structure is made with thin, delicate slivers of plywood connected by a flexible OLED panel. With its soft light and delicate shape, this lamp is a perfect addition for quiet and cozy interiors.

Bread chair by Mika Tsutai

This Bread Chair by Japanese designer Mika Tsutai is definitely an object of good taste… and good humor. Inspired by the unpredictable shape of bread, Tsutai kneaded dough — real dough, made from flour — shaped it into a chair, and baked it. The baked piece was scanned, and a digital model was created. The designer used this model to carve the same shape from wood. The unique shape reflects the random swelling of bread after baking.

Macaron seat by Kalo

Kalo created the Macaron Seat by using locally-recycled bits of rubber. Each seat is crafted by pressing a mold onto a wooden frame. This seat catches the eye using juxtapositions: smooth wooden legs contrast with a textured seat and a shining brass element along the edges of the dark rubber.

Halo lamp by Mandalaki

Designed by the Milan-based Mandalaki office, the Halo lamp is a bold combination of art and technology. Unlike most lamps, Halo does not provide neutral white illumination. Instead, it dyes space with vivid, unexpected colors. The vivid colors are produced by analog optical decomposition instead of an RGB LED. Mandalaki developed a dichroic filter to divide the pure luminous flux, or the measure of perceived light, into a vast spectrum of colors.

Sundial clock by YOY

You don’t need sunlight to use this Sundial wall clock by Tokyo-based design studio YOY. Although at first sight it seems to be a real sundial, it is only an illusion. Part of the “Fictionality” collection, this clock has a regular bar as the minute hand and a “shadow” as the hour hand, which is imprinted on the clock’s face. Surprisingly, the entire clock rotates to show the correct time.

Plug It by Studio Oberhauser

Instead of discarding thousands of small wood scraps from the industrial production of furniture, Studio Oberhauser created Plug It to exemplify the beauty of recycling. The studio suggests that stacking the comb-shaped wood chips to craft pieces of furniture can be a fun and functional game for everyone.

Sea of Plastic by EcoBirdy

EcoBirdy’s main goal is to reduce the sea of plastic. To do this, the company crafted children’s furniture entirely from recycled plastic. Plus, each item can be easily recycled again. The Antwerp-based designers have also involved children in this socially- and environmentally-responsible act by designing a storybook and a school program that teaches children about sustainable living.

D.01 bench by Davide Montanaro

Wood appears to be a stiff and rigid material, but it can be made to bend with just the right touch. Dukta is a unique incision process that can make wood into a flexible, manageable material. Davide Montanaro used this process to design the plywood D.01 bench and ensured the piece had character with its smooth shape and distinct pattern.

S-Lab clock by 4R

4R made the S-Lab clock using recycled plastic. The entire production process, from collection to melting and molding was completed in-house. The designers were able to control the color, pattern and texture of the clock. With this project, the team hopes to continue working and exploring with plastic in their designs.

Woodencap by Rootpecker

Rootpecker has made design history by creating the first wooden cap in the world. The hat is handmade in Germany and features a smooth, flexible wood surface and intricate stitching. The company aims to source only eco-friendly materials for their unique products.

Paper and Light by Denis Guidone and Tomoko Fuse

Designer Denis Guidone and origami artist Tomoko Fuse created Paper and Light to blend classic and contemporary techniques. This project includes a series of lamps made from folded washi, a traditional Japanese paper. The folded light installments illuminate the area and create playful shadows.

+ Milan Design Week

Images via Maria Novozhilova for Inhabitat



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2018. április 24., kedd

5 major ways millennials are changing office culture and design

Three people are sitting at a table, hunkered over their laptops and laughing.

Millennials are changing office culture in visible ways — you can see it in the design sensibilities of modern workplaces and the thoughtfulness of office layouts. But they are also making figurative improvements which can be a little more difficult to see at first glance. Read on to learn how this younger generation stands to change the workplace, and even the economy, as we know it.

millennials changing office culture, millennials changing office design, the modern office, work-life balance, company culture, green office space

1. Flatter company hierarchy and open offices

In both a literal and a figurative sense, millennials want to flatten the average company model. The quintessential office — cubicles at the bottom and high-powered offices at the top — presents physical and psychological barriers to workplace harmony and productivity. It doesn’t have to be that way.

Millennials seem to understand this. Employees who had direct interaction with their managers within the last six months report being up to three times more engaged than workers who had no interaction with company leaders. This engagement gap is something millennial employees are trying to change for good. From open offices to more frequent opportunities for feedback and exchanging ideas, millennials crave flatness in company structure and communication channels.

Open-door policies don’t mean anything, after all, if your CEO’s office is inaccessible. Millennials also prefer to work in an environment with great natural lighting — probably because this, too, contributes to a sense of openness and harmony.

Three people are sitting at a table, hunkered over their laptops and laughing.

2. The vanishing office

The office is vanishing — not completely or overnight, but certainly with time. It’s all about allowing employees to do their work in familiar, comfortable or novel environments.

You have probably heard of communal work spaces, which offer an interesting middle-ground between a home office and a company campus. Home offices are booming, too, thanks to millennials. In one survey, 85 percent of millennial respondents indicated they would prefer telecommuting from home or elsewhere 100 percent of the time, versus commuting to a central location.

There are plenty of ways for employers to support this new way of working — even in the smaller details like outfitting home or satellite offices. Many companies provide their employees with allowances to buy furnishings, decorations or electronics for their spaces at work, and the same concept can apply for telecommuters. A stipend for remote workers can help them create a unique work environment at home, which contributes to their productivity and makes them feel more connected to the company’s home base.

millennials changing office culture, millennials changing office design, the modern office, work-life balance, company culture, green office space

3. The rise of the side-hustle

Depending on whom you ask, this is either a gift of market-driven society or a symptom of it. Either way — and whether out of necessity or the sheer pleasure of developing new skills — millennials are encouraging a new aspect of the economy.

The side-hustle isn’t the second job that parents and grandparents knew. It might not be incredibly lucrative, but the side-hustle does provide an opportunity to develop skills, pursue interests and gain a new stream of income in addition to a full time job. According to many economists, a side-hustle economy might soon become reality.

A robotic arm.

4. Building a brighter future with technology

Many jobs that require repetitive motion or manual labor may soon be performed by machines. What comes after that? According to some experts, one solution includes taxes on the robots, which would fund a citizen stipend known as “universal basic income.” Even now, polls are finding a majority of millennials to be in favor of UBI, since it could help many underemployed college graduates find some financial security as they monetize their skills.

We’re getting ahead of the point, but the fact remains: millennials have been extremely quick to read the writing on the wall when it comes to technology and the future of the world economy. They’re envisioning a future where everyone is free to pursue talents and passions, while also learning to integrate these passions with our work responsibilities.

A large office filled with greenery, including a live plant wall.

5. Companies that benefit the world

Millennials want to spend their time working for organizations that contribute to the common good in some way. They see the challenges facing the world, and recognize the importance of the triple bottom line: social, environmental and financial sustainability. They’ve also given more of their earnings to charity than their parents’ generation.

It doesn’t stop there. When it comes to the physical environment of the workplace, green design is very much in demand. The younger generation wants to work in spaces with eco-friendly lighting, solar power and even down-to-earth structural designs using recycled materials.

The point of all this is that young people seem to see a better way of doing things when it comes to working. Step one is to make work more comfortable and relevant for the people doing it. Step two is to make it relevant to the rest of the world.

Via NBC News, OnRec, Flex Jobs, Market Watch, SF Gate, The Street and Generosity

Images via Brooke Cagle, Marc Mueller, Bruce Mars, Johnson Wang, Scott Webb, RawPixel.com and Deposit Photos



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2018. április 23., hétfő

This pop-up bar made from a recycled shipping container brings the party to you

The Honomobo team sits in chairs around the pop-up bar.

To prove the versatility of its new pop-up bar made from a recycled shipping container, Canadian prefab home builder Honomobo transported the bar up the snow-covered hills of Fortress Mountain in the Canadian Rockies. The Honomobo team spent the day on the mountain and used Honomobar to have a drink, relax, play games and enjoy breathtaking views of the snow-covered peaks.

Honomobo, Honomobar, pop-up bar, winter sports, recycled shipping containers, green architecture, overhang, modular architecture

Honomobo, Honomobar, pop-up bar, winter sports, recycled shipping containers, green architecture, overhang, modular architecture

The Honomobar is modular, easy-to-transport and can be delivered anywhere in North America. The bar serves as a pop-up temporary structure, allowing you to throw an impromptu get-together in your backyard, by the pool or high up in the mountains.

Honomobo, Honomobar, pop-up bar, winter sports, recycled shipping containers, green architecture, overhang, modular architecture

Honomobo, Honomobar, pop-up bar, winter sports, recycled shipping containers, green architecture, overhang, modular architecture

Related: Naoya Matsumoto’s Yoshi Bar is Made from Hundreds of Locally-Sourced Reeds

Each shipping container bar measures eight by 12.5 feet and features a hydraulic arm that opens the main window. Inside, a red accent panel and treated butcher block counters give the Honomobar the feel of a traditional bar. A three-foot cedar wood overhang provides protection to guests, while a black aluminum roll shutter safely locks the bar down for closing time. The design is priced at $19,764 and delivered in four to six weeks.

+ Honomobo

Via Dwell

Honomobo, Honomobar, pop-up bar, winter sports, recycled shipping containers, green architecture, overhang, modular architecture

Honomobo, Honomobar, pop-up bar, winter sports, recycled shipping containers, green architecture, overhang, modular architecture

Honomobo, Honomobar, pop-up bar, winter sports, recycled shipping containers, green architecture, overhang, modular architecture

Honomobo, Honomobar, pop-up bar, winter sports, recycled shipping containers, green architecture, overhang, modular architecture



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