Science Anna Resei designs Tele-nomadic Sheltering Unit as a moveable urban dwelling - with comfortable acrylic mattress

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Designer Anna Resei has created a conceptual design for a modular structure that can be used as a moveable shelter, which was shown as part of this year's Southern Sweden Design Days.


Design Academy Eindhoven graduate Resei made the speculative Tele-nomadic Sheltering Unit to promote a "more elastic" approach to living.
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The modular design can be assembled to create a shelter
The Tele-nomadic Sheltering Unit, which was on show as part of the Southern Sweden Design Days design festival in Malmö, Sweden, was constructed to be both durable and moveable so that future nomads can set up shelter anywhere.

Resei's design comprises a steel structure, two recycled acrylic glass plates, a patterned seat, resin bricks and a small dot matrix-screen, as well as a selection of smart textiles.
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Acryclic glass plates rest on a steel frame to form a bed
The structure can be dismantled and carried on the body, with the seat strapped to the back, the fabrics rolled-up and the bricks attached to the soles of the feet.

While the design is a concept, rather than a finished product, the moveable shelter prototype is light enough to be carried by one person.

"The steel structure is a bit heavy but it's possible," Resei said. "The whole structure is assembled and modular, so it can be rearranged and carried with you – it imagines a future where we live in the open and collectively, and only own as much as we can actually carry."
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The design can be carried
The Tele-nomadic Sheltering Unit's steel structure would always be set in the same configuration, creating a frame around which to build the shelter, but the project also includes five woven adjustable jacquard fabrics.

These were made together with specialist fabrics company EE Exclusives, and can be combined into different set-ups to protect nomadic users from the environment.
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Conductive yarn would be used to harvest electricity
Resei imagines that as part of the design, the fabrics would eventually be woven from conductive yarn to harvest electricity for the "telenomads" using the shelter.

"It's meant to have conductive yarn woven into the textiles, so that your electricity could be refilled and then you would be fully self-sufficient," she explained.

"And there's a little dot-matrix attached which would connect via the cloud, so you could find other telenomads nearby and get in touch with them, but you could also see what the weather is or [find out about] other situations," Resei added.

The project was made in collaboration with design studio Dutch Invertuals and futures consultancy The Future Laboratory.
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Anna Reise's speculative design is targeted at future nomads
A number of recent projects have featured conductive yarns, including design studio Layer's Move seating for Airbus that has a smart seat cover connected to a series of sensors that detect both the passenger's body and the conditions of their chair.

Dutch designer Hella Jongerius has argued that 3D weaving could be used to interlace building materials with photovoltaic solar yarns and create architecture that responds to the weather.
 
Yes, because when you are larping as a filthy gypsy for internet asspats, being able to charge your smartphone is paramount.
A) It's wire you stupid hipster-gypsy. When you have something conductive, even when woven, it's just wire.
B) You need something to generate the electrons we're piping through your conductive jump-rope or whatever. Imagine if we could somehow capture those pixies from the sunlight hitting the stupid roof?
C) If I'm going to be a tele-nomad I will do it in an SUV like when I worked security at a remote location. Solar>12v systems>radio, a/c, accesories, etc. I promise even with the purchase price of a clapped out Toyota it will probably be cheaper than this whole setup. If this is your engineering I am sure I would be even more horrified by your budgeting.

The more I think about these dumb bints the madder I get.
 
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