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RESEARCH
General
Arts
INDUSTRIAL
DESIGN
It's a bike, it's a scooter -- and
it's an award-winner for student designer
Melissa
Mitchell, Arts Editor
(217) 333-5491; melissa@uiuc.edu
6/1/02
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| Ahn
Sang-Gyeun and the prototype of his award-winning bicycle-scooter
hybrid, Freewill. |
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
Look, there
by the side of the road ... it's a bike ... no, it's a scooter. No,
not exactly. It's Ahn Sang-Gyeun's award-winning "Freewill"
-- a bicycle-scooter hybrid that transforms itself from one people-powered
vehicle to another with a simple 90-degree rotation of the frame.
Actually, the Freewill hasn't hit the streets yet, but if all goes according
to plans, it could move from prototype to production line as early as
year's end, according to Ahn, a graduate student in industrial design
at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Ahn's design was
the grand-prize winner in the Sixth International Bicycle Design Competition,
sponsored by the Department of Industrial Technology, Ministry of Economic
Affairs of the Republic of China, and organized by the Taiwan Bicycle
Industry R&D Center.
Endorsed by the International Council of Societies of Industrial Design,
the competition received 1,131 entries from 58 countries. Earlier this
year, Ahn learned that his design was among the top 24 designs being
considered for the grand prize. Designers who advanced to that level
of the competition received an invitation to the April 11 awards ceremony
'- along with roundtrip airfare to Taiwan and hotel accommodations '-
and were informed that winners would be announced at the ceremony.
"I was very excited to learn I had won grand prize," said
Ahn, who came to the United States to study from Seoul, South Korea.
"My wife was very happy, too," he said, explaining that she
was the one who had urged him to develop a design for the competition.
Ahn said he rides a bike to class, but had never designed one before.
As a designer, "I am interested in cultural differences -- using
the same object for different purposes. In my country, the bicycle is
used mainly for transportation; here, it is used for exercise."
He said he got the idea for a "convertible" after noticing
the proliferation of foot-powered scooters on campus sidewalks and streets
the past couple of years. As a cash-strapped graduate student, "I
thought, how about designing just one model, so people could buy one
instead of two? It's too expensive to have both. So, I thought, why
not?"
The one-speed hybrid features a front T-bar construction, similar to
most scooters. When the base is flipped to function as a scooter platform,
the pedals and seat retract, and a rear wheel flips into place.
Ahn would like to have his own Freewill someday, but figures that could
take a while. If his design goes into production, the scooter-bike will
be marketed first in Southeast Asian markets, he said. If successful
there, it could be manufactured in the United States sometime down the
road.
In the meantime, Ahn converted his winning design into an even more
practical vehicle. "I took the $15,000 prize money I earned in
the competition and bought a car," he said. Following graduation
in August, he'll use it to transport himself and his wife to Alabama,
where he has accepted an appointment on the industrial design faculty
at Auburn University.
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