NEWS
For the sixth year running, students from Umeå Institute of Design have collaborated with Electrolux Group to develop product ideas for the home of the future. Their mission? To envision household appliances where robots to do the heavy lifting.
The students, from the MFA Programme in Advanced Product Design, embarked on a creative journey where they were challenged to completely re-imagine the design landscape for appliances. In this bold new world, the robot becomes the primary force behind tasks like cleaning, cooking, dishwashing, and laundry, with humans serving as secondary participants.
“The level of storytelling by the students is pushing us to do better,” says Martin Alexanderson, Senior Design Manager, CX Product Line Wellbeing. “This partnership is not all about us sharing our experience and expertise – we are learning a lot from these talented students as we look into the future together.”
The final concepts encompass an array of innovations designed to meet the needs of a wide-ranging consumer base. From addressing the challenges faced by the visually impaired to accommodating the lifestyle of an elderly couple with limited mobility, as well as providing solutions for the elderly living alone. In collaboration with their partners at Electrolux, students pushed the boundaries of appliance design in a new world where robots are our trusted domestic companions.
“As we look to the future, we know that robots will play a greater role in all our lives. And that provides a fascinating opportunity to explore how we could design home appliances for personal robots to use to help consumers who face challenges,” says Thomas Johansson, Design Director, Dish Care, Business Area Europe, Electrolux Group. “We were pleased that the students’ ideas solved challenges faced by their target user but were also solutions that a wide variety of consumers would appreciate and even enjoy.”
Previous themes from the UID-Electrolux collaboration included designs for: single people living in small spaces (2022), multi-generational homes (2021), and the “new normal ” post-COVID world (2020).
The student design concepts
Tray flex assist is a dishwashing solution for a robot assisting a blind consumer. The robot carries dishes, glassware and cutlery to and from the table in trays with a handle at the top.
ImageUmeå Institute of Design
The trays – in high-contrast colors for those with partial sight – can be placed directly into the drawer-style dishwasher. The dishwasher, which is voice-operated, features an opening for the robot to place its hand to be washed by a silicone brush.
Senti envisions the robot vacuuming difficult-to-reach areas for the elderly, who would clean together with the robot in their home as a way of staying active.
ImageUmeå Institute of Design
The robot lifts the vacuum and attachments from a docking station, and cleans according to instructions via the app. The robot returns the vacuum to its docking station, emptying the dust and cleaning the attachments.
Atmos aims to reduce the dangers and ease the process of cooking using a robot assisting a blind consumer. The team designed a cooktop with a set of holes in the top to release steam or heat – but only when one of the custom pots is placed above it.
ImageUmeå Institute of Design
Steaming and airfrying are possible on the cooktop. The rectangular pots feature four high-contrast colors as well as tactile markings. The robot also delivers them to the table and back again. The consumer can operate everything via voice commands.
Autocare is a compact laundry solution allowing a robot to help an older person living alone. The team designed a laundry basket with compartments and wheels, which the robot pulls over to the washing machine, embedded in the kitchen furniture at (human) waist height.
ImageUmeå Institute of Design
The drum pops out of the wall, and the robot places the clothing items in the top. The drum pops back in and displays the time remaining in large numbers glowing on its front. When the cycle finishes, the drum pops out, a drawer underneath opens, and the laundry drops out into the drawer. The robot can help take clothes to be hung to dry.