Trust Art is a social platform that is commissioning
ten public artworks over the next year. People are invited to
become shareholders with $1, share with interested friends, and renew culture.

Worldwide TV Commercial for Bamboo Bikes

A public project led by the Bamboo Bike Project and Josh Powell

Project Proposal

Despite the critical need for bicycles in Africa, there are no local bicycle building businesses anywhere in sub-Saharan Africa. The Bamboo Bike Project (BBP) is a project by Scientists and Engineers at The Earth Institute at Columbia University, that is working with entrepreneurs and investors abroad who see economic, social, and technological potential in implementing large-scale bamboo bike production and sale in local markets.

BBP has examined the feasibility of employing native bamboo for bicycle frames, instead of the expensive and technically demanding carbon fiber material, or even the less expensive but also technically demanding aluminum or chromium-molybdenum steel that is commonly used to build bicycle frames.

BBP has determined that it is possible to source the material and supplies necessary to build a bamboo cargo bicycle in Africa, and train the local people to build the bikes. But this does not explain how they get from one good bamboo bike to their large-scale production. It is with large-scale production that the social goals of the project are achieved. Larger factories will be able to ensure quality control of the finished product, and produce job opportunities that yield economic growth. Factory-style bamboo bike production is necessary.

THE CHALLENGE
"Investors should be aware that the actual demand for these bicycles are not known and cannot be accurately estimated with a high-degree of certainty. Customer perception of the bicycles could be a significant impediment to an investor's success in the market." -KPMG Whitepaper on Bamboo Bikes

THE ART
Currently, BBP is focusing on facilitating factory-scale production in the Millennium Cities of Kumasi, Ghana and Kisumu, Keyna. To support those projects, Trust Art has commissioned video artist Josh Powell to create a TV commercial campaign to strengthen demand for bamboo bikes, support the launch of the two factories, and stimulate the bamboo bicycle building industry in those areas (and in other developing countries). The video will be created in a non-linguistic style, imagining what it means if all the world rode around on plants. The objective is to make the bamboo bike appeal to a global audience. Josh wants to use the high quality tools that mainstream advertisers use that are usually reserved for big budget commercial projects to spread this not for profit message. The success of this project will be measured by how well people in Ghana, to begin with, are affected by the video.

THE IMPACT
Success of the Bamboo Bike Project will mean the establishment and growth of a vast network of bamboo bicycle factories, which will each produce upwards of 20,000 bamboo bicycles annually for local distribution. The high levels of production and sale required by this model will more substantially improve the state of rural transportation, and will have a greater capacity to impact wider economic markets (potentially lowering the cost of other forms of effective transportation for rural residents even further).

Resources

Timeline



Summer 2009

Fall 2009

Winter 2009-10

Spring 2010
Trust Art Auction

About the Artist

The Bamboo Bike project: A non-profit that was founded by a couple of professors associated with Columbia University’s Earth Institute to investigate manufacturing practices that could result in a bicycle frame being made entirely from heat-treated bamboo, and that can be assembled in three or four hours by a group of unskilled laborers. The goal of the bamboo bike project is to share the manufacturing process with the local communities in the developing countries where they will be sold. In this way, a new industry is generated and the bamboo bike is proliferated to many who need it, and the economies of these struggling communities are also aided.

Josh Powell: As a video artist and someone who has directed commercials in the past, Josh is interested in the tools of advertising as a means of mass communication of good ideas. A lot of his work has dealt with the effects of advertising on our society, but he is also interested in how these tools can be used to bring about a better future.

Artists' Past Work

Public Wall

Bikes - Right2

Your Voice

Bikes - Right1

From The Artist

« The Solution to Every Problem The World Faces [VIDEO] | Main | The Bamboo Bike Prototype »
Monday
Mar232009

Bamboo Master Justin Aguinaldo

This is a photo of Justin Aguinaldo, one of the three bamboo masters currently building bikes at the Redhook studio. Justin is also a founder of the Mess Kollective, a bike messenger service owned by the bike messengers who ride for it.

His first hand experience as a professional biker has given him a tremendous amount of insight into the special modifications to the bamboo bikes that guard against wear and tear. The three bikes you see here are all prototypes that were sent to Ghana last month to an entrepreneur there who will use them as reference to design the first bamboo bike factory overseas.

References (1)

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Reader Comments (1)

Hey, I was thinking about your project and how innovative and great I think it is. Whilst thinking of your project, I attended the Armory Show at Pier 94 and fell upon the Big Bambu project:
http://www.starnstudio.com/
Looking forward to the fruit of your labor. Good luck!

May 16, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterTamara Weg

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