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By: Clara Tanone [ P o r t f o l io ]

Rmit clara tanone portfolio 1

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Page 1: Rmit clara tanone portfolio 1

By: Clara Tanone

[ P o r t f o l io ]

Page 2: Rmit clara tanone portfolio 1

Table of Content* Table of content + about the author* Foreword* 3D rendering* System design* Model making* Illustrations* Personal illustrations* Disclaimer

About the Author

Clara Tanone (born in 1992) is a stu-dent at RMIT University majoring in Industrial Design. Through highschool years which were mainly focused in performing arts and science, she has arrived in Industrial Design carrying that education background. In the 3 years of studying Industrial Design, she becomes more opened towards another new world of design, especially system design, 3D rendering, and product design. Clara’s works have been greatly influ-enced by concepts, and sustainability perspec-tives, relating to her background and utmost interest of being involved in performing arts, and her Industrial Design subjects which are mostly about sustainability. The rest could be seen in the portfolio. This is where the journey to a fragment of the author’s little world begins.

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3D Rendering

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[ Flower Mind ]

S3295987 Clara Tanone/ 2013

Glass Sculpture Rendering

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[ Flower Mind ]

S3295987 Clara Tanone/ 2013

Glass Sculpture Rendering

Glass series: Ice flower Glass series: Ice flower

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Promised

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Promised

Quick 3D

Model Sketching

Solidworks Explo-ration

Sweep Feature

Pendant

Bracelet

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Chevrolet Camaro

Blueprint + design (c) General Motors

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System Design F.o.E Project

Biodigester, waste smart

Jakarta: Clogged Up

7500 tonnes added daily (CNN International, 2010)

HealthHygiene

Space wasteGreenhouse Gas

Sinking city

Soil toxicity

“Jakarta is like a luxury home with-out a proper toilet” ( Daryoni, 2010 )

Breeding unnecessary landfill = breed-ing a hazardous time bomb in your backyard

Diseases

Ruining views

Table 1. JICA (1987, pp. S2–23) and Cleansing Department of Jakarta (2003a, p. V-4).

Page 10: Rmit clara tanone portfolio 1

Behavior Changing Products

7,500 tonnes of rubbish are produced and thrown into landfill in Jakarta. Around 60% of it is from household, which consists mostly of organic rubbish. However, what to do with rubbish? Rubbish is meant to be thrown away, right?

However, what if the rubbish isn’t actually rubbish? What if it can be a treasure?

Using the idea of biodigester and how common households in Jakarta uses LPG, the Friends of Earth project came up. The idea was to turn organic waste into gas energy that could be used for day to day cooking, thus decreasing the number of organic landfill daily and usage of non-renewable fuel.

The development of this concept, taking a case study of Dis-trict 14 of Pondok Indah suburb, consists of interviews with the finance manager of the district office, house profiles, Indo-nesian power plants research, existing efforts, and many more.

Video visualisation of how it works: http://youtu.be/5cIPeLL-niOE

2013

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Development Pictures... Final components in usage, superim-posed

Be Stingy: Tu

rning Jaka

rta’s

Wasted Tra

sh aka Fu

el to En-

ergy

6,000 tonnes o

f treasure are being th

rown out to

landfill daily in Ja

karta

. (Mander U

, Brebbia C A,

2010) 58% of th

em come from household se

ctor

(Aquan, 2008)

The concept of Ja

karta

’s “Be Sti

ngy” green project is

all

about being sti

ngy of useless e

xpenditure on ra

w energy fuel,

such as petro

leum, compared to

the m

ountainous available fu

el

that we th

row away everyday. This p

roject idea is i

nitially inspire

d

by Sweden waste

management sy

stem, w

here now it is in

a con-

dition where it l

acks so m

uch waste fro

m the re

cycling and reus-

ing that it

needs to buy waste

from other c

ountries.

“BeStingy”willfirstinvolvetheprojectgro

uptomakea

contractwiththe

localdistrictofficea

ndpreparingtheh

ouse-

holdsofastartingkit.T

heloc

aldistrictofficew

illthenp

romote

this

project to th

e households, and whoever w

ants to su

bscribe will

sign up. A

few m

onths before th

e syste

m commences, the NGO

will post o

ut free sta

rting kit

s to each of th

e subscrib

ed house.

The kit will in

clude: intro

duction brochure, ru

bbish bin se

parator,

acertificate

plaqueofbe

ingon

eofth

efirst“friends”

ofJakarta,

and a pack of 12 green bio bags.

Ofco

urse,the

biogasbenefitp

roducedfro

mthe

col-

lected organic waste will n

ot only go to

the plants,

but to th

e

customers a

s well. T

he biogas will t

hen mainly be tu

rned into

methane and stored as c

ooking gas, ju

st as h

ow the common

LPG works. Th

e catch of this w

ill be th

e cheaper price, sin

ce it’s

the subscrib

ers themselves w

ho supply th

e fuel.

The main fo

undation of th

is project’s

system is h

ow to have

leastinte

rferen

cean

dtog

ivethem

ostbe

nefittothesubsc

rib-

ers. Therefore, o

ther than usin

g separate bags fo

r organic/non-

organic waste and cheaper c

ooking gas a

lternative, th

e waste

management payment m

ethod and pickup syste

m will stay th

e

same,sonosig

nificantextraeffortfro

mthe

custome

rsisre

quired.

In conclusion, b

eing stingy is n

ot a bad th

ing, sometim

es.

Clara Tanone / 2

013

all images a

re sourced online and credite

d to th

eir respective photographer/a

rtist

F.o.E Project

Welcome!

You have now officially become

one of the first co-partner for Friends of

Earth mission to make Jakarta a rubbish-

free city!

Did you know...?

7 500 tonnes of rubbish are pro-

duced in Jakarta daily. As we added the

rubbish, this came packaged with health

and environmental hazard.

But did you also know, that

these so called rubbish, a lot of them are

wasted precious fuel can be used for

your electricity and cooking? So rather

than wastelessly sucking non-renewable

energy from earth for simple daily activity

like cooking, why not use the mountainous

available fuel that are waiting to be used?

How...?

Simple. Just follow the instruction

and the starter kit we sent to you, and we

will take care of the rest.

Starter Kit

1. Bin separator

This is to separate between the

biobag and normal landfill bag. In the slot,

just slide your bags in such as shown. It’s

to make separating the organic materials

easier for you. Length can be adjusted to

fit the size of your bins.

2. Certificate plaque

Congratulation on being the first

one to take into action of taking care

Jakarta’s environment! Why not let others

know? You can put the plaque every-

where, door, fence, wall, or anywhere.

Let’s encourage others to take care of the

city we live in!

3. Biobags

Please use these biodegradable

green bags to collect your organic waste

to help the collection process as well.

How I benefit then?

After collection process, the fuel

that you provided aka the organic waste,

we will turn into methane gas in our facil-

ity. Then, we will store it into cylinders to

be used for cooking fuel instead of LPG.

Once you bought your first methane cylin-

ders, you can refill it over and over again.

Since you provided your own fuel, every

member will have a discount when you

visit one of our retail shops to refill the cyl-

inder. Just tell us your membership number

to confirm with the database.

Why buy from energy when you

can produce it yourself? Why spend more

when you can spend less for the same

quality?

For the detail of our retail shops, and what

we sell, please visit: http://friendsofearth-

project.co.id/

H

appy

Ea

rth, Happy You!

“Never doubt that a

small group of thought-

ful, committed citizens

can change the world;

indeed, it’s the only

thing that ever has.”

--- Margaret Mead

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All About Food

In this studio, the issue taken was about street vendors in Jakarta. One of the biggest issues when buying food from increasing numbers of street vendors in Jakarta would be the health issue.

The first reason was the water used to clean the dishes has been used to clean many other dishes for the whole day. The reason for this was that most of the street vendors live far from where they are working. There also isn’t any free public water supply for them to change their water at.

Due to this water hygiene issue, the customers are basically consuming the bacteria, such as e. Coli that come with the washing.

The concept of water bin is to have public low-tech water recyling facility for the vendors every few meters. The vendors will just bring the used water to the bin, pour the water in, the bin will filter, and the vendors just have to use the foot pump to pump the filtered water back to their containers.

2012

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Development Pictures... Final components in usage, superimposed

Jakarta’s Street Vendor

--- Water BinADVANTAGE* Doesn’t use fresh source of water (recycled)

* Allowing the vendors to clean their dishes with clean water, thus reduces the health risks for the

consumers* Increasing the value of street food vendors- relieves a small area of poverty], promote another

area of cultural tourism

* Because it’s connected to the ground and underground pipes, it’s less prone to stealing

DISADVANTAGE* May encourage additional number of street food vendors, thus may clog up the roads by the

customers* Requires energy to run the filter

* Some people may think that it’s a rubbish bin and just throw their rubbish in, clogging up the

filter* Requires quite frequent maintainance

* Untrained vendors may use the recycled water for drink

Cost/Benefit

SystemStreet vendors set up stall

Pour water into the wash-

ing buckets

Pour water into the wash-

ing buckets

Piling up the dishes

Once piled up, start dish-

washing

Finished, bring the greywa-

ter to the bin

Pour greywater into the bin

Put clean water bucket

under the tap

Water-filtering process in

around 3 minutes

Clean water coming out

from the tap

Finish collecting the clean

water

Bring water back to the stall

Use the water to wash more

dishes

Maintainance by the gov-

ernment / 1 month

Design Scenario

6 Years Old Boy Has rubbish in handThought that the water

bin is the general rub-

bish one/ doesn’t care Clogged up the bin

60 Years Old Woman Coming with greywater

from dishwashing in her stall Pour the greywater into

the water bin and wait

for the process Collect the clean water

to bring back to the stall

60 Years Old WomanComing with greywater

from dishwashing in her stall

Trying to pour the grey-

water into the bin Backpain from carry-

ing up heavy weight of water

EXPLODED VIEW

- Recycled thermoplastic (PBT or EVA?)

- Vytac and antibacterial granules

- Stainless steel- Outsourced lock

- Outsourced water filter membrane

-

MaterialsLife Cycle Analysis Material Gathering

- Recycled engineering thermoplastic (PBT)

collection- Buffer solution ingredients collection

- Excavation of coppers and steel

Production=- Processing of the plastic (melting & mold-

ing & cooling)- Mixing the buffer solution

- Making the wires

- Assembly of electrical components

- Assembly of the whole parts

- Digging the soil and installation

Usage- Street vendors using it to recycle water

- Lasts probably 3 years?

- Maintainance every month, especially the

membrane filter End of life- Possibility: filter breaking

down, bin body breaking

- Remelted to downcycle to a

new one- Membrane may end up in

landfill

[ S3295987 Clara TANONE ]

ITEM NO. PART NUMBER DESCRIPTION QTY.

1 p01 body- general purpose PBT 1

2 p02funnel- PVC

13 hex finished bolt_ai

24 heavy hex nut_ai

25 p03 filter- semi-permeable membrane, PVC 16 lock

Lock (outsourced)- coated steel 17 p04

Merged with p01 18 p05 Filter- semi-permeable membrane- general purpose PBT 19 SA1Tubing- PVC, handle- rubber 1

10 SA2 Tubing- PVC, foot pump- PBT and rubber 111 p06

Plumbing- PVC 112 p07

Funnel- PVC1

1

Social

Environmental

Economical

+ Reduces danger to local health + Encourage street vendors more e�ectively about hygiene+ Rather than just saying that they need to be hygienic, water bin provides a tangible after-lecture solution+ Vendors don’t need to bring a lot of water for dishwashing to the site

- Bringing the concept of ecodesign for smaller things in Indonesia- A new scope of how to tackle a social issue in Indonesia

+ Reduces contamination of local waterways of food-borne bacteria+ Separatable parts according to the material types provided a higher chance of it being recycled- High acidi�cation and carbon footprint in material extraction and manufacturing

- The bodies may end up in land�ll

+ Government will gain the capital back from the business and vendors income taxes+ Street vending may now be promoted for cultural tourism due to increasing health standard+ Increase of income from tourism+ A progress to relieve poverty

- Initial capital is high for manufac-turing the bin- It may take a long time to have the capital fully returned

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Model Making

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Home Spraybooth

MiniSpray, as it was named, was a project created for Industry of One elective. It was an elective which purpose was to encourage students to learn on how to be self-sufficient starting designers. This includes skills of deciding where to source the equipments, time management, and different fabrication skills.

The project itself was based on the idea of a personal need to have a spraying booth facility at a studio size city apartment, and also a pro-ject idea in Instructables. Even with the window open, the toxic smell of paint was still strong. Spraying in open university ground with full table protectors. Told off by the security. Spraying in the backyard. The neighbours got angry.

However, with this item, as tried, the smell significantly decreased, dry-ing time also increased due to increased airflow, cleaner spraying due to the rotating table, and also easily cleanable with antigraffiti solution easily attainable in local hardware stores.

The object is made based on three ideas: disassembly, modularity, and recyclability. Therefore, as it can be seen in the pictures, to attach differ-ent materials, bolts are used instead of permanent glue. This enables the replacement of only a specific part, easier cleaning, and sorting of the recyclables.

Featured materials: carbon filter, CPU fan, ABS, plywood, etc.

Documentation video can be seen here: http://youtu.be/U64O4C7c4bg

Disassembly. Modularity. Recyclable

2013

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A Gift

This picture frame was originally made as a present for my grandfa-ther’s 80th birthday. Many people can buy birthday presents with mon-ey, even the most hightech items. However, what are the items that are most pleasing as gifts for a family member, especially for a grandfather.

Therefore, through asking the opinions of others and brainstorming, I decided to make a picture frame with childlike handdrawn pictures of my grandparents and us, their grandchildren, celebrating his birthday together full of smiles and playfulness.

The materials used here are balsa wood, acetate film, 240 gsm card, and basic stationaries and colouring items.

2012

Page 17: Rmit clara tanone portfolio 1

This is the Water Bin model for All About Food studio subject. The model is made using 10 sheets pasteboard, including the cylinder.

The cylinder part is made of two layers of 10 sheets pasteboard glued together and shaped using a solid cylinder made of MDF, and let to dry for half an hour for it to become rigid. The filter is made of nylon fabric easily attainable as a remnant in fabric stores.

Colouring is done using spray paint.

All About Food Model2012

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These are the books I bound manually using sewing needle, string, and glue mainly.

The highlight in these books was actually the one with the black papers. White? It’s normal, many are sold in shops. Yellow? Quite normal? Green? Quite normal as well. However, why black papers where you can’t use normal pen to write on?

The concept of the black paper book, it was supposed to be portable blackboard for teaching purpose, especially where electronic devices aren’t preferable to be used. Therefore, with this book, the teacher can write using chalk on it, and erase it afterwards. It functions like normal blackboard, but cheaper and mobile.

Book (white/black content)2012

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I llustrations

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WACOM Shoe Design2011

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Technical Drawings2011

ITEM NO. PART NUMBER DESCRIPTION QTY.1 p01 body- general purpose PBT 12 p02 funnel- PVC 13 hex finished bolt_ai 2

4 heavy hex nut_ai 2

5 p03 filter- semi-permeable membrane, PVC 1

6 lock Lock (outsourced)- coated steel 17 p04 Merged with p01 1

8 p05Filter- semi-permeable

membrane- general purpose PBT

1

9 SA1 Tubing- PVC, handle- rubber 110 SA2 Tubing- PVC, foot pump- PBT

and rubber 111 p06 Plumbing- PVC 112 p07 Funnel- PVC 1 1

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Quick Sketches 2010- 2013

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Personal Illustration

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Under the Sea2010

Facebook’s Graffiti App

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What to Gain2010

Facebook’s Graffiti App

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Order from R. T. S 2010

Adobe Photoshop

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Sketches 2010

Color pencils

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DisclaimerAll of the photographs which I used as background for superimposing the product renders and also video clips from research phase of projects I’ve done were all sourced from Google, and several other websites such as Mer-cy Corps, and BBC International.

What belongs to me are the works displayed and this portfolio itself.

Clara Tanone / 2013