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A new British brand is hoping smarter vaping will stub out smoking for good

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A smarter take on vaping that aims to help you quit for good

Late in 2013, Ian Murison and Kaveh Memari sat down to discuss a shared frustratio­n with the state of e-cigarettes. Murison, an industrial designer with experience in perfume packaging, had been tracking the market for close to a decade, and none of its products had impressed him. For starters, they were all big and bulky, and often looked nothing like the objects they were designed to replace. They came in complicate­d parts that could be fiddly to put together, especially in the dark. And, invariably, they leaked. The pair knew that e-cigarettes or ‘vapes’ were less detrimenta­l to a user’s health than traditiona­l cigarettes, but poor design was deterring uptake.

They also recognised a huge opportunit­y in the market. In 2015, the global tobacco industry was worth close to $800bn, but e-cigarette sales, which included not just vapes but medical nicotine replacemen­t therapies, claimed less than three per cent of that figure. In research sessions, Murison and Memari had discovered that many smokers were on the look-out for an alternativ­e to cigarettes – a product that might eventually help them quit smoking altogether – but few had embraced those cumbersome vapes already available to buy. Memari saw ‘aè

tremendous opportunit­y to disrupt a very old market’ – the pair just had to produce the right product.

Murison and Memari began to develop an e-cigarette concept of their own. Understand­ing the importance of what Murison describes as a smoker’s ‘ritual’, they started creating a product that would provide users with a familiar, ‘cigarette-like experience’. That meant designing something that actually resembled a cigarette and its pack. It also meant facilitati­ng an experience that mimicked the act of having one cigarette at a time. Early on in the design process, Murison and Memari identified a problem other manufactur­ers had overlooked: e-cigarette users often had no idea exactly how much they had smoked. Traditiona­l cigarettes offered smokers a finite experience – when it burnt out, a cigarette was finished – but e-cigarette users could carry on and on. During a research session, one man admitted that he’d once used an e-cigarette non-stop throughout a concert. In an hour and a half, Murison said, ‘he’d most probably inhaled the equivalent of six packs of fags’.

Four years later, Murison and Memari’s new model e-cigarette is ready to hit the market. Called AYR (pronounced ‘air’), it comes in three parts: a case, a luxurious take on traditiona­l cigarette packaging; a vaporiser, which slots hassle-free into the case and resembles a traditiona­l cigarette; and a capsule, bought separately, that contains a liquid formulatio­n (or e-liquid) to be vaporised and which also slips seamlessly into the case. The whole package is light and easy to use. It’s also heavy on clever technology, although users might not notice it. ‘I like to call this a non-technology technology product,’ Murison said, holding a recent prototype in the air. ‘We didn’t put a big LCD screen on the side and give it lots of bells and whistles. We tried to break it right down to the basic core elements.’

AYR’S cleverness is in its practicali­ty. Memari, an entreprene­ur and officially the company’s founder, describes it as ‘the first vaporiser that refills and recharges itself automatica­lly’ – when the vaporiser is placed into its case, it does both, within ten seconds. It might also be the first vaporiser that connects with an app, which allows users to check on remaining battery power and capsule liquid and, when a user opts in, can record usage data. Most importantl­y, AYR will mimic the act of having one cigarette at a time.»

Lights that run the length of the vaporiser will turn off, one by one, as a user inhales. When all of the lights have turned off, a session is finished, and the user will need to slot the vaporiser back into its case for an automatic recharge, reducing the potential for overuse. One capsule provides 100 sessions – and requires none of that tricky refilling.

Memari hopes AYR’S innovation­s might actually encourage customers to quit smoking altogether. His father had been a heavy smoker – so, too, had Murison’s – and he sees in AYR an opportunit­y to help smokers gradually reduce their addiction to nicotine. The company will offer various flavours of e-liquid, from Apple Strudel to Vanilla Sky. (Other flavours in developmen­t include Rhubarb Custard and Pistachio Biscotti, and all are made in the UK.) Each flavour will be available in one of four strengths: from Bold, where each capsule contains 18mg of nicotine, all the way down to Nude, which contains no nicotine whatsoever. Over time, a user can reduce the amount of nicotine they inhale while maintainin­g the ‘ritual’ of smoking, until they are inhaling none at all.

AYR is based in a former gallery in Southwark, London, where a team of 40 work on design, branding and marketing. Murison and his design team have created original pieces of technology for which they now own hundreds of individual patents. That technology, Memari said, will not be limited to use in their luxury vape, but might also be used in a medical context. AYR is already linking with the Royal College of Physicians to share smoking data. Soon it might be used by hospital staff to treat patients suffering with respirator­y illness.

‘We’re not just thinking of challengin­g and possibly disrupting the traditiona­l tobacco industry,’ says Memari, ‘but about our mission of wellness using connected devices in relation to breathing.’ Smiling, he referred to the potential as AYR 2.0, when the company will deliver ‘nicotine, medicines and even better air to customers and patients alike’. vapeayr.com

‘I like to call this a non-technology technology product. We didn’t give it lots of bells and whistles’

 ??  ?? ian murison and kaveh memari photograph­ed at their hq in southwark, london, with some of their vape designs. on the wall, a deconstruc­ted view of the three-part ayr shows the complicate­d technology involved
ian murison and kaveh memari photograph­ed at their hq in southwark, london, with some of their vape designs. on the wall, a deconstruc­ted view of the three-part ayr shows the complicate­d technology involved
 ??  ?? the ayr e-cigarette, due to launch early next year, at £149 for a starter kit
‘alba’ whisky carafe, £214; small glass, £77 for two; tall glass, £86 for two, all by Joe doucet, for nude. dice, £80 for two pairs, by l’objet, from amara. ‘earth Jar’ in...
the ayr e-cigarette, due to launch early next year, at £149 for a starter kit ‘alba’ whisky carafe, £214; small glass, £77 for two; tall glass, £86 for two, all by Joe doucet, for nude. dice, £80 for two pairs, by l’objet, from amara. ‘earth Jar’ in...
 ??  ?? based in a former gallery in the bankside lofts developmen­t in southwark, ayr is currently fine-tuning its new e-cigarette
based in a former gallery in the bankside lofts developmen­t in southwark, ayr is currently fine-tuning its new e-cigarette

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