The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Dealing with the bear essentials

V&A Dundee’s Peter Nurick talks about the Scottish Design Relay, the young people taking part and polar bears...

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Have you ever wondered how to stop polar bears paying you a visit while you sleep? As V&A Dundee Communitie­s Producer Peter Nurick reflects on the first leg of the Scottish Design Relay, he’s guessing the answer to that question is likely to be no.

But for Craig Mathieson, Explorer in Residence with the Royal Scottish Geographic­al Society, keeping polar bears at bay is a conundrum that keeps him awake at night.

It is also a problem considered by the team of young employees from the Michelin factory in Dundee who took part in V&A Dundee’s Scottish Design Relay. Dundee was the first stage of the national project, which will travel to five other parts of Scotland over the next seven months, celebratin­g the country’s unique design heritage.

In each location, a team of young people will study a design object with a connection to their area before being asked to create a new prototype that will be displayed in V&A Dundee when the museum opens next year.

In a tribute to the city’s history of exploratio­n, RRS Discovery was chosen as the Dundee inspiratio­n object and Kevin Fox, founder of Dundee-based luxury luggage company LAT_56, aided the young people with their design.

Craig spoke of the equipment he uses while trekking through the snow and temperatur­es as low as -60°C. As well as learning about the techniques used to survive such extreme conditions, the team was also introduced to the dangers of polar bears.

Craig – who decided he was going to be an explorer at the age of 12, after reading about the British Antarctic expedition­s led by Captain Robert Falcon Scott – comes across the huge creatures when journeying through the wilderness in Greenland.

So the Dundee design team decided to set about creating something to help keep explorers like Craig safe in their tents at night. They started by looking at bear alarm systems already on the market, and thinking about how the designs could be adapted to better suit the freezing climate.

Their finished prototype design builds on an existing humane tripwire system that sets off a loud bang if a bear breaches a campsite perimeter.

The new design includes a retractabl­e spring recoil system to prevent tangling of the tripwire, and uses non-conductive material to prevent exposed skin freezing to the device in sub-zero temperatur­es. New technology has also been incorporat­ed, allowing for early detection of polar bears.

The first workshops – which included making 3D models of the design – were held at Discovery Point in a room overlookin­g RRS Discovery. A prototype version of the new polar bear alarm system was made during the last workshop, held in the Michelin Training Centre in Dundee.

“In Dundee the team immediatel­y understood the importance of the issue that Craig faces and, from that point on, were focused totally on solving this very specific design challenge,” says Peter.

“We have no idea what challenges the other teams will face, and what creative and innovative prototypes they will come up with to solve them. What I do know is that the project is already highlighti­ng incredible creativity and ingenuity, and I can’t wait to see all the teams’ work displayed in V&A Dundee when it opens next year.”

For the second leg of the Scottish Design Relay the team will head for Orkney where furniture maker Kevin Gauld will guide young people through the design process. The third stop will be Caithness, where design group Icecream Architectu­re will work with local participan­ts.

Then it’s off to Shetland, where knitwear designer Niela Kalra will help island participan­ts tap into the area’s rich textile heritage, before moving on to Govan where young people from social enterprise GalGael Trust will work alongside design agency 4C.

The last leg of the relay, in Aberdeen, will see college students work with jewellery designer Naomi Mcintosh.

 ?? Alan Richardson/Julie Howden. ?? Clockwise from below: the Scottish Design Relay map; Matthew Woolley works on a prototype; Michelin staff Emma Evans and Ross Tolland with polar bear alarm system prototypes; the Dundee team.
Alan Richardson/Julie Howden. Clockwise from below: the Scottish Design Relay map; Matthew Woolley works on a prototype; Michelin staff Emma Evans and Ross Tolland with polar bear alarm system prototypes; the Dundee team.
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