Skip to main content

Card Radio: recyclable, aptly named





Card Radio was conceived as an environmentally friendly piece of consumer electronics, presumably with the mass market in mind. Its entire housing is made from recyclable, though not recycled, cardboard. Despite its low cost and eco-credentials, Card Radio aims not to sacrifice elegance, harkening back to the 1960s aesthetic that designer Chris McNicholl claims as its influence.





It's really worth reiterating that, aside from the electronic components essential to its functioning as a radio, Card Radio really is made of nothing else. It's assembled (or folded) by the user without need of glue, making the product easy to disassemble, which in turn increases the likelihood that it actually will be recycled.

The Card Radio (conceived by McNicholl under the name Environmentally Sound - get it?) takes four AA batteries and includes a DC adaptor port, though the adaptor itself does not come included (needless to say: check the manufacturer's spec before connecting one). A surprising but welcome touch is the inclusion of an audio input and cable - a makeshift emergency speaker for a phone or MP3 player.




The Card Radio, designed by Chris McNicholl
The radio weighs in at nine tenths of a pound (0.416 kg), the bulk of which is accounted for by the electronics inside, and a single unit's compact paper and cellophane packaging weighs a mere 32 grams (0.07 lb), so the environmental cost of its shipment has been kept down.


A batch of six Card Radios as packed for shipping



If there's an obvious question mark it is over durability. It's probably even more essential that this stays dry than the rest of your electronic gadgetry (damp cardboard doesn't smell good, to begin with). A nice touch would be to be able to buy replacement housings for when one's cardboard shell gets a little worse for wear. It would be better still if the manufacturers went the whole nine hogs and incorporated recycled cardboard - perhaps for Card Radio 2.0. In the meantime, if you've snapped one of these up, let us know how it sounds.

Card Radio is available from suck UK for GBP25 (US$39). You can read a little more about the project's background on Chris McNicholl's website.
Card Radio should play nicely with your mp3 player of choice






Source: newatlas

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Modular housing concept boasts 64 possible combinations

Italian Designer Gabriel Aramu has conceptualized a modular housing system that seems to offer endless possibilities. Dubbed "Sliding Hub," these prefabricated cubes join together to create a temporary housing solution for multiple situations. In the event that emergency shelters are required, the modules can be packed and transported to any destination. On arrival, the modules are easily joined together, with the flexibility to house individuals, small groups or large numbers without limitation. Each module incorporates an insulation system suitable for all kinds of weather conditions. In addition, the temporary accommodation units provide a comfortable standard of living, important to natural disaster victims. Constructed with steel reinforcements, numerous modules can be assembled together to create various sizes and shapes, whilst sliding them open creates large internal spaces. According to Aramu, the system can be configured 64 different ways, wh...

A Father and Son

Father and son relationship are typically formed like this.

NASA discovered two Earth-sized planets

Scientists have for the first time discovered two Earth-sized planets outside the solar system, orbiting a distant star resembling our sun. This chart compares the first Earth-size planets found around a sun-like star to planets in our own solar system, Earth and Venus. NASA's Kepler mission discovered the new found planets, called Kepler-20e and Kepler-20f. Kepler-20e is slightly smaller than Venus with a radius .87 times that of Earth. Kepler-20f is a bit larger than Earth at 1.03 times the radius of Earth. Venus is very similar in size to Earth, with a radius of .95 times that our planet. An artist's rendering shows a planet called Kepler-20e in this handout released December 20, 2011. An artist's illustration of Kepler-22b, a planet known to comfortably circle in the habitable zone of a sun-like star, in an image released by NASA on December 5, 2011. A diagram comparing our own solar system to Kepler-22, a star system containing the f...