Now that I've updated everyone on some of our research, it's high time for a media update as well. Throughout this process, the team has been pleasantly surprised to find Aqua Port featured on various design and educational blogs.
We are one of the projects featured on the MIT TechTV website (check out the embedded video below!) and most recently Dapo was profiled in the MIT magazine Spectrum
If anyone comes across the project elsewhere, please let me know in the comments section. It's awesome to see A'port popping up on different sites, but we're having a bit of a hard time keeping track of where we are in the webiverse. Thanks!
Wednesday, March 24, 2010
Wednesday, March 10, 2010
Hi all,
I came across this video segment that the New York times did for International Women's Day. It profiles the "women's work" of carrying things on the head with a group of women in the Congo. It's good to see this issue getting attention, especially with relation to women's rights!
Also take a look at my own attempt at journalism, an interview with a woman from the village Kukiniele after she tested the a'port.
I came across this video segment that the New York times did for International Women's Day. It profiles the "women's work" of carrying things on the head with a group of women in the Congo. It's good to see this issue getting attention, especially with relation to women's rights!
Also take a look at my own attempt at journalism, an interview with a woman from the village Kukiniele after she tested the a'port.
Thursday, March 4, 2010
User Reactions
While I had no idea what to expect or how people would react to the product, I was pretty blown away by the positive response and enthusiasm we received.
Many women told me that they are the sole water collectors for their families, which means they often go to the water source as many as 10 times per day. Children, too, complained that collecting water often cut into the time they can spend on school work, and felt that our product could allow them to collect more water in less time. Some responses came from pretty unexpected places...some of our greatest supporters, for example, were elderly women, many of whom experienced chronic back, neck, and chest pain from collecting. Because of these health problems, old women said they sometimes collect less water than they need in a day and hated having to burden young women to collect for them








Many women told me that they are the sole water collectors for their families, which means they often go to the water source as many as 10 times per day. Children, too, complained that collecting water often cut into the time they can spend on school work, and felt that our product could allow them to collect more water in less time. Some responses came from pretty unexpected places...some of our greatest supporters, for example, were elderly women, many of whom experienced chronic back, neck, and chest pain from collecting. Because of these health problems, old women said they sometimes collect less water than they need in a day and hated having to burden young women to collect for them
I was most surprised by the response Aqua Port received from men in the villages. Since water collection is mainly a task set aside for women and children, I expected most of our responses to come from them. However, men were equally eager to chime in, and talked about how they sometimes need to collect water for agricultural use. some suggested ways to modify Aqua Port so that it could be used for irrigation. While this was not the intention behind the original design, it would be great if we could come up with something that fits this need with the redesign.
First update, post-Tamale
So I apologize in advance for the “blog binging” that’s going to take place on here for the next couple days. I just returned from the trip to Tamale, and with no posts about the trip so far there is so much to get everyone caught up on. J


three boys with their solution to water collection...a collection cart!

My other wonderful guide, Amuda, and the portlets with our main mode of transportation.
As I mentioned, I just got back from Aqua Port’s first round of field research in Tamale, Ghana. This involved four weeks of traveling around to villages in Northern Ghana, testing the product with a wide range of villagers, and collecting a dizzying (but thrilling) amount of data, insight, and testimonials. The purpose of the trip was to, in a way, start from square one with the project and look at the process/ main problems with water collection before addressing how Aqua Port could be an appropriate solution.
Overall, this trip was completely different than design research I’d done before, but I was very excited by how everything came together. I knew from the start that this project would be unique in that the result is a product that might lead people to change how they structure their day-to-day activities, so it was essential that I learn as much about the communities and village life as possible. Fortunately, I spoke with a lot of people who were extremely helpful and great interviewees. I even managed to get around 30 volunteers to test the product and provide feedback. In addition to visiting water sources I also visited peoples’ homes and a school, and got to talk with chiefs, elders, and assemblymen in many communities.
Thanks to support from Pure Home Water Solutions and Innovations for Poverty Action, I worked with two fantastic guides throughout the trip. Both did an awesome job of not only translating my questions from English to Dagbani, but helping to link me with local village leaders and potential NGO sponsors in Tamale (they also did an excellent of job taking me around to villages on motorbike…the most reliable form of transportation in Tamale, and a really fun way to get around J )
My guide, Salifu, at a community dam with the portlets
a few interviewees
Heading to a villager's compound to meet his family
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
