Monday 25 February 2008

inter faith hospital gown

The Inter-Faith Gown is a new hospital gown for patients who would like to be more modestly clothed. It has been developed by Interweave textiles of West Yorkshire. The gown preserves the modesty of patients whose culture or religion requires head garments and trousers in additional to mainstream hospital wear. The elements can be mixed-and-matched to enable the patient to obtain the required degree of coverage.


The Linen Services Manager at Lancashire Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust identified a need for the gown and developed the design.

Inter Faith

Tuesday 19 February 2008

software development for fashion sector

You don't need an MBA or research background to create an innovative and investible business. Marcia Lazar had spent twenty yeas developing the clothing company Science London, but she couldn’t find an off the shelf software package to manage her production cycle with the price and functions needed by the owner of a small business. So she wrote a new system called WhatsIt herself, with functions that guided procurement decisions, costings, the production process, and every step through to packing. She sold a beta version to friends and then to fifty commercial clients, before asking the Innovatory for help with a business plan. Before long, she became a client of the Gateway to Investment and raised a six figure sum to develop the final product from investor Simon Worth. "When you work for yourself," Marcia say, "you don't always value what you know as much as you should." Marcia's experience in the garment industry meant she had an extremely clear vision of a problem in the marketplace and the quality, functionality and price of the product that could solve it," says Kevin Davey of the Innovatory. "This led to an innovatory product, and the birth of a scaleable business that knew its route to market. No programming house on its own could have encoded a product so well informed by decades of problem solving in the international industry targeted by this product." The software is now being sold as F2IT and you request a demo here.

Monday 18 February 2008

diy kyoto fight climate change

There’s a lot of pressure on small businesses to reduce their energy consumption and their impact on the environment these days. This may well push up the costs of many local firms. But the financial health of one friend of the Innovatory, DIY Kyoto in Penn Street, has been boosted by worries about global warming.

DIY Kyoto's list of shareholders is growing steadily, and hardly a month goes by without the business featuring on TV or in the national press.

The product attracting all the attention is called the Wattson, a tool which measures the electrical consumption of household items and helps you to estimate the annual bill for items like your kettle, your cooker or shower. The Wattson reveals startling facts about the huge and secret appetite for electricity of many household appliances.

“We have found that leaving the microwave on, just so you can use the clock, can cost as much as £50 a year,” says director Richard Woods. “The Wattson also shows that many television sets use ten times as much energy as music systems in homes. And it confirms that most items left on standby soak up just as much power as when they are in full use. People don’t know these things, and the device helps families to learn about energy use, and energy waste, while they are together in the home. We want to help households to understand and to reduce the amount of electricity they waste. The investment we have received will get the Wattson into mass production, and we intend to follow it up with new energy saving products for the home.”

The company’s team of three designers – Greta Clarke, Richard Woods, and Jon Sawdon Smith – met after graduating from the Royal College of Art.

It has taken them six years to develop the Wattson, which has two components, a sensor/transmitter and a reader. The sensor is clipped onto the power supply between the meter and the fusebox. It uses electromagnetic induction to measure the energy entering the house, and transmits the data, using wi fi, to the hand held reader anywhere in the house.

When you turn an electrical item on, the Wattson tells you exactly how much extra power you are using and what it costs. To underline its message, heavy electricity use makes the monitor glow red, and normal use blue. Up to date electricity prices can be downloaded to the handset over the internet.

“Many of our customers go round the house with their children, measuring how much leaving TV sets and computers on standby actually costs the household, and how much using the power shower adds to the family’s bills, “ Richard explains. “The data it collects on energy use - for a day, for a year or for a lifetime - can be recorded and stored, to guide changes in the household’s habits and to measure their impact.”

The Wattson was developed with support from the National Endowment for Science Technology and the Arts (NESTA). DIY Kyoto has also received a business grant and help with its search for investors from the Innovatory on Old Street, through the Gateway to Investment service.

The Independent praised the invention, dubbing it an “ecological tamagotchi” for the family. The Wattson has been featured on Richard and Judy’s breakfast show on Channel Four, and BBC 2’s Working Lunch.

For more information on DIY Kyoto visit www.diykyoto.com

eco buildings in hackney

The Olympic organisers and the developers in Broadgate aren’t the only people erecting futuristic buildings in Hackney. The borough is now attracting some of the most innovative architects in London, and they are using wood, straw, recycled materials and wind turbines in their attempts to reduce the local impact on the environment.

Plastered bales of straw are the main material used in an innovative new building at Hackney City Farm in Goldsmith’s Row, where a training centre designed by the environmental experts Amazonails has recently opened.

“The foundations of the centre are rammed earth tyres, and the bale walls are plastered with lime and clay recycled form the farm’s own pottery,” says Emma Appleton. “The main cross beam of the building is made of greenheart wood, a tropical hardwood reclaimed from the Norfolk sea defences. We also salvaged a teak boat from the 1930s that has been stripped down to make the desks in the room.”

“This building points the way forward for companies looking for less environmentally damaging forms of creating homes and workspace,” says Patrick Nicholson, a construction specialist at the Hackney Enterprise Network. “The materials for a house built with straw bales cost significantly less than brick and block. The outlay for a family-sized strawbale house in the UK would be about £60,000 plus the price of the land. Plastered strawbale walling has a surprisingly high level of fire resistance, and the UK currently produces 4 million tons of straw a year more than it needs. This is sufficient to build 250,000 well insulated and affordable new homes a year.”

Strawbale building techniques will be demonstrated at this year's Ecobuild show, an annual event dedicated to sustainable forms of design and construction, at Earl's Court from 26-28 February.

Hackney Council recently granted planning permission for a nine-storey tower in Murray Grove in Shoreditch which the architects, Waugh Thistleton, say will be the world’s tallest timber residential building.

The Stadthaus will be constructed using an Austrian solid timber system with wood from sustainable spruce forests, giving the tower – which will only take nine weeks to build – an unusually low carbon footprint. The stair and lift cores, load-bearing walls and even the floor slabs will all be constructed entirely from timber. Demand for the nineteen flats in the tower was extremely high and all the apartments were reserved on a recent launch day.

Waugh Thistleton’s designers are also the brains behind the fourteen storey Kinetica, fifty six apartments and three floors of commercial space to be built in Ramsgate Street, behind the Kingsland Shopping Centre, by 2010.

The futuristic tower is specially designed to harness wind power, which will be captured on its south side by four vertical turbines designed and installed by wind technology experts Quiet Revolution. Any renewable energy generated by the turbines which is not used by the residents will be forwarded to the National Grid.

The building will also have a very unusual façade – pixillated like an over-enlarged photograph - inspired by the images produced by German artist Gerhad Richter. The external surface will consist of thousands of black, grey and white panels made from waste timber.