Campus: San Francisco State University -- July 21, 2003
Inventive Sandal, Water Temperature Indicator Win
Awards For SFSU Students
Design and industry majors honored in national Industrial Design
Excellence Awards
Inventive designs for a new type of sandal and water temperature indicator
recently won national Industrial Design Excellence Awards (IDEA) for
two students in the Design and Industry Department at San Francisco
State University.
Graduate student Arvind Gupta received the gold medal in the student
designs category for his Modular Hinge Sandal. With the innovative sandal,
users purchase one shoe frame and choose various styles of outer sleeves,
changing the look of the footwear without buying new shoes.
“This design redefines the sandal,” said Craig Vogel, IDEA
jury member and associate dean of the College of Fine Arts at Carnegie
Mellon University. “The designer has created a sandal that fits
into the vocabulary that has emerged for athletic footwear.”
The sandal is like nothing available on the market and has a patent
pending, Gupta said. He spent six months working on his design after
he noticed a limited selection of sandals on the market, as well as
high manufacturing costs and consumer prices.
Since winning the award, Gupta has received e-mails from product designers
around the world and gotten in touch with fellow Indian designers. However,
the 29-year-old Hayes Valley resident and Van Nuys native finds personal
satisfaction he gets with his designs to be more important than the
recognition.
Gupta, who also has a patent pending on an insulated food container
he designed, believes his product is marketable and will consider licensing
it to a shoe company.
Senior Charles L. Floyd received the bronze medal in the IDEA student
designs category for his Faucet Friend Water Temperature Indicator.
The product, an inexpensive piece that attaches to a water faucet, changes
colors as temperatures rise or fall to help avoid scalding.
“This award validates that I should continue to pursue the field
of product design,” said Floyd, 39, a Potrero Hill resident. “It
gives me encouragement more than anything else.” There is no similar
product on the market, he says, adding that it has a patent pending.
The IDEAs, sponsored by BusinessWeek and juried by the Industrial Designers
Society of America, are an annual contest in which product designers
are honored in 12 categories. This year’s 122 winners included
designs by companies such as Apple, Motorola and Logitech as well as
the nation’s top design firms, including IDEO and ZIBA. A total
of 1,279 entries from 15 countries were received for this year’s
contest.
Over the years SFSU design and industry students have created countless
innovations, most notably Charles Hall, who in 1969 experimented with
starch- and gelatin-filled prototypes that would later become the world’s
first waterbed. Other student inventions include: the Unball, a cross
between a softball and bean bag that was popular in the 1980s; the Hooper,
a plastic harness used to carry two-liter soda bottles; and a glove
that helps bowlers refine their skills.
Media Contact: Matt Itelson, Public Affairs, (415)
338-1743 or matti@sfsu.edu. |