7 iconic designs solving real-world problems

Game-changing solutions that are saving lives, closing the poverty gap and helping us to secure a sustainable future

Lifestraw in useThe Index Project

LifeStraw™

A life-saving device that instantly cleans contaminated water

Lifestraw context slum outskirtsThe Index Project

Access to clean drinking water still remains a critical and prevalent global issue. Currently, there are approximately 800 million people worldwide that suffer from waterborne diseases. And as a result, close to 6,000 people die every day.

Lifestraw unitThe Index Project

LifeStraw® is a 10-inch plastic cylinder that can filter out or kill 99.99 percent of bacteria, parasites and viruses found in dirty water. It uses textile filters, iodine beads, and a charcoal filter to clean the water and can be produced with just a few dollars.

Lifestraw users drinkingThe Index Project

Most LifeStraws are freely distributed by NGOs as part of public health campaigns or in response to natural disasters and emergencies. For example, the 2010 Haiti earthquake, the 2011 Thailand floods and the 2016 Ecuador earthquake.

Lifestraw users SouthamericaThe Index Project

The standard LifeStraw can provide clean water for one person for approximately one year.

Lifestraw - fullThe Index Project

Today, millions of LifeStraws have been distributed all over the world, and after more than 10 years, the solution is still one of the most iconic, life-changing designs in the world.

$100 Laptop in use at classroomThe Index Project

$100
Laptop

A low-cost computer to broaden access to technology

Kids using $100 Laptop outdoorsThe Index Project

As technology advances, the global digital divide widens. As a result, education becomes stunted, and millions of children are left behind. While computers may be seen as a luxury item to many, they're still an essential tool for accessing 21st century knowledge and skills.

$100 LaptopThe Index Project

The $100 Laptop, later known as the OLPC (One Laptop Per Child), was launched by Nicolas Negroponte in 2005. The low-cost laptop was designed to give resource-constrained and offline communities access to communication technology.

$100 Laptop - fullThe Index Project

The $100 Laptop uses open-source software and has long battery life, a built-in camera, and a simple user interface. Its screen is clearly visible in bright sunlight, it uses a tenth of the power of a conventional laptop, and can be recharged by hand when electricity isn't available.

$100 Laptop classroom useThe Index Project

To date, more than 2.5 million laptops have been distributed globally to help improve education.

Showing off $100 LaptopThe Index Project

Although Negroponte is no longer a key player in the computer market, the company created an entirely new global market for affordable educational laptops, giving children a better chance at breaking the poverty cycle.

Tesla PowerwallThe Index Project

Tesla Powerwall 

A home battery offering independence from the power grid

Tesla Powerwall context - fabricsThe Index Project

Being able to generate your own solar power has never been easier. But, the inherent problem of energy storage means that we're still reliant on the massive power grids. And subsequently, non-renewable fossil fuels.

Tesla Powerwall frontal imageThe Index Project

Tesla Powerwall is a home battery allowing owners to collect and store clean energy for later use. The system consists of a solar panel installed on the roof, a battery to store surplus energy, and an inverter to convert solar power into electricity for your household appliances.

Tesla Powerwall different capacitiesThe Index Project

The design is sleek, compact, easy to install and maintain, and most importantly, offers increased independence from utility grids and fluctuating electricity prices.

Tesla Powerwall - securityThe Index Project

Not only does the Powerwall make switching to clean energy easier, it also provides more security to those living in remote locations or areas vulnerable to power cuts due to extreme weather.

(Powerwall 2.0 pictured)

Elon Musk presenting Tesla PowerwallThe Index Project

Creator Elon Musk also believes the Powerwall will eventually aid the development of remote communities. He speculates the batteries will help people to “leapfrog” the need for existing power systems, in a similar way that landline phones in rural parts of the world are now obsolete.

Tesla Powerwall - fullThe Index Project

The Powerwall is only just the beginning of Musk's long-term plans to shift the entire globe to clean energy.

KivaThe Index Project

Kiva.org

A peer-to-peer lending platform to give everyone access to financial capital

Kiva - VietnamThe Index Project

Kiva.org is the world’s first global crowdfunding website that connects people through interest-free micro loans. The platform allows users to easily browse a wide variety of requests and then loan money directly to the borrower of their choice.

Kiva - PalestineThe Index Project

By lending on Kiva, anyone can help a borrower start or grow a business, go to school, or access clean energy. For some, it’s a matter of survival, for others, it’s the fuel for a lifelong ambition. Once a lender’s money has been paid back, the money can either be withdrawn or lent again.

Kiva - sewingThe Index Project

Since 2005, 1.7 million Kiva lenders have lent more than $1 billion to 2.6 million loan receivers in 83 countries around the world.

Kiva.org - fullThe Index Project

By offering a completely new way to access financial capital, Kiva.org has proven to be a truly instrumental tool for reducing poverty worldwide.

Boyan Slat with trashThe Index Project

The Ocean Cleanup Array

A system to rid the world's oceans of plastic

Ocean Cleanup Array - plastic beachThe Index Project

Approximately eight million tons of plastic are thrown into the oceans every year. That’s the equivalent of 320 billion plastic bottles. Or in consumer terms: 45 plastic bottles thrown into the ocean by every person in the world, every year.

Ocean Cleanup Array - gyresThe Index Project

The oceans’ largest rotating currents, called gyres, concentrate most of this plastic into five large areas around the world.

The Ocean Cleanup System 001The Index Project

The Ocean Cleanup technology is the first system designed to passively clean up plastic pollution from the world’s oceans. Natural forces move the passive system faster than the plastic, which allows the plastic to be captured in the system's centre.

System 001 close upThe Index Project

Research indicates that over 5 years a full-scale roll-out, a fleet of approximately sixty 600m systems, could clean 50% of the Great Pacific Garbage Patch. The patch is estimated to contain approximately 80,000 tonnes of plastic, which is equivalent to that of 500 Jumbo Jets.

System 001 LaunchThe Index Project

In 2018, The Ocean Cleanup launched its first system into the North Pacific. After 4 months in the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, System 001 returned to port due to structural malfunction. After extensive root-cause analysis and system upgrading, the system plans to be back in the patch later this year.

Ocean Cleanup Array - fullThe Index Project

Dutch designer Boyan Slat explains how he came up with the idea at just 16.

Zipline droneThe Index Project

Zipline 

A ground-breaking drone delivery system saving lives in remote Africa

Zipline drone warehouseThe Index Project

For decades, drones were an unwelcome presence. They brought fear, destruction, and took countless innocent lives. While in recent years they have become more of a positive influence in our lives, there is one initiative that’s leagues ahead. These drones don’t carry bombs or bullets, but hope.

ZiplineThe Index Project

Zipline is the world’s first commercial drone delivery system flying critical medical supplies, like blood and medicine, to emergency situations. The initiative aims to put every single one of Rwanda’s 12 million citizens within a 15-35 minute delivery range of any essential medical product.

Zipline - shortThe Index Project

Health workers in remote areas use a cell phone or table to text an order with Zipline for the medical products they need. The supplies are then quickly packaged at a safe distribution centre, prepared for flight and launched into the sky.

Zipline flight patternThe Index Project

Within minutes, the health workers receive confirmation that their order has been received and dispatched. Shortly afterwards, the drone arrives and the package is gently delivered by parachute, landing in a designated area.

Zipline userThe Index Project

As of 2017, Zipline services 21 transfusion facilities, reaching around seven million people, in western Rwanda. The company also recently announced plans for starting in Tanzania and the US in 2018, with more regions and countries to come.

ZIpline - fullThe Index Project

Zipline Co-founder and Head of Product & Engineering Keenan Wyrobek explains how his vision became a reality.

what3words addressThe Index Project

what3words 

A revolutionary addressing system to put everyone, everywhere on the map

what3words caseThe Index Project

All over the world, street addressing is irregular and incomplete; finding an address and communicating it is still an imperfect science. At best, poor addressing is expensive and frustrating. At worst, it limits access to basic services, hampers development, and restricts social mobility.

what3words appThe Index Project

what3words is addressing rethought. The simple yet ingenious system has divided the world into a grid of 3 x 3m squares, and assigned each with three unique words. Using just three words, such as “fans.remix.unwind”, you can find and share an exact location anywhere in the world.

what3words - shortThe Index Project

what3words can help the postman deliver your mail, paramedics looking for a patient, or even mountaineers looking for an avalanche victim. It's available to everyone and can be used via the free mobile app or online map.

what3words stampsThe Index Project

So far, what3words is being used by the postal services of Mongolia, Djibouti, Tonga, Saint Martin, and Côte d’Ivoire, with many more on the way. Three-word addresses are also being used by the UN, the Red Cross, and other emergency response and humanitarian organisations around the world.

what3words - fullThe Index Project

what3words shows how a simple address can ensure that essential services are delivered to those in need. Not only does it provide a greater sense of identity, but it improves safety and opportunity for those who are yet to be dignified with an official address.

Credits: Story

LifeStraw, One Laptop Per Child, Tesla Energy, Kiva.org (Photographers: Brandon Smith and Eric Brandt), The Ocean Cleanup, Zipline, what3words and INDEX: Design to Improve Life®

Credits: All media
The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
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