Final Presentation

Syuan-He Wang

Red Cells

NUVU: Transitopia

by Daniel Wang

Final Presentation

Joselyn McDonald

Presentations are the story of your project - from early sketches and inspiration, through prototypes and more developed ideas, presentations highlight the pieces of the process that led each student to their latest project.

Prompt

In this assignment, you will compile and create your final presentation, which will become part of your online portfolio of work, able to be shared with the public.

Instructions

In this activity, you will create your final presentation using the template below.

Create a post in the Responses tab above. This post has two components: the visual presentation and the written project description. Each component is outlined below and should be included in the same post.

Deliverable 1: Visual Presentation

Slide 1: Final Photograph with Project title and Team member names 

Slide 2: Evocative Image (an image that highlights the kind of experience you want your project to provide viewers)

Slide 3: Thesis Statement (1-2 sentence project statement that explains the overall idea of your project)

Slides 4: Green Energy Research 

Slide 5: Precedent Image(s) that inspired your project

Slide 6: Initial 2-3 Sketch Models (shared in your midterm presentation)

Slides 7-9: Final Diagrams (Use, and Technical)

Slide 10: 3 Final Project Photographs

Slide 11:  1 gif or video of your final project in motion

Slide 12: "Thank You" slide.

Deliverable 2: Project Statement

The Project Statement is a 1-2 paragraph project description that explains the overall idea of your project to someone who is unfamiliar with the topic. Below is a series of key points to consider as you write this final project description. Keep in mind that you should not simply put all of the answers together -- you must weave it together into a clear story. Add this to your final presentation in the Responses tab.

Things to consider:

  1. The what is a clear statement of the overall idea/thesis.
  2. The why explains how your project changes the world. It is the reason your project exists – what social issue is it engaging, who is your project helping, how does the project change the world, and what important social, intellectual, or technical questions does it raise? The scope of the why can vary widely.
  3. The how briefly explains what technical prowess, innovative methods, or cool materials you used in your solution.
  4. The who explains who will use your design, why they will use it, and in what context.
  5. Think of the reader - it is good to imagine that a university admissions officer AND a potential employer in the field of your design should both be able to understand and be excited by the project based on your writing.

Diagramming Workshop

Kate James

DIAGRAMMING WORKSHOP

Prompt

Designers represent their ideas through many different means: drawings, photographs, renderings, scale models, prototypes, and more. Each method presents specific advantages for highlighting different aspects of the concept and proposed execution.

Instructions

In this assignment, we will learn about different types of diagrams, and how we can use each one to further communicate the ideas of your project. 

Review the presentation above to learn about the types of diagrams used by designers to communicate their ideas. Then each project team needs to create a Use diagram and technical diagram. As you create your diagrams, consider how each one will highlight a different aspect of your idea. These diagrams should be useful tools for others to understand your idea.

Keep in mind that these diagrams will be shared in your final presentation, so take care to make them clean and easily understandable. 

Draw a Use Diagram

  1. Look back at examples of this type of diagram in the slides above. 
  2. Depict who is interacting with your project as well as how they are utilizing it.
  3. Using arrows, color coding, and/or labels, point out the components of your project in your Use Diagram. 

Draw a Technical Diagram

  1. Look back at examples in the slides above. Notice how these examples deconstruct the object to show the individual elements.
  2. Deconstruct or take apart your final project into multiple components. Try to highlight visually, how the project is put together to perform its functions.

Deliverables

Submit your Use Diagram/s or Technical Diagram/s in the Responses tab above.

Congratulations! And Final Survey :)

Joselyn McDonald

Congratulations, you've completed a NuVu Studio! 

At this stage, you should make sure your final presentations are uploaded on the platform. If you used Google Slides, make sure you clicked the "anyone with this link can view" link-sharing option, so others can see your presentation. 

Now it's time to reflect and share your thoughts on the studio experience. Fill out the post-studio survey here: https://forms.gle/5eZk2LGw5p4C5vUb9

Batteries made from an electrically conductive mixture the consistency of molasses could help solve a critical piece of the decarbonization puzzle. An interdisciplinary team from MIT has found that an electrochemical technology called a semisolid flow battery can be a cost-competitive form of energy storage and backup for variable renewable energy (VRE) sources such as wind and solar.

https://news.mit.edu/2021/energy-storage-solution-soft-serve-ice-cream-1130

Imagine a day without vehicles. No cars, buses, trucks, rideshares.

It's almost impossible to imagine, right? Transportation is an integral part of our everyday lives. The average American drives more than 15,000 miles and spends 54 hours stuck in traffic every year. Ouch.

Today, transportation makes up nearly 30% of our energy use in the United States and most of our oil consumption.

We're thinking differently about how to travel in a sustainable way. Introducing the latest in mobility innovation!

https://www.nrel.gov/news/video/transportation-energy-basics-text.html

At the occasion of #COP26, the UIC presents this Vision 2030, painting the picture of how, given the right action and investment, we can design a better future where rail is the backbone of a sustainable mobility system. 

This inspiring vision, created by UIC Global Rail Sustainability Taskforce, describes a future where we are on track to decarbonise transport and a thriving railway has unleashed many benefits for society. The vision includes a call for action to help design this better future.

https://www.alstom.com/

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Related links

  1. https://news.mongabay.com/2021/03/new-age-of-sail-looks-to-slash-massive-maritime-carbon-emissions/
  2. http://environment.nationalgeographic.com/environment/global-warming/wind-power-profile/
  3. http://www.sciencealert.com/the-netherlands-aims-to-have-a-completely-wind-powered-railway-system-by-2018
  4. http://www.railjournal.com/index.php/europe/dutch-trains-to-be-wind-powered-from-2018.html
  5. http://environment.nationalgeographic.com/environment/global-warming/wind-power-profile/

How wind turbines work (info-graphic): https://www.saveonenergy.com/how-wind-turbines-work/

What will vehicles look like in the far future? What will the systems that support these vehicles look like? Will transportation continue to be more and more efficient? What if future transportation systems could also be delightful, fun, or helpful to society in new and surprising ways? These are the questions students will explore in the Transitopia Studio by NuVu. 

In this studio, students will be constructing sci-fi and futuristic vehicles of their imagination while learning about renewable energy systems such as solar, hydro, and wind power. They will imagine the systems and infrastructure that will change the way vehicles move, how they are designed, and who they will transport, and then design new modes of transportation based on their imaginations.

Students will experience the hands-on joy of iterative physical prototyping and explore how motors, batteries, engines, radio signals, types of chassis, and wheels can help them achieve moveable speculative transportation devices. They'll push their vehicles to the creative limit with innovative and unusual designs! Then, it’s off to the final exhibition, where students will demonstrate their prototypes and share their vision of the future of transportation with the audience. 




  • 4 Million times more energetic than a chemical reaction such as burning coal, oil, gas
  • Does not give off any greenhouse gas emissions.
  • Much lower risk for nuclear proliferation compared to current nuclear reactors
  • Difficult to achieve and sustain this reaction.
  • 59 megajoules of sustained energy for five seconds is enough energy to power 35,000 homes during that time