Repurposing winter jackets led to these portable cribs for stray cats!

Seeing a homeless stray animal on the road, shivering in the December cold, hungry and thirsty, always breaks my heart. I try to do my part, however, sometimes a community effort is needed to look after these little creatures. In South Korea, the number of stray cats has increased exponentially over the years. However, the lack of public awareness regarding animal homelessness has led to very little public support for these lonesome animals. So, national petshop chain Molly’s Pet Shop collaborated with the ad agency Cheil Worldwide, including designers Seontaeck Kim, Jungbin Lee, and Joohee Lee to bring to life, the Hood House.

The team collected padded winter clothing and upcycled them into portable cat shelters! Inspired by the dome-like shape of igloos, the little hooded dome homes have been equipped with a roof, a bed, bowls for food and water, as well as an extra waterproof cover. Customers came to Molly’s Pet Shop to voluntarily buy food for the stray cats, and they were presented with the Hood Houses! 2000 Hood Houses were created and given away. The customers then spread the homes throughout Seoul, setting up comfy cribs for the cats during the cold winter season.

The Hood House is quite simple to set up. You open the box and remove all the components required to set it up. You fit the round frame that comes along onto the base box. Insert the cushion into the round frame, and pull out the inner cover. Fix the hood onto the inner cover, and attach it to the frame. Then place the waterproof tent-like cover over the Hood House, and attach it to the home’s corners. Fill up the bowls with food and water, and let a kitty seek shelter there in peace!

Initiatives like these are game-changers and can make a humongous difference in the lives of our furry friends. I can’t wait for Hood House to find its way to countries all over the world!

Designers: Seontaeck Kim, Jungbin Lee, Joohee Lee, Molly’s Pet Shop and Cheil Worldwide

This flower-vase is also a fire-extinguisher

As useful as they are, fire-extinguishers are also designed to be too utilitarian and technical. They’re stored in attics and store-rooms, because they aren’t particularly aesthetic, and working them usually requires knowing how to operate them.

Even though laws dictate that all homes in South Korea need to have a fire extinguisher, as many as 58% of them don’t… and the ones that do, have them lying in hard-to-reach places. In order to equip Koreans with a product that’s easy to use, and can sit in one’s house in plain sight, Samsung Fire & Marine Insurance partnered with Cheil Worldwide to design the Firevase. A double-walled flower-vase with potassium carbonate filled in the sealed hollow space. The Firevase works like any normal vase, allowing you to place flowers in its inner container, while the hollow space holds the potassium carbonate which looks like water… but in the event of an emergency, the vase becomes your fire extinguisher. Designed to be thrown at a fire, the vase shatters when it hits the floor or a wall, allowing the potassium carbonate to spill out. The Potassium Carbonate starts a rapid cooling reaction that suppresses oxygen, eventually putting out the fire.

Made to look aesthetically pleasing, and have a user experience that’s much simpler than working a complex fire extinguisher, the Firevase can put out a fire by just being thrown at it… like a Molotov cocktail, but with the absolute opposite effect! Plus, the fact that it’s well-designed and has a home-friendly aesthetic means the unsuspecting fire-extinguisher will sit around your house in plain sight, storing flowers when you want, and allowing you to fight fire when you need!

Designers: Wanmo Koo, Jeakyun Kim, Sungjin Lee, Taeyul Ko (Cheil Worldwide) for Samsung Fire & Marine Insurance.