Warehouse-friendly robot comes outfitted with smart technology to streamline operation and optimize ergonomics!

In collaboration with OTTOBO Robotics, product and car designer Berk Kaplan developed a concept design for a task robot that integrates smart technology to streamline ergonomics and package-carrying flexibility.

Each day, it feels like we’re getting closer to a future where robots will walk among us. Advancements in smart technology and Artificial Intelligence have streamlined and catapulted robot development to the forefront of our minds. Wrocław-based car and product designer Berk Kaplan recently teamed up with OTTOBO Robotics to develop a concept design for their smart task robot.

During the beginning stage of the concept design phase, Kaplan first conducted his own research to settle on the overall mood and personality of the robot. Following the research period, Kaplan sat down to sketch outlines of his robot in development, toying around with practical elements and aesthetic touches. The first proposal envisioned the robot with both a hard outer shell and inner core, giving it a tough, hardworking personality and weighty body.

Where the first proposal found durability in a tough exterior and interior, the third proposal from Kaplan wrapped the robot in a soft outer shell to cover the robot’s soft interior core. The second proposal, which Kaplan and OTTOBO Robotics ultimately chose as the concept design’s final form, conceived the robot with a soft outer shell and hard inner core for a cushioned tactile experience, outfitting the robot with a friendly and approachable disposition.

Once the final conceptual form was chosen by the OTTOBO Robotics team and Kaplan, 3D models were created to further develop the robot from every angle. Working with 3D models of the robot allows Kaplan to find the best ways to optimize the robot’s ergonomics and package flexibility. During this stage, more technical specifications were chosen for the robot, more specifically deciphering how smart technology would be built into the room to ensure its operability. Following this concept design phase, Kaplan and the OTTOBO Robotics team are looking forward to future production.

Designer: Berk Kaplan x OTTOBO Robotics

Berk Kaplan used 3D models after deciding on the robot’s conceptual final form to understand its shape from every angle.

Using 3D technology, Kaplan deciphered how to best optimize the robot’s package-carrying flexibility. 

After settling on its form and creating matching 3D models, Kaplan added aesthetic details like branding and logos. Production coming soon!

Double-Decker Dining!

double_buffet_1

The Double Buffet is something I can absolutely support! I dread buffet settings because of the way the food’s just ready and waiting for you to eat it, but the damn line in front of you is separating you from it. Designed by very impatient foodies (like all of us), the Double Buffet takes the regular buffet cloche and multiplies it by two. The layered cloches allow people to serve themselves faster, and it also helps cut the line by half, so you can have that food-baby faster than before. It’s so beautiful I think I’m going to cry! <3 Designers: Berk Kaplan & Emre Pektas. double_buffet_22

double_buffet_33

Clean, Mean, Quiet Machine

hidromek

Nothing like the sound of dump trucks and bulldozers in the morning! I’m listening to it right now and daydreaming of electric power! The Hidromek Compact City Vehicle is exactly what I and many other urban dwellers would like to see in the near future.

Quiet and clean, it runs purely on electric energy with in-wheel HUB motors and a cutting edge battery that also powers its functional arm. This battery can be interchanged quickly and easily to avoid a pause in work, or it can be plugged in at the end of the work day. As versatile as it is efficient, the design can be fitted with a variety of attachments to bulldoze, landscape, lift and more.

Designer: Berk Kaplan

hidromek2

hidromek3

hidromek4

Balanced weight distribution; thanks to the pivot point and HUB engines of carrier arms on the top of B pillars.

hidromek5

Thanks to the angle of the A pillars, operator has fresh area and wide view angle for attachments.

hidromek6

hidromek7

hidromek8

hidromek9

hidromek10

hidromek11

hidromek12

hidromek13

hidromek14

hidromek15

Tractors from the future

hidromek_vehicle_1

Sometime design gets so complicated, you end up blurring the lines between design and engineering. Hidromek Vision compacter may be a conceptual tractor, but it reaches a level of design detailing that crosses over to engineering, making it more than just conceptual.

With everything detailed out, right down to even the layout of the control panel, the Hidromek sets a standard for Conceptual Transportation design.

Designers: Serdar Soyal, Nurullah Taşkıran, Hamza Cihan GUL, Hakan Telışık, Murat Yelken and Berk Kaplan.

hidromek_vehicle_2

hidromek_vehicle_3

hidromek_vehicle_4

hidromek_vehicle_5

hidromek_vehicle_6