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Students Melanie Calleja,
Melanie Phillips and Ethan Lankshear, with colleagues from New Zealand and Japan,
designed a product for organic farmers to transport, spread and dispense
compost in a single action.
A soil supplement spreader,
Nu-tan reduces the time and physical labor required for soil bed preparation on
organic farms.
"The organic farming
industry faces many challenges in upscaling production, including access to
land, soil quality, infrastructure and labor. This creates enormous opportunity
for new products and services in the organic sector," says Ms Calleja.
For the 2018-19 academic
year, Yanmar proposed a design focus on supporting organic farming for fruit
and vegetables. The challenge to students was to research user needs and
desires, to develop a new product that provides quality and a holistic user
experience for organic fruit and vegetable farmers. This approach aligns with
the SUGAR Network's focus on human-centered design.
Students visited local
organic farms and researched organic farming experiences and processes to
identify opportunities that improve the daily lives of farmers, workers and
farm productivity.
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"The challenge was to
create a solution for small scale organic farmers of ground grown product that
keeps them connected to their crops. We wanted to reduce physical labor and
maximize output for organic farmers by making soil preparation efficient and
enjoyable," explains Ms Phillips.
Nu-tan is designed to evenly
distribute and spread a variety of soil supplements during bed preparation,
combining dispensing and spreading of supplements which saves farmers time and
physical effort.
"It gives organic
farmers time to do the crop handling activities they enjoy," Ms Phillips
says.
"There is a lack of
agricultural machinery suited to small scale organic farming. It's very labor
intensive and time consuming. Nu-tan addresses this gap in the market. No two
organic farms are the same. Nu-tan adjusts to farmers' needs and specific farm
configurations, so farmers don't have to change their farm to suit the tool. It
also allows farmers to move and spread heavy loads easily," Ms Calleja says.
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The Nu-Tan team tested and
validated their ideas at organic farms. They found organic farm bed preparation
is labor intensive, and time consuming; and achieving and maintaining soil
quality free of pesticides and composting is very important.
Composting and bed
preparation is often outsourced due to time and labor considerations and farms
are unlikely to use heavy machinery due to the impact on the land and increased
carbon emissions.
The team traveled to China
to launch the project and traveled to Japan to work together. The final proof
of concept prototype was presented at a SUGAR Network EXPO in San Francisco.
Yanmar selected Nu-Tan as
its favored product idea and DFM is confident that Nu-Tan will be developed by
Yanmar in support of the organic farming industry.
In 2016-17 DFM students
collaborated on a product idea called, Wheebo, developed in collaboration with
Yanmar and Kyoto Institute of Technology. Recently launched as a Yanmar
start-up, Wheebo is a jet-powered watercraft that allows users to move on the
water with agility allowing 360 degrees of movement.
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