Most homes in Rural Bangladesh are made out of tin huts that go over 45° celsius during the summer. Our employees volunteered and teamed up with Grey Dhaka to address this issue.
Re-purposing used soft drink and water bottles, The Eco-Cooler works without electricity to reduce temperatures up to 5° celsius.
Grey Dhaka unveils world’s first zero-electricity air cooler made from plastic bottles
Zero electricity air cooler from Grey DhakaGrey has come up with an idea to keep rural housing in Bangladesh cool using re-purposed plastic bottles and no electricity in time for the hot summer months and the advertising awards season.
The agency teamed up with Grameen Intel Social Business, a Dhaka-based social business IT company, to create grids made from plastic bottles cut in half that can be placed in windows. The agency claims the Eco-Cooler can reduce the temperature of a room by five degrees celsius.
The video explains how the Eco-Cooler works with the same cooling effect as a person blowing air with pursed lips.
Eco-Cooler“After initial tests, blueprints of the Eco-Cooler were put up online for everyone to download for free. Raw materials are easily available, therefore, making Eco-Coolers a cost-effective and environmentally-friendly solution”, Syed Gousul Alam Shaon, managing partner and chief creative officer at Grey Dhaka, said in a press release.
The agency claims the Eco-Coolers have been installed in villages in Nilphamari, Daulatdia, Paturia, Modonhati and Khaleya.
Grameeen Intel Social Business’s deputy GM Abdullah Al Mamun commented: “Since most rural homes in Bangladesh are made with corrugated tin, the Eco-Cooler has the power to provide relief to millions of Bangladeshis. We sincerely hope this volunteer effort will make a difference in their lives.”
The Eco-Cooler is another idea from Grey that fits with what the network’s creative head Per Pedersen describes as “solvertising” – work that solves social and environmental problems.
Post time: Jul-16-2017