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Four winners of a competition for designs to help manage the coronavirus pandemic have been announced and will be taken forward to a development phase.

The chosen projects from Global Grad Show’s Covid-19 initiative include an AI system for monitoring patients in intensive care, developed at Imperial College London, and a delivery container made of materials that inhibit the spread of the virus, from The National Autonomous University of Mexico.

The list also features a device that lets people make bleach at home, created by graduates of Islamic Azad University in Iran, and an app for connecting volunteers with vulnerable people, from designers at Hunan University, China.

“You can post a help message on our platform and others will see this message and try to connect with you,” explains Zijing Wan of the “Help Ourselves” project. “The inspiration came from stories that actually happened: grandmothers who donated their life savings, medical team members who requested support for Wuhan.”

Eric Iroel Heredia Carillo, National Autonomous University of Mexico
Dubai's Global Grad Show launched a contest for ideas to help manage the coronavirus pandemic. Among its four winners is a delivery container made of materials that inhibit the spread of Covid-19, from the National Autonomous University of Mexico.
Zijing Wan, He Xu, Yidi Zhao, Hanhui Deng, Hunan University
Students at Hunan University, China, came up with an app for connecting volunteers with vulnerable people.
Sepideh Golgoon & Mostafa Arvand, Islamic Azad University
This device, created by graduates of Islamic Azad University in Iran, lets people make bleach at home.
Samyakh Turka, Martha Kedrycki, Imperial College London
"Foresight," an AI system for monitoring patients in intensive care, was created at Imperial College London.
Grad Show COVID-19 open call. Maud Chevallier and Jospehine Baros, L'ecole de Design Nantes Atlantique
Many of the losing proposals also showcased eye-catching designs. "Locabox" is a communal delivery depot where drivers can drop supplies to several addresses at once, managing their risk of exposure. Residents collect their items at assigned time slots.
Grad Show COVID-19 open call. "Qenqo" by Social Chain, Pontifical Catholic University of Peru.
"Qenqo" is a hygiene station for remote areas, giving isolated people access to sanitation.
Grad Show COVID-19 open call. "Handl" by Catalina Lotero and Felipe Guarin, Keio University.
"Handl" is a portable grip handle to allow users to avoid direct contact with potentially contaminated surfaces with their bare hands.
Global Grad Show COVID-19 open call. "Touch" by Anna Teachout, Georgia Institute of Technology.
"Touch" is a system of stick-on sensors that alarm when a wearer is about to touch their face, potentially reducing the risk of transmission.
Global Grad Show COVID-19 open call. "Steam Nurse" by Ruth Manzanares, Lucia Pejerrey Florian, Jessica Porras Real, Jose Paredes Alarcon, Deivid Yabar Gamarra, Universidad Privada del Norte.
"Steam Nurse" is a smart locker that cleans the clothes of hospital staff with chemicals and ultraviolet light.
Global Grad Show COVID-19 open call. "Farewell Suit" by Hector Mendoza Alvizo and Maria Jose Alvarez Estrada, Tecnologico de Monterey
"Farewell Suit" is a protective outfit that would allow family members to visit dying relatives without risk of infection.
Grad Show COVID-19 open call. "Fresh Tracker" by Sheung-Hung Lee and Ziyuan Zhu, MIT
To help reduce waste of precious fresh food supplies, "Fresh Tracker" is a system for organizing produce, feeding information on expiry dates to the user's smartphone.
Grad Show COVID-19 open call. "Interactive Barrier Design" by Xincan Yang and Daheng TongWe,
"Interactive Design Barrier" is a device to allow people in quarantine to safely interact with others, potentially reducing loneliness and improving mental health.
Grad Show COVID-19 open call. "ECHOO" by the Design Incubation Centre (DIC) at the National University of Singapore.
"ECHOO" is a system that uses headsets to re-socialize people once lockdowns are over, through techniques such as lowering volume when in close proximity to others to encourage interaction.

Developing the designs

Global Grad Show usually exhibits the ingenuity of students and graduates around the world as part of Dubai Design Week. This year an emergency edition was convened to address the pandemic, with an open call for entrants going out in March.

Almost 400 came in from representatives of 125 institutions in 40 countries, which were whittled down by a “jury of experts in innovation, technology and new ventures who looked for solutions that can create direct impact and are ready to be accelerated.”

The competition is held in partnership with the Investment Corporation of Dubai, and the intention is to make ideas into reality as rapidly as possible. The potential for swift implementation was among the criteria for selecting the final projects.

The winners will be placed on an acceleration program and receive funding, training and mentorship, in the expectation that their designs will soon be used as part of the global effort to control Covid-19.