courtesy Global Grad Show
Mirjam de Bruijn from the prestigious Design Academy Eindhoven created a range of dehydrated cleaning products to be rehydrated by consumers, thus reducing shipping emissions.
courtesy Global Grad Show
A team from the University of Texas at Austin developed a handheld device for high-speed cancer identification. Its makers claim the MasSpec Pen can detect cancerous tissue mid-surgery in 10 seconds, versus 30 minutes using a microscope. The pen, when touching suspect tissue, releases a droplet of water which takes up chemicals from inside human cells, which is sucked into the pen for analysis.
courtesy Global Grad Show
Women in refugee camps can be vulnerable, particularly at night. Anna Meddaugh of the ArtCenter College of Design, California created the Night Loo, a portable toilet which can be used in the privacy of a woman's own tent. After using the Night Loo, a sachet of superabsorbent polymer turns all liquid into a dry, odorless powder which can be poured into a latrine in the morning.
courtesy Global Grad Show
You know that feeling when the hairs on the back of your neck stand up? Well grads from the Royal College of Arts (RCA), England created a wearable body extension called Ripple that they say creates a robotic frisson when computer sensors detect someone in a room is attracted to you.
courtesy Global Grad Show
Using product design as a grim wake up call, Yiannis Vogdanis from the Institute for Advanced Architecture of Catalonia created a collection of wearables that simulate environmental conditions such as hypoxia -- low oxygen -- in pollution hotspots around the world.
courtesy Global Grad Show
Students at MIT Media Lab, Massachusetts designed a musical instrument for zero gravity, using gyroscopes and sensors to create electronic musical notes.
courtesy Global Grad Show
An exercise in ergonomics, Olov Eriksson of Lund University created an angular machete for sugar cane laborers in Nicaragua, designed to reduce stresses on the body and last for generations.
courtesy Global Grad Show
No laundromat, no problem, if you can use your truck wheel as a washing machine. Members of the Art University of Isfahan, Iran were inspired by local truck drivers who are away from home for long stints and often use open water sources to wash clothes. The C.mile drum fits within the wheel and uses its rotations while driving to launder garments.
courtesy Global Grad Show
A collapsible water vapor collector, the Aquair by students from National Cheng Kung University, Taiwan, is designed for mountainous areas in tropical climates. The waterproof fabric unit is supported by bamboo struts and utilizes a fan and centrifuge to transport drinkable water down into a bucket.
courtesy Global Grad Show
An automated zipper might seem trivial, but not if you have Parkinson's disease. Eindhoven University of Technology students pitched their gadget as a solution for anyone who has difficulty putting on certain clothes -- from the elderly to women who love that dress but hate its unreachable back zipper.
courtesy Global Grad Show
Students from the RCA created a chocolatey morsel containing a disposable electronic pill -- a "Gutbot" -- that measures microorganisms in the stomach. Gut microbiota can impact sleep cycles, stress, digestive problems and the body's metabolism.
courtesy Global Grad Show
The Haj pilgrimage is undertaken by millions of Muslims converging on Mecca, Saudi Arabia every year. RCA student Hamza Oza created the Rehber location device to help pilgrim families keep track of family members, targeted at the young and elderly. It has a three-mile range and doesn't require a smartphone or rely on heavily-burdened mobile networks.
courtesy Global Grad Show
Julianna Probst from the University of Cincinnati proposed a Pelagic Oil Recovery (POR) system for subsurface oil spill cleanup. It uses magnetically charged nanoparticles and other filters to purify ocean water while allowing the collected oil to be reused.
courtesy Global Grad Show
Taking a worst-case-scenario approach to the problem of bee population collapse, students from Monash University, Australia designed a growing environment for plants that uses robotic arms and magnetically charged styluses to transfer pollen.
courtesy Global Grad Show
Also created by students from the Art University of Isfahan, this floatation device for flood victims attaches around street lights. It rises with the water level and is fitted with belts and straps to keep bodies secure.

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The Ig Nobel Prize – an alternative, unofficial Nobel for improbable scientific research – hands out awards for “achievements that first make people laugh, then make them think.” Sometimes the esoteric world of design can feel the same way. The usefulness of design can be immediately apparent: a pen that can detect cancer mid-surgery, for example. But a musical instrument engineered for zero gravity? Perhaps less so. Nonetheless, both are driven by the desire to improve lives.

The pen, musical instrument and more could be found at the Global Grad Show, part of the fourth Dubai Design Week, which ran from November 13-17. The design week has rapidly become a regional networking opportunity with large commercial value, but that hasn’t stopped grassroots innovation from pushing through.

The graduate show, curated by author and designer Brendan McGetrick, brought together 150 student projects from 100 universities including MIT, Harvard and the Royal College of Art, and countries as diverse as Jordan, Chile and Pakistan.

03:30 - Source: CNN
Why Dubai is a 'playground for design'

Schools, McGetrick told CNN, are “where one finds design in (its) purest and most potentially valuable form.”

“Free from the commercial pressures of professional life, the next generation of designers is channeling their craft to improve the world,” he added. “In the process, they provide a key to better understanding our environment and its enormous diversity of problems and opportunities.”

McGetrick argues the current generation of political leaders lacks the skills or knowledge to tackle our most pressing challenges. Young designers, on the other hand, just might.

“The next generations do not have the luxury to hope that these issues will be solved,” he said. “Lacking political and economic power, their response is to anticipate the worst and see how they might channel their talents and training to invent tools that we will need before we urgently need them.”

And so, to this year’s winner of the Global Grad Show’s Progress Prize 2018: Mirjam de Bruijn of the Design Academy Eindhoven for “Twenty,” a packaging system for dehydrated household products.

Figuring that most cleaning products were composed of “at least 80 percent water,” she stripped it from the equation. Paired with reusable bottles, De Bruijn’s solution reduces waste while in theory cutting shipping emissions by reducing product weight and volume.

Courtesy Global Grad Show
Twenty by Mirjam de Bruijn takes a dehydrated approach to household products.

Twenty has won multiple awards in the Netherlands and “every prize raises the hope that the market is ready for these kinds of sustainable products,” said De Bruijn in an email to CNN.

“Exhibiting in Dubai offered us feedback from a completely different culture and gave insights in how design might need to be changed for different cultures,” she added.

De Bruijn has enlisted social enterprise specialist Ilse Kwaaitaal to help develop the product range. They hope to finish further research within a year and launch products soon afterward. Whether De Bruijn will do this under the Twenty label or work with an existing brand is still to be decided.

So is this award-winning designer optimistic about the design community’s ability to tackle society’s biggest problems?

“I am sure we can,” she said. “But I think we should stop thinking that we can do it on our own. I think designers, scientists, technologists and entrepreneurs should start working together.

“As a designer, I see too many great solutions that are not being used because their design is bad, and I am sure that scientists or technologists (think) the same with some designs that look better than they actually work.”

To see more of our favorite innovations from the Global Grad Show, and discover more about Dubai Design Week 2018, scroll through the gallery and watch the video above.