‘Flow’ is a bamboo-made, self maintaining public lighting which operates on the principle of vertical wind turbine. The whole lamp disintegrates in nature excpet for the electronics – LEDs, wires and dynamo – which after time can be recycled without downcycling. Due to the simple junctions and mechanics, it can also be produced by the local unskilled workforce.
The light sources situated at the ends of the windblades can form continous lighting surface or slow, waving movements and play of light, depending on the speed of the rotation. Due to its spiral form, the lamp can hold the wind from every direction.
The reason of this lamp – Solving local problem with local resources The object was mainly designed for the Colombian coasts. I was inspired by a problem that I experienced in Cartagena – a coast-wise city in Colombia. The coast-side of the city is busy and safe by day, but in the night it is abandoned and dangerous due to the lack of public lighting, as the grid cannot be transmitted to the shores.
The wind dominating the shores in the whole year is an ideal resource for the lighting. Bamboo is one of the easiest to find and cheapest to produce raw material in Colombia and its utilization is not „eco-harmful” even at small and medium serial number products.

The windblades come to existence by cutting the bamboos into halves. The ends of the bamboos are cut angularly so the lamp lights downwards to the passer-bys and its motion can be seen from afar.
It was a socially important aspect that the lamp can be produced by the locals, thus it can integrate to the area’s cultural and economic rhythm. Hence I designed the buildup in the easiest way. This product can be assembled by the locals themselves, practically only an instruction guide has to be attached. During the development of the lamp my aim was the materialization of bamboo and to fit the object into the local culture’s forms.
After the design process I realized that there are lot of countries with similar problems. In the countries of the Third World the lack of public lighting is a common problem. The reason behind is that in these places the building of an electric network is too expensive or not even possible and there is not enough resource at hand: not enough raw materials, money and skilled workforce for the production. There is a need of lighting which is cheap, can be installed at places which cannot reach the network and can be easily produced with local resources. At these places the cheapest and highest in quantity raw material is bamboo, while the cheapest utility energy is wind energy.
If you would like to learn more about the Flow bamboo lamp, click here to get more information!
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Thanks for writing about this; do you happen to have a video of the lamp in action?
It’s a shame you don’t have a donate button! I’d most certainly donate to this brilliant blog! I suppose for now i’ll settle for book-marking and adding your RSS feed to my Google account. I look forward to brand new updates and will share this website with my Facebook group. Chat soon!
I purchase when people are selling.
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Muy buena idea pero ¿cuanto cuesta la implantación?
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~– I am really thankful to this topic because it really gives great information `;`
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Hi, I’m an architect from Ecuador, I’m really interested in your work.
I’m working for the Quito’s Goverment, and we are making a project for a place very important in the City, called “el Panecillo”, is an a small mountain were we have an sculpture of a “Virgen de Legarda”; the Project is about of a “Park for the Air”, “el Parque del Aire”, and I want to involve in it, an ecologic, and new ideas, like yours.
Please contact me.
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What did you uses for your dynamo?
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Thank you for posting. I really love the show
am interestedto learn more
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yoav
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HELENA OF MANGENGUEY
yjuni
I’m an industrial designer and I’m currently doing my master of design in New Zealand and i would like to use this product/service as one of my case studies and i would really appreciate if you cold contact me through my e-mail. It is a great idea, and it fits perfectly on my subject.
Thank you very much, hope to hear from you soon.
that is an excellent idea, how will it be backed up? what wind speed is required to generate enough watts? what happens if wind is too strong? how isit backed up? battery? mains electricity?
This lighting is really amazing, I wish it was used here in Austin.
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Very good and natural design.
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Sorry for being skeptical here:
How do you fit bearings in bamboo and keep them from losening?
What is the output of your turbine? By the look of it there is no way you get enough wattage for even weak street lights.
I don’t see any wires in the cut in half tubes, how do you convey electricity to the LEDs?
Why can’t the grid be transmitted to the shores in South America?
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Do you have any contacts in Canada? Bamboo thrives here when planted, although not indigenous. We have coastlines on 3 sides of our country, and I also see applications for mountainous areas. Wishing you continued success.
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Excelente idea, esperamos verla pronto en las ciudades
I would like to look into the amazing product! How much does it cost?
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These lights look like a great idea. Please let me know when you can ship to Canada. Could I become a distributor for Canada? Will they come in different heights and sizes. Please send contact info.
thank you
Ross
Hi, guys really interesting project, I wanted to ask you, was Colombia chosen because of anything or just as a mere coincidence? or do you have some presence in the country?
The proposal is interesting, the material local, not from the coastal regions, probably at least 12 hours on a car ride at least, but quite cheap material as it grows quite fast. When you talk about production will it be made for Colombia as well?
Also, beaches have very good windy conditions, Can this model be applied up to how slow wind blowing conditions? I mean can it be used somewhere other than the beach?
Congratulations on this original idea, read about it on Inhabitat.com. We would be happy to supply our line of LED lights for testing purposes, for free.
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This is a wonderful idea. Do you have plans on making these soon. They will sell quickly in USA. Nice to see one in my garden.