Originally conceived in 2007 while apprenticing under renowned designer Bruce Mau at the Center for Massive Change, it represented a practical and low-cost way to supplement an inadequate and unreliable electrical grid in Tibet. By harnessing electricity generated by tourists who traditionally spin a multitude of prayer wheels every day, it would provide lighting along those streets and inside adjacent homes. This project evolved from theory to practice with showings of earlier models of the generator at the GRFY Studio in Chicago in 2008 and Milan Design Week in 2009.







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