August 16th, 2012 - 12:33 pm

From Sweden: The Invisible Helmet

There are lots of reasons to like Swedish women. They ride bicycles, for example. In Stockholm, 10 percent of all trips are made by bicycle.

Now comes one more reason: Two Swedish women have invented an invisible bike helmet.

Anna Haupt and Terese Alstin, co-founders of the award-winning industrial design company Hövding, began looking for ways to improve on traditional bicycle helmets for adults after Sweden passed a law requiring children under 16 wear protective headgear.

First, they queried bicyclists about why they didn’t wear a helmet. Typical responses included:

“Pain to carry about.”

“They look hideous.”

“No one else wears one.”

“Ruin your hair.”

Haupt and Alstin admit themselves that they “wouldn't be seen dead in a polystyrene helmet,” and the thought they might be forced to wear one by law caused significant worry.

The “invisible” helmet is actually a collar for bicyclists, worn around the neck. The collar contains a folded up airbag (shaped like a hood) that inflates if a bicyclist has an accident. The company’s website explains that the collar’s trigger mechanism is controlled by hi-tech, battery-powered sensors, which pick up the “abnormal” movements of a person in an accident.

The collar itself is covered by a removable shell that be can changed to match different outfits (Swedish women are also fashion-conscious) and they say they’ll be launching new designs regularly.

The helmets aren’t cheap at $595, and work just once. Then again, cheaper than a car or a trip to the hospital — or worse. On the market in Europe for less than a year, the company said earlier this spring that its has been contacted by five people who say the device saved their lives.

Focus Forward Films, which has a project highlighting innovative ideas about how we live and the people who make them come true, profiled Haupt and Alstin in a cool, 3-minute documentary short.