Volvo Cars designs lightweight, inflatable child seat

Volvo Cars has designed a lightweight and inflatable rearward-faced child seat concept using groundbreaking technology.

By Autocar Pro News Desk calendar 14 Apr 2014 Views icon2285 Views Share - Share to Facebook Share to Twitter Share to LinkedIn Share to Whatsapp

Volvo Cars has designed a lightweight and inflatable rearward-faced child seat concept using groundbreaking technology. Children’s car seats are historically bulky, hard to move and tedious to mount. According to Volvo, the new seat is safe, easy to pack and carry and will enable parents to use it in many situations not practical with the seats on the market today.

Lawrence Abele, design manager at the Volvo Monitoring and Concept Center in Los Angeles and the designer behind the new seat, said: “For me child safety is always the number one priority. For many, traveling with young children is a challenge; any assistance to simplify the parents’ life with young children is a great thing.”

The concept is also very convenient when travelling by taxi, rental car or bus, situations where people historically had to rely on the safety measures available.

 

Inflates in 40 seconds
The seat has an innovative pump system that is silent and efficient in its construction. The seat inflates in less than 40 seconds and deflates with an integrated pump. The total weight of the seat less than 5kg, half the weight of a contemporary seat, and it is constantly online via Bluetooth enabling a wide range of features, including remote controlled inflation. It fits into a weekend bag together with other necessities for a child.

“We used a unique material called drop-stitch fabric when creating the prototype of the seat. This fabric is very strong when inflated as it can be brought to a very high internal pressure. It is a quite common technology in the boating industry and was originally developed by the military in an effort to develop inflatable airplanesm,” says Maria Hansson, Project Manager at Volvo Monitoring and Concept Center in Los Angeles.


Rear-faced safest

The Inflatable Child Seat Concept faces the rear of the car, as it is the safest way for children to travel. A child's neck is under development and not as strong as an adult's neck. In a frontal impact collision, the head of a forward-facing car occupant is thrown forward inducing great strain on the neck. Children therefore need special restraints and to face the rear of the vehicle until at least 3-4 years of age.

"Actually, it would be better for all of us to travel facing the rear but given how cars are designed nowadays it's not feasible. Young children, however, can and should travel facing the rear of the car as long as possible," says Lawrence Abele. “The goal was to design a seat as safe, or safer, than anything on the market right now but second to that I want everyone, including kids to be exposed to great design every day."

 

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