Wallpaper

Roya Mahboob

AR You are involved with a number of design programmes that are seeking solutions to some of the problems posed by the pandemic. Could you tell us about them, starting with the Afghan Dreamers’ emergency ventilator design project?

RM At the end of March, Abdul Qayoum Rahimi, then-governor of [the north-western Afghan province of] herāt, put out a design challenge because there were very few ventilators in the region, which had a large number of cases of coronavirus. He was talking with doctors in Herāt, who were aware that the situation might be out of control. So, they put out a challenge to design open-source emergency ventilators and asked universities, manufacturers and the Afghan Dreamers to participate. Five members of our team responded to the call and started to build the ventilators.

AR As many of the world’s most powerful and well-capitalised manufacturers have discovered, it is incredibly difficult to design and build emergency ventilators. Not only do the Afghan Dreamers face a tough design challenge, they are tackling it in deeply difficult conditions having begun under lockdown. What extra levels of difficulty has this added?

RM When the Afghan Dreamers started working on the ventilators, there was a lockdown in herāt with many restrictions. The shops had closed, and it was a big challenge to find parts as we

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Wallpaper

Wallpaper2 min read
Desert Rose
Our shoot location for this month’s fashion story is Aman Resorts’ Marrakech outpost, Amanjena, which we first covered in our November 1999 issue (W*23). Twenty five years on, the rose-hued resort, surrounded by groves of palm and olive trees, remain
Wallpaper2 min read
Editor’s Letter
Frequent flyers will attest to the power of those ruminative moments spent waiting to board an aircraft, so beautifully captured in this month’s soft luggage story, shot by Rosie Harriet Ellis. Others may detect a degree of ennui in the way the model
Wallpaper2 min read
Recover Versions
For the last 20 years, British-Indian collector Rajan Bijlani has been painstakingly tracking down furniture from the city of Chandigarh, designed by a group of modernists, led by Le Corbusier and Pierre Jeanneret. Located in the northern Indian stat

Related Books & Audiobooks