YankoDesign

This Umbrella Has Solar Panels… And It Doubles As An Emergency Power Bank

Every time you open an umbrella, you’re deploying a canopy of wasted real estate. That dark stretched fabric sits between you and the sun, absorbing heat, blocking light, doing absolutely nothing with the energy raining down on it. For a surface that spends its entire working life pointed directly at the sky, that feels like a missed opportunity of the highest order.

Victoria García Moreno, a student at Universidad Casa Blanca in Mexico, decided to do something about it. Her James Dyson Award entry takes the umbrella’s canopy and lines it with waterproof solar panels, routing that captured energy down through the shaft and into an internal power bank housed in the handle. USB and USB-C ports let you plug your phone in while you walk. Sun protection and emergency charging, packaged into one familiar object.

Designer: Victoria García Moreno

The material logic here is sound, even if the execution remains at concept stage. Solar panels have been conformal and flexible enough for curved surfaces since the early 2000s, and the umbrella canopy offers a genuinely generous collection area compared to most portable solar products on the market. Foldable solar chargers sold today typically max out at panels smaller than a laptop screen. A full umbrella canopy, by comparison, gives you something closer to the kind of surface area that actually moves the needle on solar harvest. The panels García Moreno specifies are waterproof, which solves the obvious problem of a device that lives outdoors and frequently encounters rain.

All the electronics, the power bank, the activation circuitry, the output ports, sit inside the grip in a cylindrical housing that keeps the umbrella’s overall silhouette completely conventional. Two buttons sit on the front face: one to power the system, one to activate charging output. The USB and USB-C ports are recessed into the rear of the handle, keeping them protected when not in use. From the front, this reads as a slightly premium umbrella. The technology announces itself only when you need it to.

The honest limitation García Moreno’s concept faces is the gap between solar panel flexibility and the mechanical demands of a folding umbrella. Current flexible panel technology can handle curves, but repeated folding and unfolding introduces stress concentrations that standard rigid cells handle poorly. That’s a solvable engineering problem, and the James Dyson Award has a history of surfacing student concepts that identify the right problem before the manufacturing world catches up with a solution. For now, the Portable Outdoor Emergency Charger makes its case as a provocation worth taking seriously. The umbrella canopy has been wasted real estate for far too long, and someone had to say it.

The post This Umbrella Has Solar Panels… And It Doubles As An Emergency Power Bank first appeared on Yanko Design.

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