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Event News

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Young Brainport Summer School attracts young international talent

Brainport Eindhoven’s internationalisation is to get a further impetus. The fourth edition of the Young Brainport Summer School (YBSS) will be held from 10 to 17 August.

Forty gifted youngsters between the ages of 15 and 18 from 17 different countries worldwide are attending this educational summer week. They will be immersed in all the innovative activities and culture of the city and region. The goal is to give these top talents a ‘life-changing experience’. It is hoped they will remain connected to Brainport and be ambassadors for Eindhoven.

Well-known professors and representatives from the business world and knowledge institutions will guide the kids through the world of new technologies. There will be special demos, company visits, and challenging assignments. The programme also includes social activities, where the participants will get to know the city and region better.

‘An amazing experience’

A successful combination, according to the reaction of one of the 2018 participants. Vikram Bhatt from Canada, “YBSS is a truly amazing experience, a healthy mix of exhilarating social activities and brain hammering company workshops. It feels like you are in a completely new world as you explore Brainport Eindhoven. But you also feel at home as you socialise with other students with similar mindsets. All in all, YBSS helped me grow as an individual, and it is something I will never forget.”

“This is how the region reaches new talent needed for the future, “said Yvonne van Hest, Programme Manager at Brainport Development. “Due to the shortage in the technological labour market, many companies in Brainport Eindhoven have a shortage of well-trained staff. It is important to attract the largest possible pool of talent from students from at home and abroad. The YBSS is one of the ways to fill that talent pool.”

All participants receive a certificate at the end of the week.

Translator: Melinda Walraven

Source: Brainport.nl

Mayor is coming to open our 10-year celebration on 21 September

We just received the wonderful news that Eindhoven Mayor Jorritsma will do the honours of opening our 10-year celebrations on 21 September 2019.

Through his spokesperson we learned that Mayor Jorritsma would be happy to open our 10-year anniversary with a related speech.

We feel honoured and grateful and this marks a recognition for the work we have been doing in the last ten years to include also non-Dutch in our larger-Eindhoven society by providing news, background stories and events in English. We believe that once you are informed you can participate, contribute and thrive. All essential elements to feel at home and to connect to others in your neighbourhood.

Mayor Jorritsma is planned to take the stage around 14.30 on Saturday 21 September. After that he will be interviewed by one of our international editorial team members.

Here you can read the details of our event, here you can register for (free) entrance.

See you all on 21st September.

Eindhoven News team

 

Apple picking days start at Philips fruit garden

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The first apple picking day in the Philips fruit garden in Eindhoven took place on Saturday. From 10 a.m. visitors could come and pick apples and pears again in the Philips fruit garden.

“I love seeing the families pick apples together in my garden,” says owner Anneke Faes. “It’s nice to pick your own fruit and then take it home with you. That gives me a good feeling.”

Bumper Harvest

They have a bumper harvest this year, according to Anneke. “Despite the damage caused by birds and the sun, this year’s harvest is very good,” says Anneke. “I am proud that the public can reap the fruits of our labours.”

Apple picking days

The next apple picking days will be the following: 7 and 14 September from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., and 4, 11, and 18 September from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.

Source: Studio040

Translation: Nicole Cullinan

Dutch Design Week: more tickets sold online, yet fewer visitors

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Compared to last year’s Dutch Design Week (DDW), 50% more tickets were sold this year, while 4,000 fewer tickets were scanned at the cash register on Saturday. The organisers in Eindhoven find it difficult to tell whether this situation is related to the train problems.

DDW was off to a difficult start in the ‘Light City’ on Saturday morning. There were fewer trains to Eindhoven than usual due to the railway maintenance work and a collision. This caused long queues for visitors. However, a DDW spokeswoman said it is uncertain whether those “train problems” affected the number of visitors.

“The figures are clear – we sold more tickets online this year – 50% more than last year – but fewer tickets were scanned on Saturday. On the opening day, we scanned 11,000 tickets last year and 7,000 tickets this year. This indicates a difference of 36%. Is the poorer accessibility directly related to this situation, though? Who knows?”

Striking

The spokeswoman still finds the decrease striking: “The weather was good and therefore could not have caused it. The program offers exactly as much beauty as in other years. I don’t have a real explanation for the fewer number of visitors. Let’s just say that it’s striking that this coincides with the fact that fewer trains were running on Saturday.”

Source: www.omroepbrabant.nl

Translator: Shufei

Editor: Melinda Walraven

Region represented at Graduation Show

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There are more than 30 different nationalities among the 181 graduates at the Design Academy’s Graduation Show 2019. Among all these graduation projects is one that deals with the city of Eindhoven – Sense of Place, by Bloeme Groenewold.

Bloeme has divided Eindhoven up based on emotions. She asked 150 people from Eindhoven how they feel about certain places in the city. Stadhuisplein, for example, is a bit of a sad place. But at the same time, it gives a feeling of freedom. This is because of the skaters who skate there every day.

In Woensel, there is a feeling of belonging, thanks to the people from a wide range of cultures that live in the area. At the same time, those people sometimes miss the customs of their homeland. Each area in Eindhoven has its own feeling, and Bloeme has mapped this out using colourful objects.

Intense

During Dutch Design Week (DDW), the Design Academy’s Bachelors and Masters students present their graduation productions. This takes place during the Graduation Show. According to graduate, Anne Kamps, the students work towards this event throughout their studies.

“It is very intense,” she says. “You get up in the morning and certainly do not feel completely rested”. However, she enjoys it enormously. The visitors are involved and ask a lot of questions. They sometimes even have a viewpoint of her work she had not even thought of yet.

Six-winged chicken, rotating pig, and meatless milking goat

Eindhoven Design Academy, Duthc Design Week, Graduation Show
Anne Kamps’ project. Photo credit: Studio040

Anne’s graduation project is in response to news about a six-winged chicken. The fast-food chain, KFC, is said to have developed a six-winged chicken. This is so they can get more wings from fewer chickens.

Many readers believe the news; among them, Anne. She wonders what kind of fantasy creatures can be imagined and what kind of fabulous animals actually exist.

The result is a book with a rotating pig ‘of which you can cut slices off more easily’. The meatless milking goat has also been given a place in her work. “I do not have a very strong opinion about my subject at all. I eat meat myself. Not so often, but sometimes I do. It is more about making visitors think about the meat industry. As consumers, they have the power to make their own choices. Sometimes they do not realise that”.

Not only abstract ideas

Many of the projects exhibited at the Graduation Show are abstract. They zoom in on society and make visitors think about social themes. But self-proclaimed ‘very down-to-earth’ graduate Malou Kremers thinks differently.

She made a sleeper-chair. This is a sofa bed which can fold into a chair. In no time at all, you can have a bed or an armchair in your living room. Practical, with no deeper meaning – just a handy, stylish piece of furniture.

The graduates’ works all vary. However, according to Marc Ruis of the Design Academy, there is indeed a connection in the exhibited work. Students are increasingly concerned about the future.

Nature and the environment, for example, are recurring topics. One graduate made new products out of flower waste. Another used human stools as manure. All 181 graduation projects can be seen during DDW in the old Campina factory on Kanaaldijk-Zuid in Eindhoven.

Source: Studio040

Translator: Bob

Editor: Melinda Walraven

 

parkrun officials visit Eindhoven

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 A team of parkrun officials visited Eindhoven last week. It was part of a larger tour of potential new parkrun venues across the Netherlands.

parkrun is a weekly timed event where participants can walk, jog or run a 5 kilometre route in a local park. It is free of charge and organised entirely by volunteers.

Founded in London 15 years ago, parkrun now exists in 21 countries worldwide. In September, parkrun announced its plans to launch new routes in the Netherlands in spring 2020.

As part of their visit, the parkrun team met with the volunteers who are designing and testing potential routes.

‘We had a fantastic visit to the Netherlands,’ says Deri Thomas, parkrun’s European Territory Manager. ‘We met some great teams and saw some stunning potential parkrun venues. Eindhoven was right up there and we’re excited to get started early in the spring.’

The volunteers also expressed their excitement. Jesus González, a wireless engineer at Philips, says, ‘after enjoying parkrun in other countries, we can finally say that parkrun will take place in the Netherlands’. González also says that the parkrun representatives ‘were very positive about the park and the surroundings. We are looking forward to it’.

Eindhoven’s parkrun event is expected to launch in late February or early March 2020 at Karpendonkse Plas.

 

Reporter: Rachael Vickerman

You may have to pay more for beer at Carnaval

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Are you going to a pub in the five days during Carnaval? Then make sure to take enough money. This year in many places in Eindhoven you will pay no less than €3 for a beer.

Within the hospitality industry, the ‘magic boundary’ for a beer is €3. The fact that several pubs and other food and drink establishments have now reached that limit has caused a wide range of reactions. “If my beer supplier raises his prices, I have no choice but to raise my own beer price as well”, Arjan Bouter, organiser of the Bavaria Bier Hal on Stadhuisplein, says.

In addition to the increased beer price from the supplier, €3 is a fair price for more reasons, according to Bouter: “Entrance is free, there is a DJ, and the toilet has to be paid for. And then it all has to look a bit nice. So it is logical that a fair price is asked for the beer, among other things”.

Not all will charge more

Cafe Altstadt on Stratumseind uses the beer price that they usually also use. This increased to €2.70 in January. “We have been waiting a very long time to raise our prices, but at a certain point we could not do otherwise”, Daphyd Sens, manager of Altstadt, says. “Three euros is too much money for me. I would only ask that if there was really no other way”. According to Sens, the average national price for beer is also around €2.70.

The question now is whether visitors are willing to pay €3. According to Bouter, the general ban on glass and cans during Carnival does not help either. “Beer from a plastic cup looks significantly less chic than it does in a glass”. Still, both business owners are not worried. “People will buy beer anyway, whether it costs a lot or a little”, Bouter says.

Source: Studio040

Translator: Bob

The world’s best solar car safely back in Eindhoven

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Solar Team Eindhoven’s solar car arrived home, in Eindhoven, yesterday in one piece after a boat trip from Australia.

The team from the Eindhoven University of Technology (TU/e) won the World Solar Challenge last year. This is a race in Australia for solar-powered cars. However, getting the car back to Eindhoven turned out to be quite a challenge.

The team had trouble finding a shipping company that was prepared to transport this piece of high-tech. During the race, Delft University of Technology’s car burst into flames. A spark has shut the car’s engine down.

Shippers not to keen to transport the car

The car’s battery is another sticky point, which was not mass-produced. The high safety requirements for carrying such a battery meant shippers were not eager to transport the vehicle.

The fact that the solar car named Stella Era would arrive in Eindhoven without damage was not a matter of course. In the run-up to the World Solar Challenge, the car’s solar panel was severely damaged during transport from the Netherlands to Australia. This damage put the team’s participation in the World Solar Challenge at risk.

“We are thrilled Stella Era is safe in the Netherlands again”, Katelijn van Kooten, the team’s Exterior Design Engineer, says. “Because of the bad luck with the transport on the way there, we were extra anxious”. The damage not only caused the team a lot of stress and extra work at the time. It was also a financial setback. Luckily the team was able to raise enough money through crowdfunding to replace the damaged panel.

The plan is that now that Stella Era is back in the Netherlands, the students will show off this winning car at all kinds of events. In this way, they hope to inspire people and the industry to switch to sustainable transport. When this will happen is unclear, taking the coronavirus measures into account.

Source: Studio040

Translator: Bob

Editor: Melinda Walraven

Comedian sells out Philips Stadium – 22 times

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Comedian, Rob Scheepers, will perform 22 gigs in the Philips Stadium. The first of which will be on Wednesday, 8 July. The funnyman announced this at a special press conference held at the stadium itself.

PSV spokesman, Thijs Slegers, convened the press conference. Former footballers, Björn van der Doelen and Edward Linskens, attended. And Dutch television and film actor, Frank Lammers, joined remotely.

Scheepers has had several shows and can be heard weekly on Radio Veronica. He said he’s the first to sell out the Philips Stadium 22 times. But there are only 100 seats available per performance.

Source: Studio040

Translator: Bob

Editor: Melinda Walraven

Dutch Design Week 2020 will take place entirely online

This year’s Dutch Design Week (DDW) will be held entirely online, with no live in-person events. Mayor of Eindhoven, John Jorritsma, and Monique List-de Roos from Eindhoven city council made this decision. It was largely based on the new stringent regulations given by the Dutch government during Monday evening’s press conference.

Veiligsheidregio Brabant, or ‘Safety Region Brabant’, a government department responsible for implementing public health and safety measures in the region also contributed to the decision. They say that moving DDW online is necessary due to the increasing number of coronavirus cases in the Netherlands. This is because hosting live events for groups of people, and the national and international travel that DDW brings about, risks increasing infection rates even further.

‘Saddens us deeply’

Dutch Design Foundation (DDF), the organisation behind DDW, say although they understand the decision, they are saddened. They initially hoped for a more ‘intimate’ version of the usual DDW ‘that would take place both live and digitally’. Martijn Paulen, DDF’s director says, ‘We knew this would be an odd year, but that the live festival now, with only two and half weeks to go, cannot take place at all saddens us deeply’.

‘Cutting the soul out of the city’

Jorritsma says that he appreciates DDF’s efforts to try and make a live event as safe as possible. He did not make the decision to cancel it lightly. For a city like Eindhoven where design is so central to its culture, he says cancelling events like DDW is like ‘cutting the soul out of the city’.

However, Jorritsma adds that ‘when I see the increasing number of infections in our city, with the images of the overflowing healthcare system in spring still vividly in mind’, he must make ‘fighting the virus and preventing new infections’ his priority. ‘Welcoming or facilitating large groups of people who visit DDW in the city’ does not line up with that priority. Likewise, councillor List-de Roos says ‘we cannot actively invite people to come to the city at this time; that is not responsible’.

Next steps

DDF is now busy working on building a digital platform to host an online version of DDW. Their main focus is on maintaining connections between audiences and designers in a digital world.

 

Translation: Rachael Vickerman

Source: Dutch Design Foundation and Eindhoven City Council press release

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