On a darkened on-ramp to the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway, I once hit a pothole so deep that it dented the rim of my Integra. Years later, on a stretch of Lafayette Street near City Hall, I hit another pothole with so much force that the Golf I was driving freaking deployed the passenger-side airbag. Google the word "pothole" and the number one link is to Wikipedia's description. The number two link is to New York City's Department of Transportation website.
The NYC DOT's Pothole Gang (probably not their official name) fixes up to 4,000 potholes a day. Their goal is to fix them as fast as they find them. And to find them, they rely on agitated motorists like me taking the time out of our day to report a pothole's location to the DOT's website.
Designer Ajay Rao doesn't live in New York (he hails from India), but he's proposed an interesting way to passively create a pothole database. As an entrant in Local Motors' BMW Urban Driving Experience Challenge, a design competition seeking ways to turn BMWs and MINIs into "a socially responsible machine that contributes to our global well-being," Rao conceptualized a system whereby drivers intentionally aim to hit potholes.
The idea behind Rao's "Beamer" concept is that the car's suspension is specifically designed to cope with pothole impacts, and once the pothole event occurs, a sensor goes off and your car radios the pothole's coordinates in to the authorities. For performing this service, the driver receives some type of tax credit or points on a BMW debit card.
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