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Don't go off-road in electric car made of bamboo

Japanese companies have launched an electric car made of bamboo and paper. Featuring traditional Japanese styling, the Meguru can travel up to 25 miles on a two-hour charge.

Tim Hornyak
Crave freelancer Tim Hornyak is the author of "Loving the Machine: The Art and Science of Japanese Robots." He has been writing about Japanese culture and technology for a decade. E-mail Tim.
Tim Hornyak
2 min read
Kinki Knives Industries

It may look like a joke, but a group of companies in Japan is serious about selling an electric car made of traditional materials such as bamboo and paper.

The three-wheeled Meguru (Japanese for "to move") is more of an auto rickshaw than a car, and it's designed for use as a taxi. A driver sits in front, and one or two passengers sit in back on a couch.

Developed mainly by metalworking firm Yodogawa and blade maker Kinki Knives Industries in Osaka, the prototype was given distinctly Japanese styling with the help of Kyoto craftspeople.

Its frame is steel painted with vermilion lacquer, and it evokes the torii gates of Shinto shrines. The flooring is bamboo, and the folding fan doors are crafted from Japanese washi paper. At night, the interior lights glow through the paper doors, giving it a lantern-like appearance.

The Meguru's lithium ion battery takes two hours to charge on a household power supply, and it can travel about 25 miles on a charge. It has a top speed of about 25 mph, and it is registered as a road vehicle in Japan.

The firms plan to mass-produce the Meguru and sell it for less than $10,000. They're touting it as an example of the strength of smaller manufacturers in the Osaka region, which has been hit hard by the economic slump.

The Meguru probably wouldn't look out of place in Japanese cities like Kyoto and Nara, which have traditional neighborhoods as well as old-school rickshaws in the streets. The zero-emission ride will please those who care about the environment, and the paper and bamboo give it an air of old-world craftsmanship.

Just don't drive it off-road into a forest full of pandas.

(Via CScout Japan)