Organic, overgrown 🪸 forms and living, changing things don’t seem to fit with modular, recombination-ready design. Obviously!
Ummm… really? We wonder! Isn’t nature actually a master of… cycles? 🌳
We’d love to explore this, and potentially bring weird and beautiful shapes and living matter into our free modular system. Is it possible? Experiment with us.
… connect organic shapes and truly multipurpose parts.
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MULTIPURPOSE PARTS? Quick Check Box
Ikego is not about objects! It’s about “super universal parts” that allow the creation of many different objects. Parts that can be creatively reused in many ways and enable ‘nice part usage‘. And that give us ultimate creative freedom.

Infinite ♾️ objects from just a couple of parts?
Let’s find them through collaboration in an evolutionary process. This is the Ikego experiment.
We use construction toy systems as a metaphor because they are simple and easy to understand, which enables creative expression and collaboration. The brick system perfected by the LEGO company or erector sets come to mind as examples.

… a wall, a door, ⟳ a face, pavement, ⟳ a flower pot, a bucket …

… a wall, a leg, a pillar, a chassis, a screen, a handle …
„There is no trash in a LEGO room.“ Neil Gershenfeld (MIT, Center for bits and atoms), source
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How to create them? Here is one possible way to approach the search for such a part:
▷ 1 Start with the object you want to build. Create a useful solution. And make sure your part works for it.
Experiments with the Ikego system go back quite a while. In the beginning, we tried to create multipurpose parts first – we guessed – and then tried to build objects with them. That approach failed. The parts weren’t useful, the objects didn’t work. We only made progress once we flipped the process—starting with the objects and deriving the parts from them. For us, starting with the parts simply didn’t work. While this may not be a strict rule for everyone, it’s a perspective maybe worth considering.
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▷ 2 Find at least two alternate use cases for your parts. If you can’t find any, redesign the part until you can, and go back to step 1 ↑.
There is a famous story from the LEGO design department. When designer Mike Psiaki was tasked with designing the Porsche model (10295), he struggled to perfectly capture the curve at the rear end using existing LEGO parts. The element designer Yoel Mazur suggested introducing a new part into the catalog specifically for this purpose. However, Mike Psiaki was determined to find a solution using existing pieces. Despite this, the element designer created a new part anyway, which indeed solved the problem perfectly. Subsequently, all designers in the department were given time to play with this new part to see if there were any good ‘nice part usages’ (alternative applications) for it. At LEGO, before a new piece is approved for production, it has to demonstrate its ‘system-wide’ value, ensuring it isn’t just a specialized solution for one specific car. They tested if it is truly a multipurpose part. The result was a clear yes! Following this test, the part made it into the system. Today, there are indeed many applications for it.
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▷ 3 Pick a connection method that works for many other parts from the catalog (maybe the Ikego Grid). But you can also introduce a new method! Just make are sure it opens new lanes for the overall flexibility of the building system…
When introducing a new connection method, try to find one that combines easily with existing parts. Tolerance is key. If the method requires specific diameters or dimensions that cannot be replicated with hand tools, it is a slight disadvantage. However, this is not a dealbreaker. In such cases, try to use solutions that already exist on the market and are widely used → Hack Into Existing Systems! Ideally, these are common, easily accessible, standardized, well-documented, and already open (with expired patents). – Ikego is not about reinventing the wheel. It’s about putting wheels on the wagon that fit.
Btw. We also created some kind of white paper with deeper thoughts about design with multipurpose parts.
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inspiration for “pipes & hoses”


















Beginnings
parts in Organic Shapes
See Sets → | See all Parts →
Build on this and expand it.
Research with us, as an independent, a student or an intern. Or invite Ikego designers to design a solution for you!
“… modular systems are often about points of connections … shared joinery…”
