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Shopping cart

A shopping cart (American English), trolley (British English, Australian English), or buggy (Southern American English, Appalachian English), also known by a variety of other names, is a wheeled cart supplied by a shop or store, especially supermarkets, for use by customers inside the premises for transport of merchandise as they move around the premises, while shopping, prior to heading to the checkout counter, cashiers or tills.[1] Increasing the amount of goods a shopper can collect increases the quantities they are likely to purchase in a single trip, boosting store profitability.

A shopping cart held by a woman, containing bags and food.

In many cases customers can then also use the cart to transport their purchased goods to their vehicles, but some carts are designed to prevent them from leaving either the store or the designated parking area by magnetically locking the wheels. In many places in the United States, Canada and the United Kingdom, customers are encouraged to leave the carts in designated areas within the parking lot, and store employees will return the carts to the entrances. In some areas carts are connected by locking mechanisms that require the insertion of a coin or token to release an individual cart. Returning the cart to its designated area releases the coin to the customer.

Studies have shown that it is advisable for shoppers to sanitize the handles and basket areas prior to handling them or filling them with groceries due to high levels of bacteria that typically live on shopping carts.[2] This is due to the carts having a high level of exposure to the skin flora of previous users.

Design

 
A child-friendly shopping cart design

Most modern shopping carts are made of metal or a combination of metal and plastic and have been designed to nest within each other in a line to facilitate collecting and moving many at one time and also to save on storage space. The carts can come in many sizes, with larger ones able to carry a child. There are also specialized carts designed for two children, and electric mobility scooters with baskets designed for individuals with disabilities.

As of 2006, approximately 24,000 children are injured in the United States each year in shopping carts.[3] Some stores both in the U.S. and internationally have child carrying carts that look like a car or van with a seat where a child can sit equipped with a steering wheel and sometimes a horn. Such "Car-Carts" may offer protection and convenience by keeping the child restrained, lower to the ground, protected from falling items, and amused.[4]

Shopping carts are usually fitted with four wheels, however if any one wheel jams the cart can become difficult to handle. Most carts in the United States have swivel wheels at the front, while the rear wheels are fixed in orientation, while in Europe it is more common to have four swivel wheels. This difference in design correlates with smaller retail premises in Europe. The front part of the cart is often sectioned off in order to place household goods such as bleach, cleaning products etc. so that they do not mix with edible products.

An alternative to the shopping cart is a small hand-held shopping basket. A customer may prefer a basket for a small amount of merchandise. Small shops, where carts would be impractical, often supply only baskets, or may offer a small cart which uses an inserted shopping basket within the frame of the cart to provide either choice to a customer.

History

Development of first shopping cart by Sylvan Goldman

One of the first shopping carts was introduced on June 4, 1937, the invention of Sylvan Goldman, owner of the Humpty Dumpty supermarket chain in Oklahoma. One night, in 1936, Goldman sat in his office wondering how customers might move more groceries.[5] He found a wooden folding chair and put a basket on the seat and wheels on the legs. Goldman and one of his employees, a mechanic named Fred Young, began tinkering. Their first shopping cart was a metal frame that held two wire baskets. Since they were inspired by the folding chair, Goldman called his carts "folding basket carriers". Another mechanic, Arthur Kosted, developed a method to mass-produce the carts by inventing an assembly line capable of forming and welding the wire. The cart was awarded patent number 2,196,914 on April 9, 1940 (Filing date: March 14, 1938), titled, "Folding Basket Carriage for Self-Service Stores". They advertised the invention as part of a new “No Basket Carrying Plan." Goldman had already pioneered self-serve stores and carts were part of the self-serve retail concept.[6]

The invention did not catch on immediately. Men found them effeminate; women found them suggestive of a baby carriage. "I've pushed my last baby," an offended woman informed Goldman.[citation needed] After hiring several male and female models to push his new invention around his store and demonstrate their utility, as well as greeters to explain their use, shopping carts became extremely popular and Goldman became a multimillionaire.[citation needed] In urban areas like New York City, where transporting groceries home from the store's parking lot is more likely to involve walking and/or a trip by public transportation than a car ride, privately owned carts resembling Goldman's design are still popular. Instead of baskets, these carts are built to hold the paper bags dispensed by the grocery store.

Another shopping cart innovator was Orla Watson,[7] who invented the swinging rear door to allow for "nesting" in 1946.[8][9][10] Orla Watson continued to make modifications to his original design. Advice from his trusted business partners Fred Taylor, a grocery store owner in Kansas City,[11] and George O'Donnell, a grocery store refrigeration salesman, and the incorporation of Watson's swinging door yielded the familiar nesting cart that we see today using the "double-decker" approach.[12] Goldman patented a similar version of the cart with only one basket rather than the double-decker feature, which he called the "Nest-Kart" in 1948, over one year after Watson filed for his patent.[11] The Nest-Kart incorporated the same nesting mechanism present on the shopping carts designed by Watson, and an interference investigation was ordered by Telescope Carts, Inc. alleging infringement of the patent in 1948.[11] After a protracted legal battle, Goldman ultimately recognized Watson's invention and paid one dollar in damages for counterfeit, in exchange for which Watson granted Goldman an exclusive operating license (apart from the three licenses that had already been granted).[11]

In 1909, Bessie DeCamp invented a seat belt for chairs, go-carts or carriages.[13] This was well before shopping carts with child seating areas were invented. Goldman introduced a child seating area on shopping carts in 1947.[14][15] For whatever reason, it wasn't until 1967 that seat belts for shopping carts were introduced by David Allen. It was high tech for the time, because it was a retractable seat belt.[16]

Development of nesting carts by Orla Watson

 
Original patent documents of Orla Watson showing design of the nesting feature of the Telescope Cart. The rear of the cart swings forward when a cart is shoved into it, hence the nesting feature.
 
Nested carts being returned from a parking lot to a Target store by a cart pushing assist device

In 1946, Orla Watson devised a system for a telescoping (i.e., "nesting") shopping cart which did not require assembly or disassembly of its parts before and after use like Goldman's cart; Goldman's design up until this point required that the cart be unfolded much like a folding chair.[11] This cart could be fitted into another cart for compact storage via a swinging one-way rear door. The swinging rear door formed the basis of the patent claim, and was a major innovation in the evolution of the modern shopping cart. Watson applied for a patent on his shopping cart invention in 1946, but Goldman contested it and filed an application for a similar patent with the swinging door feature on a shopping cart with only one basket in 1948 which Goldman named the "Nest-Kart". After considerable litigation and allegations of patent infringement, Goldman relinquished his rights to the patent in 1949 to Watson and his company, Telescope Carts, Inc. realizing that the swinging rear door feature was the key to Watson's patent. Watson was awarded patent #2,479,530 on August 16, 1949.[17] In exchange, Goldman was granted an exclusive licensing right in addition to the three other licenses previously granted; Telescope Carts, Inc. continued to receive royalties for each cart produced by Goldman's company that incorporated the "nesting" design. This included any shopping cart utilizing his hinged rear door, including the familiar single basket "nesting" designs similar to those used in the present.[18]

Owing to its overwhelming success, many different manufacturers desired to produce shopping carts with the rear swinging door feature but were denied due to the exclusive license issued to Goldman.[citation needed] The federal government filed a lawsuit against Telescope Carts, Inc. in 1950 alleging the exclusive license granted to Goldman was invalid, and a Consent Decree was entered into where Telescope Carts, Inc. agreed to offer the same license to any manufacturer. Orla Watson and Telescope Carts, Inc. licensed their telescoping shopping cart design to several manufacturers throughout the 1950s and 1960s until the patent expired.

New developments

 
Mobile device shelf

In 2012, a driverless shopping cart was made by Chaotic Moon Labs.[19] The device, called "Project Sk8" or "Smarter Cart" was basically a cart fitted with Windows Kinect (to detect obstacles), and an electric drivetrain, and used in conjunction with a Windows 8 tablet. For smaller stores, shopping baskets with wheels can be used either as a large basket or a small cart. These carts are designed for indoor use only.

In 2017, a mobile device shelf was added to shopping carts at Target stores to support the digital in-store shopping experience. The shelf was invented and designed by Nick Dyer, a former employee of Target.[20]

 
EASY Shopper by Pentland Firth Software GmbH

The introduction of "EASY Shopper" in 2019 by Pentland Firth Software GmbH in partnership with the German retailer EDEKA represents another step in the evolution of shopping carts. Equipped with a tablet, barcode scanner, and cashierless checkout system, the smart shopping cart aims to provide customers with a more streamlined and convenient shopping experience.[21] The system utilizes computer vision to accurately track items in the cart and allow customers to scan and pay for their purchases as they shop, reducing the need to stand in line and wait to pay for their items. [22]

Retail store acceptance

Past studies determined that retailers who did not offer shopping carts such as Sears suffered lower sales in comparison to retailers who did use shopping carts.[23] Subsequent to the introduction of shopping carts and centralized checkout lines at Sears stores, the company noticed a correlating increase in sales.[24]

In 2004 British supermarket chain Tesco trialed shopping carts with user-adjustable wheel resistance, heart rate monitoring and calorie counting hardware in an effort to raise awareness of health issues. The cart's introduction coincided with Tesco's sponsorship of Cancer Research UK's fundraising event Race for Life.[25][26]

Also in 2004, shopping carts were identified as a source of pathogens and became a major public health concern.[to whom?] This was primarily due to the media spotlight on a Japanese research study revealing large amounts of bacteria on shopping carts.[27][28] Those findings were later backed by a University of Arizona study in 2007.[29]

In 2009 researchers developed prototypes of computerized context aware shopping carts by attaching tablet computers to ordinary carts. Initial field trials showed that the prototype's context awareness provided an opportunity for enhancing and altering the shopping experience.[30]

Some retailers, such as Target, have begun using carts fully made of recycled plastic with the only metal part being the wheel axles, drawing away from the established metal cart design. Target's cart has won design awards for its improved casters, interchangeable plastic parts to simplify repairs, and handles that improve maneuverability.[31] Other cart designs also incorporate additional features such as a cup holder for cold or hot drinks or a bouquet of flowers, along with other features such as a secure shelf for a tablet computer or mobile phone to allow the use of mobile coupons and circulars, or as seen in an all-plastic design created for the Wisconsin-based Festival Foods and also used by Whole Foods Market by Bemis Manufacturing Company, all of these features, along with extra rungs on the side rail designed to attach plastic bags or carry handles for beverages. Smaller half-sized carts for smaller shopping trips have also become common.[32]

Deposits

 
Shopping carts locked with a chain
 
Mechanism of a typical shopping cart lock

In many countries, the customer has to make a small deposit by inserting a coin, token or card, which is returned if and when the customer returns the cart to a designated cart parking point. The system works through a lock mounted on the handle of the cart, connecting it to a chain mounted on the cart in front of it when nested together, or to a chain mounted on a cart collection corral. Inserting the token unlocks the chain, and reinserting the chain locks it in place and ejects the token for user to retrieve.

One motivation behind the deposit system is to reduce the expense of employees having to gather carts that are not returned, and to avoid damage done by runaway carts. Another benefit is that carts are less likely to be removed from the store premises and abandoned in the surrounding neighborhood. Carts that are not returned may be returned voluntarily by a pedestrian, with the deposit coin acting as a reward.

Although almost ubiquitous in continental Europe and the UK, the deposit system is less common in Canada and has not been widely adopted in the United States, with the exception of some chains like ALDI, which require a $0.25 deposit. One of the first store chains to use the $0.25 deposit system in the US was the Real Superstore (a subsidiary of National Supermarkets) in the early 1990s.[33][circular reference] Other stores such as Costco and ShopRite also use the coin deposit system, but it is not used at all of their locations.

In Australia, deposit systems are common in some local government areas, as they have been made compulsory by local law.[34] Usually, all ALDI stores, and most Coles[35] and Woolworths[36] stores will have a lock mechanism on their carts that requires a $1 or $2 coin to unlock.

The deposit varies, but usually coins of higher value, such as 1, £1, or $1 are used. While the deposit systems usually are designed to accommodate a certain size of domestic coin, foreign coins, former currencies (like German D-Marks), or even appropriately folded pieces of cardboard can be used to unlock the carts as well. Cart collectors are also usually provided with a special key that they can use to unlock the carts from the cart bay and get the key back.

Some retailers sell "tokens" as an alternative to coins, often for charity. Merchandising companies also offer branded shopping tokens as a product.

Theft prevention

Shopping cart theft can be a costly problem with stores that use them. The carts, which typically cost between $75 and $150 each, with some models costing $300–400, are removed by people for various purposes. To prevent theft, estimated at $800 million worldwide per annum, stores use various security systems as discussed below.[37]

Cart retrieval service

Most retailers in North America[citation needed] utilize a cart retrieval service, which collects carts found off the store's premises and returns them to the store for a fee. The primary strength of this system is the ability of pedestrian customers to take purchases home and allow retailers to recapture abandoned carts in a timely manner at a fraction of the cost of a replacement cart. It also allows retailers to maintain their cart inventories without an expensive capital outlay.[38] A drawback of this method is that it is reactive, instead of proactively preventing the carts from leaving the store premises.[37]

Electronic and magnetic

Electronic systems are sometimes used by retailers. Each shopping cart is fitted with an electronic locking wheel clamp, or "boot".[39] A transmitter with a thin wire is placed around the perimeter of the parking lot, and the boot locks when the cart leaves the designated area. Store personnel must then deactivate the lock with a handheld remote control to return the cart to stock. Often, a line is painted in front of the broadcast range to warn customers that their cart will stop when rolled past the line. However, these systems are very expensive to install and although helpful, are not foolproof. The wheels can be lifted over the electronic barrier and/or pushed hard enough that the locks break.[37][40] There are also safety concerns if the person pushing the trolley is running, and also if the trolley doesn't lock and is taken onto a road, locking due to magnetic materials under the road. Some cities have required retailers to install locking wheel systems on their shopping carts. In some cases, electronic systems companies have encouraged passage of such laws to create a captive audience of potential customers.[41]

Physical

A low-tech form of theft prevention utilizes a physical impediment, such as vertical posts at the store entrance to keep carts from being taken into the parking lot. This method also impedes physically disabled customers, which may be illegal in many jurisdictions. For example, in the United States it would be a violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990.[40]

Another method is to mount a pole taller than the entrance, onto the shopping cart, so that the pole will block exit of the cart. However, this method requires that the store aisles be higher than the pole, including lights, piping, any overhead signage and fixtures. It also prevents customers from carting their purchases to their cars in the store's carts. Many customers learn to bring their own folding or otherwise collapsible cart with them, which they can usually hang on the store's cart while shopping.

A further system is to use a cattle grid style system. All pedestrian exits have specially designed flooring tiles, which, along with specially designed wheels on the cart, will immobilize the cart as they roll onto them. Like the magnetic systems, this can easily be overcome by lifting the cart over the tiles.

Name

 
Carriage return at a Saugus, Massachusetts Stop & Shop.

The names of a shopping cart vary by region. The following names are region specific names for shopping carts. Many of these names may be used alone or in descriptive phrases such as grocery ____, shopping ____, or supermarket _____ for disambiguation:[42]

For disabled people

Special electronic shopping carts are provided by many retailers for the elderly or disabled people. These are essentially electric wheelchairs with an attached basket. They allow customers to navigate around the store and collect items.

Manually powered carts are also available specifically designed for use by wheelchair users.[43][44] A still-to-be-implemented aid for people with disabilities is the addition of a guide wheel at the center of rotation of a cart with four caster wheels. In order to allow the nesting of carts to be unhindered, this guide wheel is attached to the front of the cart with a piece of spring steel which bends under the cart's weight.[45]

Conceptual detours of the shopping cart in art, design and consumerism

 
Hanging file, designed by Otl Aicher, manufactured by Brüder Siegel, Leipheim
 
Homeless man with transfunctionalized and transformed shopping cart in Paris
 
Diamond Chair by Harry Bertoia
 
Homeless man with transfunctionalized and transformed shopping cart in Tokyo

Shopping cart manufacturers such as Caddie, Wanzl or Brüder Siegel maintained intensive direct and indirect mutual business relations with artists, graphic designers, industrial and furniture designers such as Charles Eames, Harry Bertoia, or Verner Panton since the market launch of the shopping cart - not only for new and further developments of their own shopping carts and wire basket goods, but also for advertising and PR purposes. Olivier Mourgue,[46] Otl Aicher, Stiletto [fr][47] as well as other artists and designers had wire furniture or artwork made by shopping cart manufacturers.[48]

One of the most famous thematizations of a shopping cart in art is the 1970 sculpture "Supermarket Lady" by US pop artist Duane Hanson, which is critical of consumerism.[49][50]

In 1983, the neoist "one-man artist group" Stiletto Studio,s[47] from Berlin converted a 'stray' shopping cart into an 'inverted' cantilever-wire chair on the principle of objet trouvé. As a design simulation critical of consumer culture, Stiletto's ironically titled "Consumer's Rest" Lounge Chair[47][51][52][53][54] recurred to the fact that Eames' and Bertoia's wire furniture were already over-aestheticized adaptations of the contemporary advent of shopping carts in the United States, and thus were themselves already recursions to the consumer revolutionary context of the International Style in architecture and design.[55][56][57]

By far the most stolen shopping carts that are not returned and left outside their location, however, are misappropriated by occasional subsequent and secondary users without any artistic or cultural-critical ready-made intentions as emergency solutions - among other things as improvised pieces of furniture (for example, as laundry baskets), or universal nomadic furniture[58] for the household goods of the homeless, or, ignoring the fact that the zinc and plastic coatings of the wire surfaces are harmful to health when heated, as ad hoc barbecue grills.

See also

References

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  2. ^ VanNest, Heather (March 2, 2011). "Carts one of dirtiest places in grocery store, study says". USATODAY.com. Retrieved March 31, 2016.
  3. ^ Gary A. Smith, MD, DrPH (2006). "Shopping Cart–Related Injuries to Children". Pediatrics. American Academy of Pediatrics. Retrieved June 20, 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. ^ "Shopping Cart". encyclopedia.pub. Retrieved March 8, 2023.
  5. ^ . The Great Idea Finder. The Great Idea Finder. April 24, 2007. Archived from the original on December 21, 2017. Retrieved June 20, 2012.
  6. ^ Crockett, Zachary (February 18, 2016). "How a Basket on Wheels Revolutionized Grocery Shopping". Priceconomics. Retrieved March 8, 2016.
  7. ^ Orla Watson Invented the Grocery Cart with a Basket. November 16, 2003. American Profile.
  8. ^ Terry P. Wilson, The Cart that Changed the World: The Career of Sylvan N. Goldman (University of Oklahoma Press, 1978). ISBN 978-0-8061-1496-5
  9. ^ Catherine Grandclément, "Wheeling One's Groceries Around the Store: The Invention of the Shopping Cart, 1936-1953", in Warren Belasco and Roger Horowitz (eds.), Food Chains: From Farmyard to Shopping Cart (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2008), pp. 233-251. ISBN 978-0-8122-4128-0
  10. ^ Ted Morgan, On Becoming American: A Celebration of What it Means and How it Feels (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1978, pp. 45-6). ISBN 978-0-395-26283-2
  11. ^ a b c d e Catherine Grandclément (2006). Wheeling food products around the store… and away: the invention of the shopping cart, 1936-1953 . CSI Working Papers Series.
  12. ^ Smithsonian Snapshot: Telescoping Shopping Cart, c. 1949. Newswise.com.
  13. ^ Child's-chair safety device - Bessie DeCamp - patent #944,020
  14. ^ "Unarco--Cart History". Retrieved March 31, 2016.
  15. ^ Phil Ament. . Ideafinder.com. Archived from the original on December 21, 2017. Retrieved March 31, 2016.
  16. ^ Safety retaining belt for shopping carts – David L. Allen – patent #3,550,136
  17. ^ "ArchPatent". ArchPatent. Retrieved April 7, 2013.[permanent dead link]
  18. ^ Jeanne Sklar. . Amhistory.si.edu. Archived from the original on October 12, 2018. Retrieved April 7, 2013.
  19. ^ "Microsoft Kinect Games Grocery Shopping at Texas Whole Foods". WIRED. February 27, 2012. Retrieved March 31, 2016.
  20. ^ US9637152B2, Dyer, Nicholas John & Abel, Stacy Lee, "Support shelf for a shopping cart and associated shopping assembly", issued 2017-05-02 
  21. ^ Warentest, Stiftung. "Einkaufs-App Edeka Easy Shopper im Schnelltest: Keine Hektik an der Kasse mehr". www.test.de (in German). Retrieved February 13, 2023.
  22. ^ Martin, Cristina (January 16, 2023). "Smart shopping trolleys will enhance your business and promote customer retention - Retail Gazette". www.retailgazette.co.uk. Retrieved February 13, 2023.
  23. ^ Assortment (referencing a study by ) Influence Of The Shopping Cart November 8, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, Retrieved on May 23, 2011.
  24. ^ Dr. Steve Vitucci, Texas A&M University – Central Texas Sears update case notes, Retrieved on May 23, 2011.
  25. ^ "Trolley offers supermarket workout". BBC News. BBC. April 28, 2004. Retrieved June 20, 2012.
  26. ^ Elana Bowman. "Trim Trolley Takes Off The Weight While You Grocery Shop". Inventor Spot. Aha Cafe LLC. Retrieved June 20, 2012.
  27. ^ Loeb, Heather (April 21, 2015). "Eliminate Germs from Your Life". Menshealth.com. Retrieved April 4, 2016.
  28. ^ African Journal of Microbiology Research Vol. 5(23), pp. 3998-4003, October 23, 2011
  29. ^ Vincent Sobotka (March 14, 2011.) Study: E.coli contamination found on half of shopping carts. Digital Journal.
  30. ^ Black, D., Clemmensen, N. J., and Skov, M. B. (2009) Shopping in the Real World: Interacting with a Context-Aware Shopping Trolley, Proc. of Mobile Interaction with the Real World. Shopping in the Real World: Interacting with a Context-Aware Shopping Trolley
  31. ^ Cook, Kim (September 7, 2011). "Shopping cart advances just keep rolling along". MSNBC. Retrieved September 8, 2011.
  32. ^ Jansen, Kerri (June 14, 2016). "Bemis develops line of all-plastic shopping carts". Plastics News. Retrieved October 31, 2016.
  33. ^ National Supermarkets
  34. ^ Connery, Georgina (February 16, 2017). "ACT to push supermarkets to introduce coin-lock system for trolleys". The Canberra Times. Retrieved December 31, 2020.
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  39. ^ US patent|5598144A
  40. ^ a b William, Dara Akiko (April 20, 1999). . Los Angeles Daily News. Gale Group. Archived from the original on May 11, 2012. Retrieved May 5, 2009.
  41. ^ Elmahrek, Adam (February 24, 2011). "Santa Ana Shopping Cart Law Shows Extent of Mayor's Business Dealings". Voice of OC. Retrieved September 8, 2011.
  42. ^ "The Cambridge Online Survey of World Englishes". Tekstlab.uio.no. Retrieved March 31, 2016.
  43. ^ "Trolley for use with a wheelchair, United States Patent 4555124". FPO. FreePatentsOnline.com. Retrieved June 20, 2012.
  44. ^ . QHDC Australia. QHDC Australia PTY LTD. Archived from the original on November 10, 2014. Retrieved July 29, 2014.
  45. ^ "Guide wheel assembly for carts, United States Patent 7198279". FPO. FreePatentsOnline.com. Retrieved June 20, 2012.
  46. ^ "Le premier caddie de l'histoire du design à avoir été transformé en chaise". June 5, 2012.
  47. ^ a b c Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum. "Stiletto Studios". Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved November 11, 2022.
  48. ^ "In 1989, Stiletto commissioned a shopping trolley manufacturer to produce the Consumer's Rest industrially as a limited multiple. Through this conceptual strategem, he further withdrew his work from all commonly used criteria for classification attempts applied to artistic ready-mades and product design so far." (in: Vitra Design Museum: Atlas of Furniture Design, Weil am Rhein, Germany, 2019, on CONSUMER'S REST Lounge Chair by Stiletto (Stiletto Studio,s), page 726)
  49. ^ . Archived from the original on April 14, 2009.
  50. ^ http://ludwigforum.de/museum/restauratorenwerkstatt/die-restaurierung-der-supermarket-lady-von-duane-hanson/[bare URL]
  51. ^ . Archived from the original on December 21, 2016.
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  53. ^ . Archived from the original on June 27, 2018.
  54. ^ Martina Fineder, Thomas Geisler, Sebastian Hackenschmidt: Nomadic Furniture 3.0 – Neues befreites Wohnen? / New Liberated Living? (page 89ff), MAK Studies 23, Wien, und Niggli Verlag, Zürich, 2017, ISBN 978-3-721209617
  55. ^ "While other German artists and even designers at the time also worked with found objects, Stiletto emphasizes that his approach differed from that of the exponents of New German Design [de], who actually coined the term. He regards the Consumer’s Rest as a work of conceptual art which critiques design, remarking: ‘In the beginning, I simply wanted to transcycle a standard shopping cart into an authentistic Wire Chair imitation. After all, it was Eames and Bertoia, not me, who redesigned shopping carts as furniture. And they did so in a country and at a time when wastefully packaged mass consumption and overflowing shopping carts weren’t yet considered antisocial but rather an aspirational lifestyle in an era of booming capitalism.’ Indeed, Charles Eames mentioned the construction principle of the shopping trolley as one of his inspirations for the Wire Chair (>477)." (in: Vitra Design Museum: Atlas of Furniture Design, Weil am Rhein, Germany, 2019, on CONSUMER'S REST Lounge Chair by Stiletto (Stiletto Studio,s), page 726)
  56. ^ "With his 1983 Consumer’s Rest Lounge Chair Stiletto created one of the true pin up pieces of the era, a work which attracted a lot of media attention thus helping others find publicity and a work which has since gone on to be included in the permanent collection of numerous leading design museums including the Vitra Design Museum, the V&A London, and the Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum in New York." in: Schrill Bizarr Brachial. Das Neue Deutsche Design [de] der 80er Jahre at the Bröhan Museum Berlin, 2014
  57. ^ Paragraph From Folding Chair to Shopping Cart in Claudia Falter: "Shopping," p. 1007ff u. fig. p. 1017, in In the Designer Park | Life in Artificial Worlds, Kai Buchholz and Klaus Wolbert (eds.), Häusser.media Verlag, Darmstadt, 2004, ISBN 3-89552-100-0
  58. ^ Victor Papanek & Jim Hennessey (1973). Nomadic furniture: how to build and where to buy lightweight furniture that folds, collapses, stacks, knocks-down, inflates or can be thrown away and re-cycled, New York, Pantheon Books. ISBN 0-394-70228-X

External links

shopping, cart, this, article, about, physical, shopping, carts, digital, shopping, carts, software, shopping, trolley, redirects, here, wheeled, shopping, shopping, caddy, beth, orton, album, shopping, trolley, trundler, redirects, here, confused, with, hand,. This article is about physical shopping carts For digital shopping carts see Shopping cart software Shopping trolley redirects here For the wheeled shopping bag see Shopping caddy For the Beth Orton album see Shopping Trolley Trundler redirects here Not to be confused with Hand truck This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Shopping cart news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2007 Learn how and when to remove this template message A shopping cart American English trolley British English Australian English or buggy Southern American English Appalachian English also known by a variety of other names is a wheeled cart supplied by a shop or store especially supermarkets for use by customers inside the premises for transport of merchandise as they move around the premises while shopping prior to heading to the checkout counter cashiers or tills 1 Increasing the amount of goods a shopper can collect increases the quantities they are likely to purchase in a single trip boosting store profitability A shopping cart held by a woman containing bags and food In many cases customers can then also use the cart to transport their purchased goods to their vehicles but some carts are designed to prevent them from leaving either the store or the designated parking area by magnetically locking the wheels In many places in the United States Canada and the United Kingdom customers are encouraged to leave the carts in designated areas within the parking lot and store employees will return the carts to the entrances In some areas carts are connected by locking mechanisms that require the insertion of a coin or token to release an individual cart Returning the cart to its designated area releases the coin to the customer Studies have shown that it is advisable for shoppers to sanitize the handles and basket areas prior to handling them or filling them with groceries due to high levels of bacteria that typically live on shopping carts 2 This is due to the carts having a high level of exposure to the skin flora of previous users Contents 1 Design 2 History 2 1 Development of first shopping cart by Sylvan Goldman 2 2 Development of nesting carts by Orla Watson 2 3 New developments 3 Retail store acceptance 4 Deposits 5 Theft prevention 5 1 Cart retrieval service 5 2 Electronic and magnetic 5 3 Physical 6 Name 7 For disabled people 8 Conceptual detours of the shopping cart in art design and consumerism 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksDesign Edit A child friendly shopping cart design Most modern shopping carts are made of metal or a combination of metal and plastic and have been designed to nest within each other in a line to facilitate collecting and moving many at one time and also to save on storage space The carts can come in many sizes with larger ones able to carry a child There are also specialized carts designed for two children and electric mobility scooters with baskets designed for individuals with disabilities As of 2006 approximately 24 000 children are injured in the United States each year in shopping carts 3 Some stores both in the U S and internationally have child carrying carts that look like a car or van with a seat where a child can sit equipped with a steering wheel and sometimes a horn Such Car Carts may offer protection and convenience by keeping the child restrained lower to the ground protected from falling items and amused 4 Shopping carts are usually fitted with four wheels however if any one wheel jams the cart can become difficult to handle Most carts in the United States have swivel wheels at the front while the rear wheels are fixed in orientation while in Europe it is more common to have four swivel wheels This difference in design correlates with smaller retail premises in Europe The front part of the cart is often sectioned off in order to place household goods such as bleach cleaning products etc so that they do not mix with edible products An alternative to the shopping cart is a small hand held shopping basket A customer may prefer a basket for a small amount of merchandise Small shops where carts would be impractical often supply only baskets or may offer a small cart which uses an inserted shopping basket within the frame of the cart to provide either choice to a customer History EditDevelopment of first shopping cart by Sylvan Goldman Edit One of the first shopping carts was introduced on June 4 1937 the invention of Sylvan Goldman owner of the Humpty Dumpty supermarket chain in Oklahoma One night in 1936 Goldman sat in his office wondering how customers might move more groceries 5 He found a wooden folding chair and put a basket on the seat and wheels on the legs Goldman and one of his employees a mechanic named Fred Young began tinkering Their first shopping cart was a metal frame that held two wire baskets Since they were inspired by the folding chair Goldman called his carts folding basket carriers Another mechanic Arthur Kosted developed a method to mass produce the carts by inventing an assembly line capable of forming and welding the wire The cart was awarded patent number 2 196 914 on April 9 1940 Filing date March 14 1938 titled Folding Basket Carriage for Self Service Stores They advertised the invention as part of a new No Basket Carrying Plan Goldman had already pioneered self serve stores and carts were part of the self serve retail concept 6 The invention did not catch on immediately Men found them effeminate women found them suggestive of a baby carriage I ve pushed my last baby an offended woman informed Goldman citation needed After hiring several male and female models to push his new invention around his store and demonstrate their utility as well as greeters to explain their use shopping carts became extremely popular and Goldman became a multimillionaire citation needed In urban areas like New York City where transporting groceries home from the store s parking lot is more likely to involve walking and or a trip by public transportation than a car ride privately owned carts resembling Goldman s design are still popular Instead of baskets these carts are built to hold the paper bags dispensed by the grocery store Another shopping cart innovator was Orla Watson 7 who invented the swinging rear door to allow for nesting in 1946 8 9 10 Orla Watson continued to make modifications to his original design Advice from his trusted business partners Fred Taylor a grocery store owner in Kansas City 11 and George O Donnell a grocery store refrigeration salesman and the incorporation of Watson s swinging door yielded the familiar nesting cart that we see today using the double decker approach 12 Goldman patented a similar version of the cart with only one basket rather than the double decker feature which he called the Nest Kart in 1948 over one year after Watson filed for his patent 11 The Nest Kart incorporated the same nesting mechanism present on the shopping carts designed by Watson and an interference investigation was ordered by Telescope Carts Inc alleging infringement of the patent in 1948 11 After a protracted legal battle Goldman ultimately recognized Watson s invention and paid one dollar in damages for counterfeit in exchange for which Watson granted Goldman an exclusive operating license apart from the three licenses that had already been granted 11 In 1909 Bessie DeCamp invented a seat belt for chairs go carts or carriages 13 This was well before shopping carts with child seating areas were invented Goldman introduced a child seating area on shopping carts in 1947 14 15 For whatever reason it wasn t until 1967 that seat belts for shopping carts were introduced by David Allen It was high tech for the time because it was a retractable seat belt 16 Development of nesting carts by Orla Watson Edit Original patent documents of Orla Watson showing design of the nesting feature of the Telescope Cart The rear of the cart swings forward when a cart is shoved into it hence the nesting feature Nested carts being returned from a parking lot to a Target store by a cart pushing assist device In 1946 Orla Watson devised a system for a telescoping i e nesting shopping cart which did not require assembly or disassembly of its parts before and after use like Goldman s cart Goldman s design up until this point required that the cart be unfolded much like a folding chair 11 This cart could be fitted into another cart for compact storage via a swinging one way rear door The swinging rear door formed the basis of the patent claim and was a major innovation in the evolution of the modern shopping cart Watson applied for a patent on his shopping cart invention in 1946 but Goldman contested it and filed an application for a similar patent with the swinging door feature on a shopping cart with only one basket in 1948 which Goldman named the Nest Kart After considerable litigation and allegations of patent infringement Goldman relinquished his rights to the patent in 1949 to Watson and his company Telescope Carts Inc realizing that the swinging rear door feature was the key to Watson s patent Watson was awarded patent 2 479 530 on August 16 1949 17 In exchange Goldman was granted an exclusive licensing right in addition to the three other licenses previously granted Telescope Carts Inc continued to receive royalties for each cart produced by Goldman s company that incorporated the nesting design This included any shopping cart utilizing his hinged rear door including the familiar single basket nesting designs similar to those used in the present 18 Owing to its overwhelming success many different manufacturers desired to produce shopping carts with the rear swinging door feature but were denied due to the exclusive license issued to Goldman citation needed The federal government filed a lawsuit against Telescope Carts Inc in 1950 alleging the exclusive license granted to Goldman was invalid and a Consent Decree was entered into where Telescope Carts Inc agreed to offer the same license to any manufacturer Orla Watson and Telescope Carts Inc licensed their telescoping shopping cart design to several manufacturers throughout the 1950s and 1960s until the patent expired New developments Edit Mobile device shelf In 2012 a driverless shopping cart was made by Chaotic Moon Labs 19 The device called Project Sk8 or Smarter Cart was basically a cart fitted with Windows Kinect to detect obstacles and an electric drivetrain and used in conjunction with a Windows 8 tablet For smaller stores shopping baskets with wheels can be used either as a large basket or a small cart These carts are designed for indoor use only In 2017 a mobile device shelf was added to shopping carts at Target stores to support the digital in store shopping experience The shelf was invented and designed by Nick Dyer a former employee of Target 20 EASY Shopper by Pentland Firth Software GmbH The introduction of EASY Shopper in 2019 by Pentland Firth Software GmbH in partnership with the German retailer EDEKA represents another step in the evolution of shopping carts Equipped with a tablet barcode scanner and cashierless checkout system the smart shopping cart aims to provide customers with a more streamlined and convenient shopping experience 21 The system utilizes computer vision to accurately track items in the cart and allow customers to scan and pay for their purchases as they shop reducing the need to stand in line and wait to pay for their items 22 Retail store acceptance EditPast studies determined that retailers who did not offer shopping carts such as Sears suffered lower sales in comparison to retailers who did use shopping carts 23 Subsequent to the introduction of shopping carts and centralized checkout lines at Sears stores the company noticed a correlating increase in sales 24 In 2004 British supermarket chain Tesco trialed shopping carts with user adjustable wheel resistance heart rate monitoring and calorie counting hardware in an effort to raise awareness of health issues The cart s introduction coincided with Tesco s sponsorship of Cancer Research UK s fundraising event Race for Life 25 26 Also in 2004 shopping carts were identified as a source of pathogens and became a major public health concern to whom This was primarily due to the media spotlight on a Japanese research study revealing large amounts of bacteria on shopping carts 27 28 Those findings were later backed by a University of Arizona study in 2007 29 In 2009 researchers developed prototypes of computerized context aware shopping carts by attaching tablet computers to ordinary carts Initial field trials showed that the prototype s context awareness provided an opportunity for enhancing and altering the shopping experience 30 Some retailers such as Target have begun using carts fully made of recycled plastic with the only metal part being the wheel axles drawing away from the established metal cart design Target s cart has won design awards for its improved casters interchangeable plastic parts to simplify repairs and handles that improve maneuverability 31 Other cart designs also incorporate additional features such as a cup holder for cold or hot drinks or a bouquet of flowers along with other features such as a secure shelf for a tablet computer or mobile phone to allow the use of mobile coupons and circulars or as seen in an all plastic design created for the Wisconsin based Festival Foods and also used by Whole Foods Market by Bemis Manufacturing Company all of these features along with extra rungs on the side rail designed to attach plastic bags or carry handles for beverages Smaller half sized carts for smaller shopping trips have also become common 32 Deposits Edit Shopping carts locked with a chain Mechanism of a typical shopping cart lock In many countries the customer has to make a small deposit by inserting a coin token or card which is returned if and when the customer returns the cart to a designated cart parking point The system works through a lock mounted on the handle of the cart connecting it to a chain mounted on the cart in front of it when nested together or to a chain mounted on a cart collection corral Inserting the token unlocks the chain and reinserting the chain locks it in place and ejects the token for user to retrieve One motivation behind the deposit system is to reduce the expense of employees having to gather carts that are not returned and to avoid damage done by runaway carts Another benefit is that carts are less likely to be removed from the store premises and abandoned in the surrounding neighborhood Carts that are not returned may be returned voluntarily by a pedestrian with the deposit coin acting as a reward Although almost ubiquitous in continental Europe and the UK the deposit system is less common in Canada and has not been widely adopted in the United States with the exception of some chains like ALDI which require a 0 25 deposit One of the first store chains to use the 0 25 deposit system in the US was the Real Superstore a subsidiary of National Supermarkets in the early 1990s 33 circular reference Other stores such as Costco and ShopRite also use the coin deposit system but it is not used at all of their locations In Australia deposit systems are common in some local government areas as they have been made compulsory by local law 34 Usually all ALDI stores and most Coles 35 and Woolworths 36 stores will have a lock mechanism on their carts that requires a 1 or 2 coin to unlock The deposit varies but usually coins of higher value such as 1 1 or 1 are used While the deposit systems usually are designed to accommodate a certain size of domestic coin foreign coins former currencies like German D Marks or even appropriately folded pieces of cardboard can be used to unlock the carts as well Cart collectors are also usually provided with a special key that they can use to unlock the carts from the cart bay and get the key back Some retailers sell tokens as an alternative to coins often for charity Merchandising companies also offer branded shopping tokens as a product Theft prevention EditShopping cart theft can be a costly problem with stores that use them The carts which typically cost between 75 and 150 each with some models costing 300 400 are removed by people for various purposes To prevent theft estimated at 800 million worldwide per annum stores use various security systems as discussed below 37 Cart retrieval service Edit Most retailers in North America citation needed utilize a cart retrieval service which collects carts found off the store s premises and returns them to the store for a fee The primary strength of this system is the ability of pedestrian customers to take purchases home and allow retailers to recapture abandoned carts in a timely manner at a fraction of the cost of a replacement cart It also allows retailers to maintain their cart inventories without an expensive capital outlay 38 A drawback of this method is that it is reactive instead of proactively preventing the carts from leaving the store premises 37 Electronic and magnetic Edit Electronic systems are sometimes used by retailers Each shopping cart is fitted with an electronic locking wheel clamp or boot 39 A transmitter with a thin wire is placed around the perimeter of the parking lot and the boot locks when the cart leaves the designated area Store personnel must then deactivate the lock with a handheld remote control to return the cart to stock Often a line is painted in front of the broadcast range to warn customers that their cart will stop when rolled past the line However these systems are very expensive to install and although helpful are not foolproof The wheels can be lifted over the electronic barrier and or pushed hard enough that the locks break 37 40 There are also safety concerns if the person pushing the trolley is running and also if the trolley doesn t lock and is taken onto a road locking due to magnetic materials under the road Some cities have required retailers to install locking wheel systems on their shopping carts In some cases electronic systems companies have encouraged passage of such laws to create a captive audience of potential customers 41 Physical Edit A low tech form of theft prevention utilizes a physical impediment such as vertical posts at the store entrance to keep carts from being taken into the parking lot This method also impedes physically disabled customers which may be illegal in many jurisdictions For example in the United States it would be a violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 40 Another method is to mount a pole taller than the entrance onto the shopping cart so that the pole will block exit of the cart However this method requires that the store aisles be higher than the pole including lights piping any overhead signage and fixtures It also prevents customers from carting their purchases to their cars in the store s carts Many customers learn to bring their own folding or otherwise collapsible cart with them which they can usually hang on the store s cart while shopping A further system is to use a cattle grid style system All pedestrian exits have specially designed flooring tiles which along with specially designed wheels on the cart will immobilize the cart as they roll onto them Like the magnetic systems this can easily be overcome by lifting the cart over the tiles Name Edit Carriage return at a Saugus Massachusetts Stop amp Shop The names of a shopping cart vary by region The following names are region specific names for shopping carts Many of these names may be used alone or in descriptive phrases such as grocery shopping or supermarket for disambiguation 42 cart or basket The United States Canada and the Philippines buggy Used by some in Southeast Michigan Western Pennsylvania where it is considered part of the region s dialect in the Southern United States and parts of Canada trolley the United Kingdom Ireland Australia New Zealand Malaysia Trinidad and Tobago South Africa and some regions of Canada Was also used in the Philippines carriage Used by some in the New England region of the United States barrae or coohudder Some places in Scotland bascart various regions wagon New York Hawaii trundler some places in New Zealand wheelbasket some places in the Eastern US notably Western Massachusetts For disabled people EditMain article Motorized shopping cart Special electronic shopping carts are provided by many retailers for the elderly or disabled people These are essentially electric wheelchairs with an attached basket They allow customers to navigate around the store and collect items Manually powered carts are also available specifically designed for use by wheelchair users 43 44 A still to be implemented aid for people with disabilities is the addition of a guide wheel at the center of rotation of a cart with four caster wheels In order to allow the nesting of carts to be unhindered this guide wheel is attached to the front of the cart with a piece of spring steel which bends under the cart s weight 45 Conceptual detours of the shopping cart in art design and consumerism Edit Hanging file designed by Otl Aicher manufactured by Bruder Siegel Leipheim Homeless man with transfunctionalized and transformed shopping cart in Paris Diamond Chair by Harry Bertoia Homeless man with transfunctionalized and transformed shopping cart in Tokyo Shopping cart manufacturers such as Caddie Wanzl or Bruder Siegel maintained intensive direct and indirect mutual business relations with artists graphic designers industrial and furniture designers such as Charles Eames Harry Bertoia or Verner Panton since the market launch of the shopping cart not only for new and further developments of their own shopping carts and wire basket goods but also for advertising and PR purposes Olivier Mourgue 46 Otl Aicher Stiletto fr 47 as well as other artists and designers had wire furniture or artwork made by shopping cart manufacturers 48 One of the most famous thematizations of a shopping cart in art is the 1970 sculpture Supermarket Lady by US pop artist Duane Hanson which is critical of consumerism 49 50 In 1983 the neoist one man artist group Stiletto Studio s 47 from Berlin converted a stray shopping cart into an inverted cantilever wire chair on the principle of objet trouve As a design simulation critical of consumer culture Stiletto s ironically titled Consumer s Rest Lounge Chair 47 51 52 53 54 recurred to the fact that Eames and Bertoia s wire furniture were already over aestheticized adaptations of the contemporary advent of shopping carts in the United States and thus were themselves already recursions to the consumer revolutionary context of the International Style in architecture and design 55 56 57 By far the most stolen shopping carts that are not returned and left outside their location however are misappropriated by occasional subsequent and secondary users without any artistic or cultural critical ready made intentions as emergency solutions among other things as improvised pieces of furniture for example as laundry baskets or universal nomadic furniture 58 for the household goods of the homeless or ignoring the fact that the zinc and plastic coatings of the wire surfaces are harmful to health when heated as ad hoc barbecue grills See also EditMotorized shopping cart Toy wagon Trolley disambiguation References Edit Definition of SHOPPING CART www merriam webster com Retrieved March 7 2023 VanNest Heather March 2 2011 Carts one of dirtiest places in grocery store study says USATODAY com Retrieved March 31 2016 Gary A Smith MD DrPH 2006 Shopping Cart Related Injuries to Children Pediatrics American Academy of Pediatrics Retrieved June 20 2012 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Shopping Cart encyclopedia pub Retrieved March 8 2023 Sylvan Goldman Fascinating facts about Sylvan Goldman inventor of the shopping cart in 1937 The Great Idea Finder The Great Idea Finder April 24 2007 Archived from the original on December 21 2017 Retrieved June 20 2012 Crockett Zachary February 18 2016 How a Basket on Wheels Revolutionized Grocery Shopping Priceconomics Retrieved March 8 2016 Orla Watson Invented the Grocery Cart with a Basket November 16 2003 American Profile Terry P Wilson The Cart that Changed the World The Career of Sylvan N Goldman University of Oklahoma Press 1978 ISBN 978 0 8061 1496 5 Catherine Grandclement Wheeling One s Groceries Around the Store The Invention of the Shopping Cart 1936 1953 in Warren Belasco and Roger Horowitz eds Food Chains From Farmyard to Shopping Cart University of Pennsylvania Press 2008 pp 233 251 ISBN 978 0 8122 4128 0 Ted Morgan On Becoming American A Celebration of What it Means and How it Feels Boston Houghton Mifflin 1978 pp 45 6 ISBN 978 0 395 26283 2 a b c d e Catherine Grandclement 2006 Wheeling food products around the store and away the invention of the shopping cart 1936 1953 CSI Working Papers Series Smithsonian Snapshot Telescoping Shopping Cart c 1949 Newswise com Child s chair safety device Bessie DeCamp patent 944 020 Unarco Cart History Retrieved March 31 2016 Phil Ament Inventor Sylvan Goldman Biography Ideafinder com Archived from the original on December 21 2017 Retrieved March 31 2016 Safety retaining belt for shopping carts David L Allen patent 3 550 136 ArchPatent ArchPatent Retrieved April 7 2013 permanent dead link Jeanne Sklar Technology Invention and Innovation collections Amhistory si edu Archived from the original on October 12 2018 Retrieved April 7 2013 Microsoft Kinect Games Grocery Shopping at Texas Whole Foods WIRED February 27 2012 Retrieved March 31 2016 US9637152B2 Dyer Nicholas John amp Abel Stacy Lee Support shelf for a shopping cart and associated shopping assembly issued 2017 05 02 Warentest Stiftung Einkaufs App Edeka Easy Shopper im Schnelltest Keine Hektik an der Kasse mehr www test de in German Retrieved February 13 2023 Martin Cristina January 16 2023 Smart shopping trolleys will enhance your business and promote customer retention Retail Gazette www retailgazette co uk Retrieved February 13 2023 Assortment referencing a study by Britt Beamer of America s Research Group Influence Of The Shopping Cart Archived November 8 2011 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on May 23 2011 Dr Steve Vitucci Texas A amp M University Central Texas Sears update case notes Retrieved on May 23 2011 Trolley offers supermarket workout BBC News BBC April 28 2004 Retrieved June 20 2012 Elana Bowman Trim Trolley Takes Off The Weight While You Grocery Shop Inventor Spot Aha Cafe LLC Retrieved June 20 2012 Loeb Heather April 21 2015 Eliminate Germs from Your Life Menshealth com Retrieved April 4 2016 African Journal of Microbiology Research Vol 5 23 pp 3998 4003 October 23 2011 Vincent Sobotka March 14 2011 Study E coli contamination found on half of shopping carts Digital Journal Black D Clemmensen N J and Skov M B 2009 Shopping in the Real World Interacting with a Context Aware Shopping Trolley Proc of Mobile Interaction with the Real World Shopping in the Real World Interacting with a Context Aware Shopping Trolley Cook Kim September 7 2011 Shopping cart advances just keep rolling along MSNBC Retrieved September 8 2011 Jansen Kerri June 14 2016 Bemis develops line of all plastic shopping carts Plastics News Retrieved October 31 2016 National Supermarkets Connery Georgina February 16 2017 ACT to push supermarkets to introduce coin lock system for trolleys The Canberra Times Retrieved December 31 2020 About us Coles Group Retrieved December 1 2021 About Us Woolworths Retrieved December 1 2021 a b c Wilkinson Kelly Learmonth Michael June 3 1999 Wheels of Fortune Metroactive Retrieved May 5 2009 Montague Julian The Stray Shopping Cart Project Web Site The Stray Shopping Cart Project Archived from the original on April 24 2006 Retrieved September 8 2011 US patent 5598144A a b William Dara Akiko April 20 1999 Corralling Carts Anti Theft Device Keeps Shopping Baskets In Their Place Los Angeles Daily News Gale Group Archived from the original on May 11 2012 Retrieved May 5 2009 Elmahrek Adam February 24 2011 Santa Ana Shopping Cart Law Shows Extent of Mayor s Business Dealings Voice of OC Retrieved September 8 2011 The Cambridge Online Survey of World Englishes Tekstlab uio no Retrieved March 31 2016 Trolley for use with a wheelchair United States Patent 4555124 FPO FreePatentsOnline com Retrieved June 20 2012 Zinc Plated Clear Coated Wire Basket Shopping Cart Trolleys with multiple capacities QHDC Australia QHDC Australia PTY LTD Archived from the original on November 10 2014 Retrieved July 29 2014 Guide wheel assembly for carts United States Patent 7198279 FPO FreePatentsOnline com Retrieved June 20 2012 Le premier caddie de l histoire du design a avoir ete transforme en chaise June 5 2012 a b c Cooper Hewitt Smithsonian Design Museum Stiletto Studios Smithsonian Institution Retrieved November 11 2022 In 1989 Stiletto commissioned a shopping trolley manufacturer to produce the Consumer s Rest industrially as a limited multiple Through this conceptual strategem he further withdrew his work from all commonly used criteria for classification attempts applied to artistic ready mades and product design so far in Vitra Design Museum Atlas of Furniture Design Weil am Rhein Germany 2019 on CONSUMER S REST Lounge Chair by Stiletto Stiletto Studio s page 726 Ludwig Forum Duane Hanson Archived from the original on April 14 2009 http ludwigforum de museum restauratorenwerkstatt die restaurierung der supermarket lady von duane hanson bare URL Stiletto Studios Melina the artist s daughter 100 Objects from Century of the Child Archived from the original on December 21 2016 https www centrepompidou fr fr programme agenda evenement c4roraA bare URL AdA Object Talk Stiletto Short Rest ZFBK Archived from the original on June 27 2018 Martina Fineder Thomas Geisler Sebastian Hackenschmidt Nomadic Furniture 3 0 Neues befreites Wohnen New Liberated Living page 89ff MAK Studies 23 Wien und Niggli Verlag Zurich 2017 ISBN 978 3 721209617 While other German artists and even designers at the time also worked with found objects Stiletto emphasizes that his approach differed from that of the exponents of New German Design de who actually coined the term He regards the Consumer s Rest as a work of conceptual art which critiques design remarking In the beginning I simply wanted to transcycle a standard shopping cart into an authentistic Wire Chair imitation After all it was Eames and Bertoia not me who redesigned shopping carts as furniture And they did so in a country and at a time when wastefully packaged mass consumption and overflowing shopping carts weren t yet considered antisocial but rather an aspirational lifestyle in an era of booming capitalism Indeed Charles Eames mentioned the construction principle of the shopping trolley as one of his inspirations for the Wire Chair gt 477 in Vitra Design Museum Atlas of Furniture Design Weil am Rhein Germany 2019 on CONSUMER S REST Lounge Chair by Stiletto Stiletto Studio s page 726 With his 1983 Consumer s Rest Lounge Chair Stiletto created one of the true pin up pieces of the era a work which attracted a lot of media attention thus helping others find publicity and a work which has since gone on to be included in the permanent collection of numerous leading design museums including the Vitra Design Museum the V amp A London and the Cooper Hewitt Smithsonian Design Museum in New York in Schrill Bizarr Brachial Das Neue Deutsche Design de der 80er Jahre at the Brohan Museum Berlin 2014 Paragraph From Folding Chair to Shopping Cart in Claudia Falter Shopping p 1007ff u fig p 1017 in In the Designer Park Life in Artificial Worlds Kai Buchholz and Klaus Wolbert eds Hausser media Verlag Darmstadt 2004 ISBN 3 89552 100 0 Victor Papanek amp Jim Hennessey 1973 Nomadic furniture how to build and where to buy lightweight furniture that folds collapses stacks knocks down inflates or can be thrown away and re cycled New York Pantheon Books ISBN 0 394 70228 XExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Shopping carts Look up shopping cart in Wiktionary the free dictionary Shopping Cart Related Injuries to Children American Academy Of Pediatrics Paper on the history of the shopping cart The Telescopic Shopping Cart Collection at the National Museum of American History Smithsonian Institution dead link Reversing the Operation of CAPS Shopping Cart Wheel Locks DEFRA guidance on the security of shopping trolleys Guidance on Section 99 and Schedule 4 of the Environmental Protection Act 1990 as amended by the Clean Neighbourhoods and Environment Act 2005 DEFRA Daugherty Julia Ann P Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture Oklahoma State University Library Home Web 11 Oct 2010 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Shopping cart amp oldid 1150218207, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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