AISE! in the Media

BBC Innovators: Tanzania’s ‘Father of rural innovation’

A mobile phone charger powered by a bike and a windmill-operated washing machine are just some of Tanzanian Bernard Kiwia’s inventions. And many of the ideas from his innovation hub are eco-friendly.

Delivered. talks to Bernard Kiwia

Tanzanian inventor knows how to bring ideas to life and has inspired hundreds of others as well

In Delivered. DHL magazine: January 2019

When he was 16 years old, Bernard Kiwia designed and built his own film projector using local materials. “That was the first thing I ever made,” he remembers. “I like finding out how technology operates – and I like to have an idea and then try to make it work.”

Kiwia has now turned his passion for creation into a full-time job as the Director of Technology for Twende, a non-profit organization and school for innovation in Arusha, northern Tanzania, which provides local people with space, tools and technical advice. In his workshop Kiwia has helped hundreds of secondary school students, smallholder farmers and microentrepreneurs to design and make practical products from local materials.

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Documentary – Life in Africa, Bernard Kiwia, Tanzania, Africa. by Beekeeper Stories

BBC NEWS:
Bernard Kiwia: Tanzania’s bicycle mechanic turned inventor


It is often said that African entrepreneurs are solution seekers and none more so than Bernard Kiwia.

While spending most of his time repairing bicycles, he had an idea about how he could use pedal power to create products to help make improvements to the lives of people in his community.

Now a social entrepreneur, he has created products such as solar water heaters and drip irrigation kits. Africa Business Report visited him in Arusha, Tanzania, to talk about his innovative designs.

(MIT) Massachusetts Institute of Technology – D-Lab: Design hosts Tanzanian inventor Bernard Kiwia

Bernard at MIT D-Lab in 2010

This week has been inventors’ week in D-Lab: Design. After Suprio’s lecture on Monday, we hosted Bernard Kiwia for Wednesday’s class. Bernard is an inventor from Tanzania, who currently leads technology innovation at Global Cycle Solutions in his home country. Bernard started as a bicycle mechanic with 3 years of experience when he participated in the first edition of the International Development Design Summit at MIT over the summer of 2007. After connecting there with other craftsmen, technicians and hackers of sorts, he came back home to start making things, as he likes to describe his current activities. As part of his lecture, Bernard presented the different inventions he has come up over the years, which include a cell phone charger for bicycles, a wheel truing stand, several daily objects made out of bicycle spare parts (a can opener made from a bike brake, a picture frame made from a front sprocket wheel, chairs made from bike wheel rims, etc), a bycicle-powered water pump, a solar water heater, and a pedal-powered drill press to name a few.

Bernard’s bicycle-powered water pump.
Photo: Bernard Kiwia

Being presented with such a rich and varied array of inventions, D-Lab students wondered about the origin of all these designs: did they come from his head or did people come to him with challenges? Bernard replied straightforwardly: in order to invent, you need to know what people need. For me it’s easy because I live there, and I experience the same problems myself: I had to take a cold shower every morning until I decided that I would build a solar water heater to have access to warm water for showering. As soon as I build one, neighbours started asking for one. Thus, if you don’t live there you have to make a lot of research to understand people’s needs and desires. Better yet, travel to learn it by yourself first-hand.

Bernard has strong opinions about what it takes to become an inventor: don’t make things for somebody else, think of yourself as the user, assume that you will be somewhere in Africa, and this device will help you while you are over there.  The ultimate attribute of an inventor is self-confidence: Bernard wants to keep trying to do new things because he knows he can do it. Then, if you know you can do it, just try and start doing it. Answering students’ concern about the challenge of continuously coming up with novel ideas, Bernard comments that fresh ideas are a small part of the game. Instead, it’s all about modifying exisiting ideas from the past and re-adapt them to match current needs. As an inventor and designer, you must have an inner curiosity to know and discover how things work, and these are the sources of inspiration for your next designs.

Invention is  a very personal thing: one feels it, and does it. –Bernard Kiwia

Bernard lecturing in D-Lab: Design class.
Photo: Nathan Cooke. Source: D-Lab Archives
Swahili