Client Company
EZ Puzz Inc.
Target Consumer
For children over 3 years old.
Problem Statement
A local office furniture manufacturing company throws
away tens of thousands of scrap ¾” hardwood cubes that result from its
furniture construction processes. The material is expensive, and the scrap
represents a sizeable loss of profit.
Design Statement
EZ Puzz Inc. would like to return value to
its waste product by using it as the raw material for desktop novelty items
that will be sold on the showroom floor. Design, build, test, document, and
present a three-dimensional puzzle system that is made from the scrap hardwood
cubes. The puzzle system must provide an appropriate degree of challenge to a
person who is three years of age or older.
Constraints
1. The puzzle must be fabricated from 27, ¾” hardwood
cubes.
2. The puzzle system must contain exactly five puzzle pieces.
3. Each individual puzzle piece must consist of at least three, but no more than six hardwood cubes that are permanently attached to each other.
4. No two puzzle pieces can be the same.
5. The five puzzle pieces must assemble to form a 2 ¼” cube.
6. Some puzzle parts should interlock.
7. Puzzle cube must be sold in a package design that appeals to consumers.
8. The user must be able to insert and remove the puzzle without destroying the package.
9. Text should be created in Microsoft Word and must include: designer’s name, appropriate warnings, cost, country of manufacture, and fictitious company name.
10. Graphics should include an isometric sketch of the assembled cube and a bar code.
11. If you do not have access to a color printer, color must be added through the use of markers, colored pencils, crayons, or paints.
12. A window through which to view the product is optional.
2. The puzzle system must contain exactly five puzzle pieces.
3. Each individual puzzle piece must consist of at least three, but no more than six hardwood cubes that are permanently attached to each other.
4. No two puzzle pieces can be the same.
5. The five puzzle pieces must assemble to form a 2 ¼” cube.
6. Some puzzle parts should interlock.
7. Puzzle cube must be sold in a package design that appeals to consumers.
8. The user must be able to insert and remove the puzzle without destroying the package.
9. Text should be created in Microsoft Word and must include: designer’s name, appropriate warnings, cost, country of manufacture, and fictitious company name.
10. Graphics should include an isometric sketch of the assembled cube and a bar code.
11. If you do not have access to a color printer, color must be added through the use of markers, colored pencils, crayons, or paints.
12. A window through which to view the product is optional.