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Childhood, Choppers, and the ICE test with Ola Stenegärd

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Manage episode 394744589 series 3464209
Content provided by ecological motoring initiative (EMI) and Ecological motoring initiative (EMI). All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by ecological motoring initiative (EMI) and Ecological motoring initiative (EMI) or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

What it Takes: How to become an Astronaut with legendary motorcycle designer Ola Stenegärd. The dialogue explores Ola's journey from a young child growing up in the Swedish countryside to becoming a renowned figure in the motorcycle industry. Key topics include the thrill of creating and riding motorcycles, the importance of design in creating vehicles, Ola's journey to becoming a designer, and the future of motorcycles in a world that has to rethink the sustainability of motoring. The interview emphasizes the role of passion and determination in achieving one's dreams, using Ola's career as a testament.
Please join our brand new Patreon and support a community that loves its vehicles and its earth.
Ola Stenegärd on Instagram
Indian Motorcycles
Forever Motoring
Featuring:
brothers and the Easy Rider scene in Sweden
Skateboard disasters
Truck engines in tractors
How being a farmer mean being creative
Why a farm is like a workshop
Riding horses and riding bikes
The liviing machine
„breathing life into the engine is like breathing soul into it“
"...especially when it is an engine you built yourself..."
Hard to find something as exciting as figuring out a paticular bike and what makes its engine tick
Ola’s first Chopper which he created when he was about 14 years old
that first moment of flow, realizing the power of drawing before building
Winning first in his class at this show where all the people and bikes he had been seeing in magazines were suddenly there in real life--what other dream can be so rich?
The importance of teachers and their encouragement
How one sentence or even just a couple of words can change a life
ArtCenter College of Design in Pasadena…seeing all these famous people in magazines who had built cars and bikes and who had gone there, it felt impossible to ever get there himself, like going to the moon or becoming an astronaut…
How others help us by seeing the best of us, often what we cannot see in ourselves
Though he has experienced a lot of good luck and grace, he also has a lot of passion and dedicated himself to this hard work and obsession…
Selling all his motorcycles to pay his way through art school
Greg Brew
Polaris industries
Church of Choppers
Forever Two Wheels
Remember who you are designing for (the rider, the customer, the person living day to day life with this bike)
“you pour a lot into that vehicle because you know its going to mean a lot to the person who buys it”
Syd Mead
A different take on what it will mean to create ecological motoring…
How far can you throw the ball? The balance of innovation and finding better ways to motor.
Electric should not be an excuse for being weird.
Ola’s ICE test.
He offers a different view than previous guests because he points out that a lot of things like the fuel tank might seem redundant (now that it is not alays used for fuel for example) but have actually evolved to have different purposes and should not be done away with just because we are doing away with other conventions.
Bringing it back to the basics—to the rider and the bike and their intimate relationship

Instagram, Twitter, Newsletter

  continue reading

19 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 394744589 series 3464209
Content provided by ecological motoring initiative (EMI) and Ecological motoring initiative (EMI). All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by ecological motoring initiative (EMI) and Ecological motoring initiative (EMI) or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

What it Takes: How to become an Astronaut with legendary motorcycle designer Ola Stenegärd. The dialogue explores Ola's journey from a young child growing up in the Swedish countryside to becoming a renowned figure in the motorcycle industry. Key topics include the thrill of creating and riding motorcycles, the importance of design in creating vehicles, Ola's journey to becoming a designer, and the future of motorcycles in a world that has to rethink the sustainability of motoring. The interview emphasizes the role of passion and determination in achieving one's dreams, using Ola's career as a testament.
Please join our brand new Patreon and support a community that loves its vehicles and its earth.
Ola Stenegärd on Instagram
Indian Motorcycles
Forever Motoring
Featuring:
brothers and the Easy Rider scene in Sweden
Skateboard disasters
Truck engines in tractors
How being a farmer mean being creative
Why a farm is like a workshop
Riding horses and riding bikes
The liviing machine
„breathing life into the engine is like breathing soul into it“
"...especially when it is an engine you built yourself..."
Hard to find something as exciting as figuring out a paticular bike and what makes its engine tick
Ola’s first Chopper which he created when he was about 14 years old
that first moment of flow, realizing the power of drawing before building
Winning first in his class at this show where all the people and bikes he had been seeing in magazines were suddenly there in real life--what other dream can be so rich?
The importance of teachers and their encouragement
How one sentence or even just a couple of words can change a life
ArtCenter College of Design in Pasadena…seeing all these famous people in magazines who had built cars and bikes and who had gone there, it felt impossible to ever get there himself, like going to the moon or becoming an astronaut…
How others help us by seeing the best of us, often what we cannot see in ourselves
Though he has experienced a lot of good luck and grace, he also has a lot of passion and dedicated himself to this hard work and obsession…
Selling all his motorcycles to pay his way through art school
Greg Brew
Polaris industries
Church of Choppers
Forever Two Wheels
Remember who you are designing for (the rider, the customer, the person living day to day life with this bike)
“you pour a lot into that vehicle because you know its going to mean a lot to the person who buys it”
Syd Mead
A different take on what it will mean to create ecological motoring…
How far can you throw the ball? The balance of innovation and finding better ways to motor.
Electric should not be an excuse for being weird.
Ola’s ICE test.
He offers a different view than previous guests because he points out that a lot of things like the fuel tank might seem redundant (now that it is not alays used for fuel for example) but have actually evolved to have different purposes and should not be done away with just because we are doing away with other conventions.
Bringing it back to the basics—to the rider and the bike and their intimate relationship

Instagram, Twitter, Newsletter

  continue reading

19 episodes

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