Smati Turtle: car made from scrap parts by Ghanian artisans and Dutch artists


The Smati Turtle 1 is an "African concept car" created by Dutch artist/researcher team Melle Smets and Joost van Onna, who worked with the artisinal car-makers of Suame Magazine, Ghana, to create a killer junker for the African market. Suame Magazine is a neighborhood full of people who take apart scrap cars and rebuild them for local markets, removing the difficult-to-maintain electronics, expanding the cargo areas. The Turtle 1 took three months to create, and had its test-drive inaugurated by the Ashanti king.

PromoSuameMagazine 1

Our research will explore the benefits and problems of nowadays mobility in West Africa and Europe. This exploration is not about inventing the car of the future but a reflection on contemporary society.

The dream car will be built according to the motto “Let’s make things simple” and satisfied the following criteria:

1. It is built in Suame Magazine, from locally crafted, refurbished and used parts from different brands of (discarded) cars;

2. It is robust and easy to assemble, re-assemble and repair;

3. It is a prototype of a car potentially fit for the African market;

4. It provides the driver and passengers with a superb experience of the landscape when driven;

5. It is built in a time frame of 12 weeks.

Source of inspiration is the Buafo (literal translation: carrying help), a pickup truck prototype developed in the 1970s as part of an effort by the government to create a home-grown car industry.


SMATI Turtle 1 – IMPAKT festival – 30 okt. t/m 3 nov.

(Thanks, Kate!)