AAU Student Projects is unavailable between June 15th 1.30pm and 17th 1.30pm due to planned system maintenance. The projects cannot be downloaded during this period.
AAU Student Projects - visit Aalborg University's student projects portal
A master's thesis from Aalborg University
Book cover


FELT

Authors

; ;

Term

4. term

Publication year

2026

Submitted on

Pages

143

Abstract

People who work with livestock operate in physically demanding, unpredictable, and hygiene-sensitive settings, where equipment must be reached and handled close to large animals. Many farm veterinarians and farmers use improvised solutions such as placing boxes on the ground, carrying equipment and medicines in pockets, or walking back and forth between animals, equipment, and vehicles. These practices create inefficient workflows, increase physical strain, reduce overview, and lead to unsafe needle handling. This project responds to the need for a workflow-oriented equipment system that supports accessibility, ergonomics, organization, hygiene, and safer handling during animal treatment. Developed with farm veterinarians at Vendsyssel Landdyrlæger and BoviCura, the work followed a co-evolutionary, design thinking process using field visits, observations, interviews, reference studies, bodystorming (acting out use scenarios), mockups, prototype testing, user feedback, and technical detailing. The outcome is FELT: a workflow-oriented equipment box system designed to bring tools closer to the point of use. The system includes a hanging platform, interchangeable FELT Boxes for organization, and recessed placements for approved sharps containers. By positioning equipment at an ergonomic working height near the animals, FELT reduces bending, repeated walking, and the temporary storage of needles in pockets or on the ground. FELT currently includes small and medium variants for different equipment needs, while a large variant remains a future development opportunity. Overall, the project shows how workflow insights can be translated into a practical, scalable, production-oriented product system for professionals who work with and treat animals.

Folk, der arbejder med husdyr, befinder sig i fysisk krævende, uforudsigelige og hygiejnesensitive omgivelser, hvor udstyr skal kunne nås og bruges tæt på store dyr. Mange landdyrlæger og landmænd bruger improviserede løsninger som at stille kasser på jorden, bære udstyr og medicin i lommerne eller gå frem og tilbage mellem dyr, udstyr og køretøj. Det giver et ineffektivt arbejdsflow, øger den fysiske belastning, mindsker overblikket og fører til usikker håndtering af kanyler. Dette projekt adresserer behovet for et arbejdsflow-orienteret udstyrssystem, der styrker tilgængelighed, ergonomi, organisering, hygiejne og sikrere håndtering under behandling af dyr. Projektet er udviklet i samarbejde med landdyrlæger fra Vendsyssel Landdyrlæger og BoviCura gennem en samskabende designproces med feltbesøg, observationer, interviews, referencestudier, bodystorming (at afprøve brugsscenarier med kroppen), mockups, prototypetest, brugerfeedback og teknisk detaljering. Resultatet er FELT: et arbejdsflow-orienteret udstyrsbokssystem, der bringer udstyret tættere på brugssituationen. Systemet består af en ophængt platform, udskiftelige FELT Boxes til organisering og indbyggede pladser til godkendte kanylebeholdere. Ved at placere udstyret i ergonomisk arbejdshøjde tæt ved dyrene reducerer FELT behovet for at bukke sig, for gentagne ture og for midlertidig opbevaring af kanyler i lommer eller på gulv/jord. FELT omfatter små og mellemstore varianter til forskellige udstyrsbehov, mens en stor variant er et fremtidigt udviklingsspor. Samlet viser projektet, hvordan indsigter i arbejdsflow kan omsættes til et praktisk, skalerbart og produktionsorienteret produktsystem for fagfolk, der arbejder med og behandler dyr.

[This apstract has been rewritten with the help of AI based on the project's original abstract]

Keywords