PRM’s new chatbot is a multilingual platform
platform designed to help the public. It uses PRM databases and information provided by corps employees.
A cheerful little robot, named Neo, has been designed to
humanize the tool and bring users closer together. Neo is used in a flyer, a poster and in my final CFC project (TPI).
The owner of La Balance restaurant decided to install a 24/7 pizza vending machine, filled daily with fresh pizzas concocted by the restaurant’s chef.
So he called on my design expertise to help him to help him imagine his vending machine.
I designed a visual for the pizza machine based on what already existed, while adding the unique touch of “La Balance” to give the machine a real identity.
The most important information, such as cooking instructions, is displayed on the front panel, while other useful information has been placed on the side of the machine.
After years of using the same website, Mr. Antonio Auteri, owner of the restaurant, decided to modernize it. As his son, he asked me to compare his site with those of competing restaurants, which enabled us to identify the problems.
A complete redesign of the website was carried out to bring it up to date, including the search for new, more modern fonts and colors. We replaced the burgundy and serif fonts with sans-serif fonts and a contemporary yellow. Customer feedback has confirmed that the site is now more practical and visually appealing.
This year (2024), PRM has acquired new scooters for its Public Safety Assistants (PSA). For the occasion, a new design was conceived and thought out with the help of the hierarchy, as well as colleagues.
For this project, the PRM graphic charter was followed, while keeping it simple so that the scooters could also be used by other units.
This logo was designed as part of a competition at CPNV, during my first year of apprenticeship, organized by Pestalozzi Primary School to redesign their logo. During the selection process, they hesitated with the logo of a final-year student, but it was eventually rejected.
The request was to create a logo with “EPP” or “E2P”. The number 2 was designed to incorporate the loop of the P, allowing both EPP and E2P to be read. The logo is rounded to symbolize flexibility and uses basic shapes to represent the seriousness and confidence of the establishment.