Today’s Solutions: May 05, 2026

We all know how deeply politicized the US-Mexico border wall has been during the past four years, but for a brief moment of time, designers from architecture studio Rael San Fratello were able to foster a sense of unity at a section of the wall.

This happened through a project called the Teeter-Totter Wall, which saw children play on a trio of pink seesaws slotted into the country’s border wall in 2019. The idea was to create a sense of togetherness at the divisive border, and although it was only in place for around 40 minutes, the images from that moment are moving.

Recently, the Teeter-Totter Wall was crowned the winner of the Beazley Design of the Year awards, which are organized by London’s Design Museum every year. A five-person panel came to this conclusion in light of the recent political events in America, with the Design Museum‘s chief executive and director Tim Marlow describing it as an “inventive and poignant reminder of how human beings can transcend the forces that seek to divide us.”

In order to get the pink seesaws in place, Rael San Fratello worked with Mexico’s Colectivo Chopeke, with a team on each side of the border helping slide the boards in between the tall, metal slats that divide El Paso in Texas from the Mexican city of Ciudad Juárez.

In an interview, San Fratello revealed that the “guerilla project” never received official permission and was designed to be assembled as quickly and covertly as possible in case border patrol were to intervene. The aim was to show that “play can be an act of resistance.”

Solutions News Source Print this article
More of Today's Solutions

Brighton is building Europe’s first stadium designed entirely for women’s foo...

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM For most of its history, women’s football has played in spaces that weren’t built for it: men’s training ...

Read More

What doctors want you to know about GLP-1s and bone loss

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM A study presented at the 2026 American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons annual meeting found that among nearly 147,000 ...

Read More

New radioactive implant attacks cancer tumors with remarkable success

Engineers at Duke University created a promising novel cancer treatment delivery system and demonstrated its efficacy against one of the disease's most complex forms. ...

Read More

Embrace the learning curve: how to get through the ‘I suck at this and ...

Amid the bustle of New Year's resolutions, as you embark on a new workout program or dive into a novel activity, remember this: "New ...

Read More