The original Razor A Kick folding scooter arrived in 2000, and in many ways—just like the phone of nearly the same name—it epitomized Y2K design. Its colorful hand grips and shiny aluminum frame glinted in the sunlight, hearkening a joyous, technological future. It was a massive hit that was named Spring/Summer Toy of the Year by the nonprofit Toy Association and sold 5 million units in the first six months.
“There’s an interesting story behind that [variety],” says Ian Desberg, VP of design and development at Razor. Desberg is a trained toy designer who used to race BMX bikes, and he says Razor is full of people who used to race cars, skateboard, and practice all sorts of other wheeled sports. “You don’t need to be on the design team to influence the products here,” he says.
“I walked around for a few days thinking about that challenge from Carlton. As a design team, we’re always looking at the benchmark products, like the Apple iPhone—why is that so successful and iconic?” Desberg says. “It was one of those light bulb moments where we asked ourselves, ‘What is our benchmark, our iPhone at Razor?’ And it dawned on us, it’s the A Kick scooter. We could turn it into an adult scooter so [that] it looks like the one you had as a kid. That would be a head turner!”
The company immediately started making prototypes, building atop its know-how from having released three E Prime scooters already. The motor and battery systems would be easy. The trickier part was reinterpreting the most iconic elements of the original Razor to this new, supersize version.
Starting with the frame, it would need to have that polished aluminum look. Razor already made its electric scooters out of aluminum, so the company kept the material but finished it with the reflection you remember. The harder work was around subtly reshaping the form. Its E Prime had smoothed corners that wouldn’t capture the sharp, extruded metal aesthetic of the Razor. So the team developed a new machining process to, ironically, make the design look a little older.
The smaller details were just as important, like the brightly colored handlebar grips. Originally, these were made of foam grip tape. But that material doesn’t age well outside in the cold and rain. So they remade the original, dumbbell-handle shape in rubber. The team also retained the shiny fender on the rear wheel, which you step on to brake. Desberg promises that the sensation of braking doesn’t just look the same—it feels the same, too. (Riders can also break using a lever on the handlebars, where they’re typically found on electric scooters.)“Being able to go back to those early adopter customers with upgrades, performance enhancing components . . . we plan to,” Desberg says.
As Desberg explains, Razor’s E Prime scooters used to have this telescoping bar, but the design was eliminated in recent years and lights were added. “We ran wiring down the telescoping, and it became problematic to raise and lower something with electronics in it,” he says. “And the wiring would rattle in the T-bar, which nobody likes.” The updated design, as seen in the Razor Prime, uses a wider-diameter bar, coupled with new connectors and routing, to eliminate the noise.
The final product, Desberg hopes, is the perfect mix between a premium electric scooter and playful nostalgia. “We love that visual,” Desberg says. “We want a pink-and-silver scooter to be cruising down the street at a good clip, turning heads.”
The Razor Icon is on Kickstarter starting at $550, discounted for launch. Final MSRP will be somewhere under $1,000.
Recognize your brand’s excellence by applying to this year’s Brands That Matter Awards before the early-rate deadline, May 3.