Jones Titanium Spaceframe
The swooping lines on the custom aren鈥檛 just for show. Former GT Bikes designer Jeff Jones reimagined how a mountain bike works: the Spaceframe鈥檚 front and rear triangles are more parallel to each other than on other bikes, for added flex and greater shock absorption. Factor in the material (strong yet forgiving titanium) and oversize tires and you鈥檝e got a ride that鈥檚 as light (27 pounds) and responsive as a hardtail but nearly as absorbent as a full-suspension bike. Meanwhile, a buttressed fork makes for rigid steering, and the upright position keeps the forward lean to a minimum for easy handling.
Lunar Nova Climbing Wall

Sophisticated isn鈥檛 a word we typically apply to climbing walls. But then we鈥檝e never seen anything quite like Lunar鈥檚 鈥攁n in-home design, still in the concept stage, that blends seamlessly with a modern urban habitat. Lunar, a San Francisco design firm, traded the usual plywood-and-resin construction for sleek epoxy panels that look more Dwell than Rock & Ice. Practice routes are dialed in via iPhone app: choose the difficulty of your problem and soft-colored backlights illuminate the holds in endless combinations.
Black Diamond, Magnetron Rocklock and Gridlock, carabiner

It wasn鈥檛 broken, but Black Diamond found a way to make a carabiner better鈥攁nd safer鈥攁nyway. Instead of latching shut via a conventional twist-lock or screw-gate design, the company鈥檚 (pictured) and use magnets to hold tight. The result is a 鈥檅iner that is just as strong聽 but, because you operate it with one hand, is much easier to use.
The North Face, Powder Guide ABS, Avalanche Vest

Airbag-equipped backpacks are (wisely) everyone鈥檚 favorite new avalanche safety tool, and nearly a dozen manufacturers now sell them in the U.S. But only the North Face thought to incorporate the technology into apparel. Designed with airbag-veteran ABS, the Powder Guide ABS avalanche vest fits over a standard ski jacket, making it ideal for short sidecountry missions. And, yes, there鈥檚 enough room in the vest for a small shovel and avalanche probe.
Heatgear Heatstick water heating system

What if you didn鈥檛 have to stop and bust out your stove to boil water? That鈥檚 the idea behind Heatgear鈥檚 . Simply activate the ignitor, screw the pressurized butane-and-propane-filled fuel rod into the 32-ounce thermal bottle, and in less than 15 minutes you鈥檝e got a hot drink or dinner. The only catch? The Heatstick was developed for NATO and has yet to obtain U.S. safety certification.
Airlite inflatable snowshoe

No more hefting bulky snowshoes into the backcountry just in case. When stored, Airlite鈥檚 are each about the size of a Nalgene bottle and together weigh just 2.5 pounds. Should you need them (snow-mobile breaks down, lost in the woods), they inflate in seconds with a CO2聽cartridge, yielding sturdy 36-inch-long shoes.
Hyperlite Mountain Gear Metro Pack

At just 5.8 ounces, Hyperlite Mountain Gear鈥檚 weighs only a bit more than a heavy-duty garbage bag, and it鈥檚 so small you can slip it into your back pocket. Most impressive: it鈥檚 cut from the same material used in sails and blimps, so it鈥檚 waterproof, and it鈥檚 10 times stronger than steel.
New Balance RC 5000 Minimalist Running Shoe

How minimalist can a running shoe get? ditched the entire outsole on the 3.2-ounce : where you typically have a slab of rubber, there are only rows of rubberized dots and spikes. The result is one of the lightest running shoes you鈥檒l find. The shoemaker says it鈥檚 perfect for 10Ks, though its estimated lifespan is just 124 miles.
Lisa Akoya Airplane

The Akoya, from French airplane manufacturer , might just be the ultimate adventure vehicle. With a range of 1,000 miles and a top speed of 138 miles per hour, the two-seater is the only consumer aircraft that can land on water and snow as well as the shortest of backcountry landing strips. (A 650-foot runway is all that鈥檚 required.) The key to its versatility: seafoils, winglike devices under the fuselage that let you set it down on a remote Rockies lake for trout fishing or a Canadian glacier for skiing. Two luggage holds accommodate snowboards, dive equipment, fishing gear, and even bikes.
Outlier Liberated Wool Peacoat

Leave it to a group of active hipsters in Brooklyn to reinvent the classic officer鈥檚 coat. Their company is Outlier, and their is as technical as it is dapper. Cut from a water-resistant wool-fleece combo, it鈥檚 stretchy and specifically tailored to provide full range of motion whether you鈥檙e stretched out on your bike or walking city streets.
Cole Haan LunarGrand Wingtips

Business up top, performance down below. Developed in conjunction with Nike, are our new favorite collaboration. They鈥檙e buttoned-up enough for the office, but because the sole is made with the same stuff found in Nike鈥檚 top-of-the-line running shoes, they鈥檙e the most comfortable walking-around-town shoe we鈥檝e ever worn.
Specialized Turbo S Electric Bike

The , Specialized鈥檚 first electric bike, is among the world鈥檚 fastest, with a top speed of 28 miles per hour. It鈥檚 so zippy that the company can鈥檛 sell it in the U.S., where the legal limit for an e-bike is 20 mph. And whereas most electric-assist bikes are clunky, the 50-pound Turbo is sleek, thanks to the low-profile lithium-ion battery and internal cable routing.
Sierra Designs Zissou Sleeping Bag

Down is useless when wet. That鈥檚 why we鈥檙e excited about Sierra Designs鈥 DriDown jackets and sleeping bags鈥攍ike the 30-degree . A molecular polymer makes each feather hydrophobic, so the down stays dry seven times longer and (if it does happen to get soaked) dries 33 percent faster.
Petzl Nao headlamp

The easiest way to think about it is this: Petzl鈥檚 knows what you鈥檙e looking at. Glance down at a map in front of you and light sensors above the headlamp鈥檚 LEDs dim and diffuse the beam for easy reading. Look back at the trail and the Nao鈥檚 microprocessors automatically focus and intensify the light.
BioLite Camp Stove

鈥淪toke the fire, the GPS is dying!鈥 The converts the heat it generates into energy鈥攚hich, in addition to driving a built-in fan that makes the cook fire more efficient, can rejuice your depleted devices via USB. It鈥檚 a cool idea, but it鈥檚 not perfect: the stove is hefty (over two pounds), and it鈥檚 slow to charge (two hours to restore half the battery life of an iPhone 4). $130; biolitestove.com
Overade Foldable Helmet

Three quick snaps is all it takes to transform the to a grapefruit-size bundle. Developed by French design firm Agence 360, which has worked with Look Cycle, the foam-and-ABS-plastic lid is as safe as conventional helmets and stuffs easily into a bag. Overade isn鈥檛 alone: bike-accessories company also plans to release a collapsible helmet in the U.S. this year.