After years of working on technical products in sectors such as medical technology, industrial systems, and consumer electronics, I noticed my motivation slowly shifting. Not because the engineering itself interested me less, but because I increasingly felt the need to work on products that are visible in everyday life.

I wanted to work on technology you encounter outdoors. Technology that is used, touched, and judged by people who don’t read manuals — they simply expect it to work.

That search led me to Ecotap.

Why charging infrastructure?

Much of my earlier work was hidden deep inside machines or enclosures. Technically challenging, but rarely visible. Charging infrastructure is the opposite. A charging station stands outside, on the street, and must function under all conditions.

That requires different choices. Designing for weather, vandalism, intensive use, and long-term reliability. Every detail matters: structure, sheet metal, sealing, assembly, and serviceability.

What appeals to me is that the engineering here has direct impact. You’re not working on a niche solution, but on infrastructure that becomes part of the streetscape.

Designing with real-world use in mind

At Ecotap, I work on the mechanical design and further development of charging solutions. Much of this involves redesigning: critically reviewing existing products and improving them.

Can it be lighter? Smarter? Cleaner to manufacture? More reliable to assemble and maintain?

My focus is on sheet-metal design, structural details, intelligent assembly, and robust sealing. For me, good engineering often lies in what you remove: fewer parts, clearer choices, and solutions that make sense for both production and service.

Collaboration without noise

I prefer working in environments where responsibility sits low in the organization. Where you can communicate directly with colleagues, suppliers, and production partners.

No unnecessary layers — just clear agreements. Serious work, with room for common sense.

Looking ahead

My experience sits at the intersection of engineering, product development, and manufacturability. At Ecotap, I can develop technology that is visible, scalable in production, and designed to function outdoors for years.

On tasevski.nl, I share my work and my way of thinking. Not as a finished story, but as a snapshot within a career driven by continuous improvement.