
Walking to the grocery store with a wire granny cart has always been practical but never particularly pleasant. The wheels rattle over every sidewalk crack, the wire basket looks like it escaped from a hardware aisle, and your tomatoes inevitably get crushed under a bag of potatoes. As more people ditch cars for walkable neighborhoods, the tools for hauling groceries haven’t really kept up with how design-conscious those people actually are.
That’s where Roulette Cart comes in. The Manhattan Blue version looks less like something you hide in a closet and more like a piece of luggage you wouldn’t mind leaving in your entryway. A padded navy bag sits on a slim aluminum frame with four small translucent wheels, the whole thing reading as upright and intentional. It’s built for people who walk to the store regularly and want something that feels considered, not just functional.
Designer: Futurewave for Roulette Carts

The interior actually makes a bigger difference than you’d think. Unzip the front, and the bag opens into a bright orange compartment with vertical bottle sleeves, small pockets for eggs or berries, and a wide cavity for everything else. You can slide wine upright without worrying it’ll tip, tuck leafy greens into their own space, and stack cans without turning your bread into a pancake. The 40-liter capacity feels more like organizing a rolling pantry than just dumping bags into a void.


Of course, none of that matters if the cart falls apart on cracked sidewalks. The lightweight powder-coated aluminum frame stays rigid when loaded, while the skateboard-style TPU wheels roll more quietly than cheap plastic ones that sound like you’re dragging a shopping cart through a parking garage. The four-wheel stance lets you push it like a stroller instead of tilting and dragging behind you, which helps when you’re navigating crowded aisles with 15kg of groceries.

Living with it in a small apartment feels surprisingly well thought out. The slim footprint and upright posture make it easy to park in a hallway without it sprawling into your living space, the way folding chairs tend to. The padded handle sits at a comfortable height so you’re not hunching on the walk back, and the detachable bag means you can lift just the soft part up a few stairs without wrestling the entire frame into a narrow elevator.


The materials are chosen for durability without shouting about it. The bag uses tough nylon, the frame is aluminum, and the wheels are high-quality TPU, the same stuff in skateboard wheels. These feel less like features to brag about and more like insurance against wet sidewalks, weekly grocery runs, and those trips where you bought way more than you planned and need everything to survive another six blocks home without collapsing.

Roulette Cart doesn’t reinvent walking or shopping, but it does make the annoying parts less annoying. The hauling, the packing, and the storing all get a little easier, and the whole thing looks deliberate enough that you’re not embarrassed rolling it through your neighborhood. It treats a routine errand with a bit more respect than a wire basket ever could, which turns out to matter more than you’d expect.