I used to think all wheelbarrows were created equal. But then I saw this cool cart with its big spoked wheels and army green, rectilinear body:
It's the Farm & Garden Cart by a company called Agri-Fab. While it looks expensive (is that brass on the wheels?), it's relatively inexpensive at about $140. Great for use in fixing up the rear yard (I remember doing that at the forgotten, overgrown area behind my first apartment), getting going on the garden, or keeping at the country house.
Buy it at Amazon.
Image: Agri-Fab

Commercial Flour Sa...
How are you supposed to dump it? Does the back end fold down?
"are that brass on the wheels?"
Yes. Thou art brass on the wheels.
@xtina - It says on their website that the front panel is removable.
I have a cart like this (no brass though, and less expensive). Love it! Great for hauling anything around.
My brother (http://nandmbrand.blogspot.com/) made a cart like that for my mom a few years ago. He builds bikes so he used bike parts and it is brilliant! Mom uses it to cart fire wood and because it looks so nice she can park it right in the garage.
Useless for mixing concrete or moving anything liquidy like mud or wet leaves, as it'll spill out the front. Unless you have a 2 or 3 wheelbarrow shed.
Also the centre of balance is too far back, compared to a trad wheelbarrow, meaning you'll be lifting alot more weight than you need to.
That's ridiculous and apparently not made for people who actually do any hauling. The classic wheelbarrow is a perfectly designed tool: easy to push, easy to flip, easy to mix things in - just easy. This doesn't seem to improve on the design. It more or less just pretties it up. I think my wheelbarrow is pretty sharp as it is.
-M
This cart is definitely pretty, and I can see the advantages of it compared to a regular wheelbarrow (more space, flat bed is great for carting plants, firewood, etc), but these can be very difficult to move around.
Like @rapidtransitman said, the center of balance is off, so I guess if you want to do any hauling, you won't actually be able to put a ton of weight in the cart unless you are very, very strong and not easily annoyed by cumbersom objects.
Yowza - Thank you VisuaLingual. I'm fising that right away!
FiXing. Fixing that right away.
I don't know if it's ever supposed to replace a wheelbarrow -- it's a garden cart! You put the heavy stuff at the front, over the axle, and you pile up brush or weeds or whatever lighter stuff toward handle end.
Also since it's two-wheeled, you basically can't tip it over, which is helpful for hauling longer distances over rough ground. If someone calls your name and you turn around while pushing a real wheelbarrow, you're liable to have to pick up the entire load off the ground where you spilled it.
Oh man - I wonder if I can fit that in my Jeep and bring it with me when I do day trips with my scuba diving folks...