Waste as a commodity

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Design Academy Eindhoven LAB3 / 2012

Louise Knoppert Amanda Österlin La Mont Christian Frank Müller

Waste as a commodity

Waste as a commodity – an Animal Coffin. The brief was to work with waste as a commodity and investigate how waste could be used as a resource for a new material or product. The process started by analysing how and where waste is produced in our society today, collecting and categorizing waste materials based on properties and making experiments. The experiements where defined and turned into a final material containing five different waste materials, coffee grounds, potato starch, flour, human hair and cardboard. With this material an animal coffin was designed to give an opportunity to bid farewell of a beloved pet.

Process overview

Research Collectors

Producers

Retailers

Material

Raw material

Waste

construction

The project started with a profound analysis of different processes where waste is produced in the society. By looking at industries operating in different stages of the production process, we saw that waste is produced in all stages

surface

Consumer

Products

Waste

filler

glue

Waste

colour

Collecting waste

After the first analysis we started collecting different kinds of waste material and categorized them based on their properties. We grouped the waste materials in the categories: glue, filler, construction, surface and colour.

Material library

Combining different groups to find a new material.

construction

filler

surface

glue

colour

Experimenting

After collecting and categorizing the waste materials we made experiments by combining one waste material from each group. We combined the waste materials by using different mixing methods such as heating, melting, cooking, pressing, blending etc.

Samples from experiments

The experiments where divided in tree stages where we, after each stage, made an evaluation to select the most interesting waste materials to keep for further experimentation. We decided to only use biodegradable waste materials and to combine five waste materials that could easily be selected within a local area.

Experimenting methods

melting

compressing method

mashing into liquids/dusts

Final material selection

cardboard human hair flour vinegar potato starch coffee grounds When the selection of the final waste materials was made we started defining the final recipe and the exact amount to use of each waste material.

Final material

When the new material mixture was defined we started looking at suitable situations where the new material could be used. We saw that the new material, with its biodegradable, easy to shape and stiffness properties, would be most suitable for products that are used a short amount of time such as packaging, gardening products etc.

Production method

cutting

smashing

pressing

blending in liquids

drying

Logistics

When the final material was decided we researched about how to collect these different materials and where to get it from. To make a feasable product proposal we made calculations of the possible amount we could collect and how to collect it. We plan to produce the coffin in local, small-scale social workshops.

Defining product

We saw the opportunity to insert seeds in the material and use it in a situation where the material transforms into new resources, such as burials.

First prototype

We defined a shape and built a scale model of the coffin.

Second prototype

Currently we are in the process of redefining the shape, details and size to produce a test mould.

Technical drawings

Marketing

Animal Coffin

“Sit by the oak tree and remember your beloved pet.”

becomes nutrition for a new plant.

Label

“Sit by the oak tree and remember your beloved pet.”

Clear and simple! Our finished packaging does not distract from our coffin but enhances it with all necessary information.

Animal coffin S

An animal coffin in biodegradable material. When the coffin degrades the seeds in the lid start to grow and the dead animal and coffin becomes nutrition for a new plant.

Animal coffin

“Sit by the oak tree and remember your beloved pet.”

Coffin sizes

Coffin

Currently we are working with developing an urn to allow bigger animals to be cremated and buried with the same ceremony.

Urn

Natural resources A tree replaces the flowers

Flowers start growing

Processed and used in the society

“Nothing is lost, nothing is created, everything is transformed”

Collected by local worker

Antoine Laurent de Lavoisier (1743-1794) Buried in the earth

Shredded and mixed

Burial ceremony

Seeds added to material mix

User with pet to bury

Material pressed and dried into coffin shape