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Showing posts with label recycled. Show all posts
Showing posts with label recycled. Show all posts

Monday, April 4, 2011

Take a Seat on a Bench Made from 5,000 Recycled Metrocards

by Alex Davies
from: http://www.treehugger.com/

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Photos Courtesy of Stephen Shaheen

In New York's subways, you see a lot of discarded Metrocards. It's sad, not only because most people drop them on the floor rather than in a trash can, but because the cards are rechargeable, and there's no good reason to dispose of them in the first place. But NYC-based artist and designer Stephen Shaheen has come up with a unique way to recycle old cards, or at least 5,000 of them: he's made a one of a kind bench.

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Measuring 48" x 18" x 18" and made of the cards, various types of glue, and an armature of 1/8" steel, the aptly-named Metrobench is an homage to the Big Apple's public transportation system and an outstanding example of how everyday objects can be recycled instead of thrown away. To collect the cards, Shaheen used Craigslist to assemble a team to help him; they had all 5,000 in just a week. Of his work, Shaheen says:

I was inspired to use these discarded objects--at once very personal and expendable--in a way that reflects the manner in which mass transit joins many diverse lives into a single moment or path together.

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And as New York begins to introduce smart, contact-less cards to replace the Metrocards (which are swiped), Shaheen will have a lot more raw material to produce more benches.

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Seven Pieces of Furniture Made of Old Bicycles


Bicycle recycling doesn’t mean greasy work in your garage. Custom-made creations that’ll brighten up any home, bar, school or office are available.

milano lounge Seven Pieces of Furniture Made of Old Bicycles
Image: Andy Gregg, used with permission
Recycling old bicycles usually means fixing together old parts to form “new” bicycles that look even older than the originals. However, a few creative bicycle artists prove that the bicycle lends itself to being repurposed into sleek and stylish furniture that can or can’t be in your face about its humble beginnings. In either case, bicycle parts have never been so in vogue!
7) Book shelves
elasticshelf with books Seven Pieces of Furniture Made of Old Bicycles
Image: System Design Studio, used with permission
This wall-mounted shelf is ideal for people who want their furniture to grow with their needs. Just have one book in your shelf? Then it will be slim, looking like a line on the wall. Got some more books, CDs or more bulky items? No problem; your shelf will be able to accommodate those, too, and start looking like a more traditional shelf.

elasticshelf flat Seven Pieces of Furniture Made of Old Bicycles
Image: System Design Studio, used with permission
We’re talking about ElasticShelf, made by System Design Studio in Barcelona, Spain. This shelf unit can be used in the home or the office and is made out of recycled bicycle tires that are suspended between two used furniture legs — a simple idea that’ll keep you pumped for some time.
elasticshelf before Seven Pieces of Furniture Made of Old Bicycles
Image: System Design Studio, used with permission
6) Tables

vectorT1 Seven Pieces of Furniture Made of Old Bicycles
Image: Andy Gregg, used with permission
This side table, called “Vector,” lets you forget that you’re looking at old bicycle parts, so sleek is its design. It was created by bike furniture designer Andy Gregg, who is currently the only designer in the world to work exclusively in recycled bicycle parts, and is made from professional-level bicycle rim sections. It comes with either a clear or smoked glass top, but we’d go clear so that visitors can admire the construction from all angles!
modtableM 02w Seven Pieces of Furniture Made of Old Bicycles
Image: Andy Gregg, used with permission
The “Modulus” side table, above, does not hide its origins, instead cleverly integrating bicycle spokes into its design. It is made from bent and welded chrome-plated bicycle rims, and the top comes in either glass or acrylic.
5) Coat racks

coatrack3 07w Seven Pieces of Furniture Made of Old Bicycles
Image: Andy Gregg, used with permission
A coat rack is not what comes to mind when thinking about recycling old bicycle parts for furniture. Luckily, Gregg thinks outside the box. His coat rack uses bicycle frame tubes and wheel rim sections. It certainly looks sturdier than many coat hangers we have seen!
4) Barstools
s2bar1 100set Seven Pieces of Furniture Made of Old Bicycles
Image: Andy Gregg, used with permission
It is as barstools that the shiny, metallic spokes of bicycles seem to be utilized best. They’ll lend a cool yet nostalgic feel to even the most sterile of bars. The two S-2 swivel barstools, above, come with pro pads and have a 13″ top and tire trim — perfect with the S-2 bar table! Here’s the S-6 barstool model with a back rest by the beach. Lovely!
barstool2 Seven Pieces of Furniture Made of Old Bicycles

Image: Andy Gregg, used with permission
3) Loveseats
LoveseatM 12 Seven Pieces of Furniture Made of Old Bicycles
Image: Andy Gregg, used with permission
Speaking of love: what couple could say no to this cozy loveseat, perfect for romantic evenings, maybe reminiscing about bicycle tours once taken together? Oh, and the Modulus Loveseat is also available with custom-made cushions in a variety of fabrics and materials.
2) Benches
bench3blue08 Seven Pieces of Furniture Made of Old Bicycles
Image: Andy Gregg, used with permission

From loveseat to bench is just a small step and a few necessary modifications. We just love the model in blue, above! Or how about the custom-made one below? It was commissioned by the North Star Academy High School in Marquette, MI, where it has invited students to rest since 2005.
bench 20w Seven Pieces of Furniture Made of Old Bicycles
Image: Andy Gregg, used with permission
Below is another bench, on location in a shop. It was originally designed to be just the right height for putting your shoes on and taking them off after a ride.
teaser Seven Pieces of Furniture Made of Old Bicycles
Image: Andy Gregg, used with permission
1) Chairs
tire lawn chairs Seven Pieces of Furniture Made of Old Bicycles

Given the size of bicycles, and their tires especially, they really lend themselves to being converted into chairs. We were able to find not just one but three talented designers making bicycle tire chairs.
Lawn chairs

The amazing lawn chairs, above, are made entirely out of old bicycle tires. Notice how the pattern of the tires seems to imitate that of wicker furniture. Very cool!
These particular chairs can be found at the gardens of Sampson & Beasley in Portland, OR. But there’s a story behind them that will take us to Indonesia — Bali, to be precise. There, local groups have taken up the issue of the millions of discarded tires that are often simply left lying around (or worse, are burned) because of a lack of infrastructure to get them to landfills — or better, to be recycled. You can imagine what kind of acrid, black smoke tires produce when burned…
Luckily, those initiatives employ locals and train them in making chairs out of recycled moped and bicycle tires. The finished chairs are then shipped all over the world, but with every purchase, money goes back to the families and thus the communities of those who made them.
Needless to say, the chairs are great for the outdoors — in the garden, on the deck or patio or next to the pool — because they are sturdy, long-lasting and heavier than plastic, which will come in handy when the next storm rolls around. If you are interested, you can order them here.

Lounge chairs
leokempf chair small Seven Pieces of Furniture Made of Old Bicycles
Image: Leo Kempf, used with permission
Being off your rocker — in this chair — might not be so bad. Though made out of recycled car tires and thus not really fitting on our list strictly speaking, it should theoretically be possible to create it out of old bicycle tires as well, given that the car tires are cut into smaller strips in any case.
tired lounge Seven Pieces of Furniture Made of Old Bicycles
Image: Leo Kempf, used with permission
“Tired Lounge” is the brainchild of designer Leo Kempf and originates from his experiment with rubber as a material for furniture. The result? A comfortable lounge chair that sits anyone from a baby to a tall adult; the designer is 6’2″ and sits in the chair comfortably. According to a description on his website, the “soft rubber was cleaned, coated, cut into strips, stretched and woven.” The simple curve shape is intended to give the chair an appearance of floating. Says Mr. Kempf: “The chair was a fun, experimental project that turned out quite nicely. Its bold shape with the tire texture make the chair really stand out.”
Bike rack chair

bike rack chair Seven Pieces of Furniture Made of Old Bicycles
If you’re thinking, “Hey, where’s the bike?” in this photo, you have to think just a bit beyond the bicycle. The chair is made of old Chicago bike racks and is another ingenious creation by Gregg. There are many other great bicycle chair models in Gregg’s shop. We especially like “Milano,” shown top, because of its funky colors and the fact that it comes with a horn. You never know when that may come in handy… Meanwhile below is the “Vector” lounge chair.
Chair Seven Pieces of Furniture Made of Old Bicycles
Image: Andy Gregg, used with permission
If you’re working in a bicycle shop or have had enough of simply repairing old bikes, it’s time to either get creative or donate some raw materials. There will surely be bike lovers who don’t want to only sit on their bikes but also decorate their houses with them, especially after going through our list. There’s more out there, and we’re sure, more creative bike furniture and accessories to come in the future.
Special thanks to Andy Gregg of Bike Furniture Design, Remi Melander and Helbert S. Ferreira of System Design Studio and Leo Kempf of Leo Kempf Design for kindly granting photo permissions.

Sources: 1, 2, 3, 4

Monday, November 8, 2010

Artist Melts 1,527 Guns to Make Shovels for Tree Planting!

palas por pistolas, pedro reyes, environmental art, urban art, mexican art, mexico art, art of mexico, art in mexco, mexico drug crime, mexico drug trafficing, shovels for guns

The city of Culiacán, in western Mexico has the highest rate of gun deaths in the country. After speaking with family members of victims of drug crimes in the city, artist Pedro Reyes decided to use its prolific amount of firearms to help the local botanical garden. In the ultimate act of recycling, Reyes and the garden started a campaign for residents to hand over their guns to the artist in exchange for a coupon that they could use to buy electronics or household appliances. He collected 1,527 guns for the project — Palas por Pistolas — had them melted down and transformed into 1,527 shovel heads that are now being used to plant trees in the community.

palas por pistolas, pedro reyes, environmental art, urban art, mexican art, mexico art, art of mexico, art in mexco, mexico drug crime, mexico drug trafficing, shovels for guns

Reyes is an artist who focuses on the failures of modern culture in a positive way. He doesn’t believe in failures really, but that failure is the outcome of a certain perception. He takes things that people often see as broken and shows them in a new light. “If something is dying, becoming rotten and smelly, I think there is a chance to make a compost in which this vast catalog of solutions can be mixed in an entirely new way,” he told BOMB Magazine. In Palas por Pistolas he was aiming to show “how an agent of death can become an agent of life.”

Of the weapons that Reyes collected 40% of them were automatics of military caliber. After the collection the guns were taken to a military base and publicly smashed with a steamroller. They were then melted, recycled into shovels with wooden handles that tell the story of the project and distributed to art institutions and public schools where people in the community are planting — at least — 1,527 trees. In addition to the trees planted in the Cualiacán community these shovels have made their way to the Vancouver Art Gallery, the San Francisco Art Institute, Maison Rouge in Paris and other places around the world to plant Palas por Pistolas trees.

+ Pedro Reyes

Via GOOD Magazine

Friday, September 10, 2010

Artists Build Incredible Obelisk Out of Hundreds of Bicycles

by Ariel Schwartz
from: http://inhabitat.com/

obelisk, santa rosa, bikes, bicycles, sustainable design, green design, eco art

California artists Mark Grieve and Ilana Spector recently constructed this incredible towering obelisk made entirely out of bikes on a street corner in Santa Rosa. Dubbed Cyclisk, the monument is an ode to bike culture constructed from 340 bicycles and one tricycle.





obelisk, santa rosa, bikes, bicycles, cyclisk

The 10,000 pound, 65 foot-tall behemoth was, strangely enough, built with help from Nissan. Apparently, Santa Rosa’s “1% for art” law requires major construction projects to donate money to public art projects. Nissan is building a dealership in the city, so it chose to contribute cash to the $37,000 piece of artwork.

Regardless of the project’s background, we’re happy to see old bike parts being put to good use. As Spector noted in a statement, “Collecting unusable parts from the debris piles of nonprofit community bike projects has proven to be a win-win; community bike DIY places are thrilled unusable parts are not becoming land fill and the City is psyched the sculpture will solidify Santa Rosa as bike-friendly.”

+ Santa Rosa Public Art

Via Wired Gadget Lab

Photos © Ilana Spector

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Puma's 'Clever Little Bag' Slashes Sneaker Packaging


Puma's 'Clever Little Bag' Slashes Sneaker Packaging

Herzogenaurach, Germany — Puma's new shoe packaging changes the idea of the shoebox by wrapping footwear in a simple cardboard structure held in place by a reusable bag.


The new packaging, which will hit stores in late 2011, was designed in collaboration with Fuseproject, a firm led by Yves Béhar, whose previous work includes One Laptop Per Child and PACT Underwear.

Puma's packaging, which it's calling its "Clever Little Bag," will contain 65 percent less cardboard by using a bag made of recycled plastic as the outer layer that holds the inner cardboard structure (which has no top) together. The bag's handles slip through a hole at one end of the inner box, securing the bag to the cardboard and providing a plastic-bag-free way to carry the shoes.

Puma has also eliminated all plastic bags and tissue that typically come in shoeboxes.

Due to using fewer materials - 8,500 fewer tons of paper, to be specific - and the new packaging's lighter weight, Puma expects to cut carbon dioxide emissions by 10,000 tons per year and water, energy and diesel use by 60 percent. That works out to 1 million liters of water, 20 million megajoules of electricity, 1 million liters of fuel oil and 500,000 liters of diesel.

Puma is also changing the bags it uses for it apparel. The company is first reducing the amount of bagging material it needs by folding T-shirts an extra time before packaging them up, and it is also replacing plastic bags with biodegradable ones. Puma stores will also swap out their plastic and paper bags for biodegradable versions. Altogether, the apparel and shopping bag changes will cut plastic use by 912 tons and paper by 293 tons.

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Coca-Cola Making Chairs Out of 3 Million Recycled Coke Bottles

By: by jerryjamesstone
From: http://greenopolis.com/

Coca-Cola is creating a new chair line from 3 million recycled Coke bottles.

The chair is a joint effort between Coke and leading furniture manufacturer Emeco (Electric Machine and Equipment Company). Emeco chairs have become a bit iconic after being featured on the hit TV show Sex and the City.

The company got an early start creating chairs for the U.S. Navy during World War II. In fact, the contract specified that the chair be able to withstand a torpedo blast to the side of a destroyer. That chair was made from 80-percent recycled aluminum with a painstaking 77-step process.

“The 111 Navy Chair is a reflection of our commitment to sustainability, constant innovation and originality in design,” said Kate Dwyer, Group Director, Worldwide Licensing, The Coca-Cola Company.

Each new chair uses at least 111 20-ounce recycled PET soda bottles diverted from Coke's recycling plant in Spartanburg, South Carolina. The plant happens to be the world's largest bottle-to-bottle recycling facility.

It's called the 111 Navy Chair which is a play on the chair's original name--106 Navy Chair--and the quantity of Coke bottles used. The chair will cost $230 and is available in six colors: Coca-Cola Red, Snow, Flint, Persimmon, Grass, and Charcoal. That price is about half of the original Navy Chair.

“When Coca-Cola approached me with this project I jumped on it,” said Gregg Buchbinder, Chairman of Emeco. “I was excited about the impact of reusing the PET from about three million plastic bottles a year. That’s a lot of bottles and a lot of chairs.”

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Source: MNN

Friday, March 19, 2010

Recycled Pizza Boxes Hungry For a Bigger Slice of the Market


Recycled Pizza Boxes Hungry For a Bigger Slice of the Market

New York, NY — The Green Box pizza box, made of recycled cardboard and designed to reduce waste, has been picked up for nationwide distribution by FoodBizSupply.com.

The Green Box, created by E.C.O. Inc., looks like any other pizza box, but it contains 100 percent recycled content. Because recycling centers do not take paper or cardboard that is soiled by food, they do not accept pizza boxes. The Green Box takes a type of packaging that would get throw away anyway and turns it into something with a second purpose.

The top of the box is perforated so that it can be torn into 4 squares - to use instead of paper plates or dishes that would need to be washed - and the bottom can be folded in half for storing pizza instead of using aluminum foil or containers.

FoodBizSupply.com is an online distributor that focuses on products with a sustainable side to them, and is the latest addition to Green Box's distribution network.

"They have a very wide, broad range of customers," said William Walsh, founder and CEO of E.C.O. "It's a different level of customer, too. It's a customer that is much more socially aware, so I feel the partnership and having distribution through FoodBizSupply is going to be key to our business."

The Green Box is also being distributed to Italian restaurants through Roma Foods, and through the northeast U.S. by Mansfield Paper and Imperial Bag and Paper.

Walsh said he is searching for other nationwide distributors, and that a major organic grocer, which he could not name, is using the Green Box on a regional basis. In addition, two of the top pizza chains are conducting tests and market research on the box.

Green Box's website will be getting a facelift soon, Walsh said, and will include a way for people to find restaurants and pizza shops that use the Green Box, as well as a way for restaurants to find Green Box distributors.

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Inexpensive Home Built With Recycled Containers


by Admin

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Building a home that is inexpensive and unique in same time is real challenge today. A perfect example how home can be built with less money is this house which is designed by architects Claire Helene Drouin and Jean Marie Sanchez.
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The entire house is built with 15 recycled shipping containers. After it is finished, you would never notice that it is built from containers and it has a very fashionable design.

This home is built in Marseille, France where you can find a plenty of shipping containers that are waiting to be recycled and used again. Maybe the coolest fact is that this home is pretty mobile and it could be eventually relocated to another place.

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Image source