Emeco’s 111 Navy chair gives Coke bottles a second life

Emeco, which calls itself “the Aluminum Chair Company,” will formally unveil its first all-plastic chair at the Salone Internazionale del Mobile Wednesday in Milan. Called the 111 Navy chair, it is produced from 111 (or more) recycled Coca-Cola bottles. It will be sold in the U.S. through Design Within Reach beginning next month.

It took two years to develop the 111 Navy, a replica of the 1944 classic all-aluminum Navy 1006 chair, which Emeco developed for ships during World War II. Legend holds that the contours of the seat were inspired by pinup Betty Grable’s shapely derriere.

The 111 Navy is a hollow one-piece injection-molded chair made from 60% recycled polyethylene terephthalate (PET) plastic with glass fiber reinforcement. It weighs in at just under 13 pounds, nearly twice as heavy as the 7-pound aluminum version.

Happily, it costs almost half as much — only $230 compared with the $415 made-in-the-U.S.-from-recycled-aluminum version. Emeco and Coca-Cola hope to recycle some 3 million bottles annually to produce the chairs.

Of the six available colors, the Coca-Cola red, snow and flint gray can be used indoors or out. The grass, persimmon and charcoal may fade in direct sun and are not recommended for outdoors.

The 111 Navy sits on feet with semi-frosted transparent polycarbonate glides that give it a floating appearance. The semi-gloss finish and a subtle texture give the surface a feel somewhere between an eggshell and the skin of an orange, says Magnus Breitling, Emeco’s director of product management. “It is more temperature-friendly,” he adds. “It is not as cool to the touch as the aluminum chair and doesn’t get as warm in the sun.”

News Source: LATimesBlog

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Farm Fountain

Farm Fountain is a system for growing edible and ornamental fish and plants in a constructed, indoor ecosystem. Based on the concept of aquaponics, this hanging garden fountain uses a simple pond pump, along with gravity to flow the nutrients from fish waste through the plant roots. The plants and bacteria in the system serve to cleanse and purify the water for the fish.

This project is an experiment in local, sustainable agriculture and recycling. It utilizes 2-liter plastic soda bottles as planters and continuously recycles the water in the system to create a symbiotic relationship between edible plants, fish and humans. The work creates an indoor healthy environment that also provides oxygen and light to the humans working and moving through the space. The sound of water trickling through the plant containers creates a peaceful, relaxing waterfall. The Koi and Tilapia fish that are part of this project also provide a focus for relaxed viewing.

Farm Fountain is a collaborative project by artists Ken Rinaldo and Amy Youngs. Ken Rinaldo is an artist and theorist who creates interactive multimedia installations that blur the boundaries between the organic and inorganic. Amy M. Youngs creates biological art, interactive sculptures and digital media works that explore the complex relationship between technology and our changing concept of nature and self.

For more information on Ken and Amy and the Farm Fountain project, please visit
FarmFountain.com .

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Andrew Kim’s Square Coke Bottle Design

CCS student Andrew Kim’s Coke bottle redesign is an ambitious take on the iconic bottle, going square in the name of eco-friendliness. The new bottle shape would take up far less space in shipping pallets per bottle, and a push-up in the bottom large enough to accommodate the cap of the bottle beneath it would enable stacking. Said cap is offset for better drinkability.

Another interesting design feature is that underneath the label, the bottle is ribbed so that it can compress like an accordion, taking up even less space when it’s time to go into the recycling truck.

News Source: Core77

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Ingrid Goldbloom Bloch

As a little girl, Ingrid would accompany her father on his errands and get lost in the aisles imagining all the things she could make from the bits and pieces she came across. Since that time, hardware stores have been the inspiration for many of the mixed-media sculptures that Ingrid creates.

In Ingrid’s own words; “I see the beauty in common objects and hope that others will too. I use everyday items like steel nuts, washers, vinyl plumbing tubing, clamps and coke cans and transform them into something entirely different from their intended purpose. Through this metamorphosis, I try to draw the viewer in to take a closer look at materials and objects that ordinarily go unnoticed and see them in a new light.”

For more information, please visit Ingridgoldbloombloch.com

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Smart Glass Jewelry

SMART GLASS JEWELRY is handmade in Atlanta, Georgia from glass, sterling silver, and silver solder using traditional stained glass methods. Each piece is individually selected, with variations in shape and texture in the glass ensuring that every piece in the SMART GLASS line is a truly unique and one-of-a-kind original.

Smart Glass Jewelry Image 1

Growing up in Washington State, Kathleen Plate began learning about stained glass when she was a young girl. She observed the art of cutting and soldering the glass by her “70’s craftsy mom” and brings those early skills to her designs today. Her hobby led her to start creating pieces in her spare time, which she sold to local stores in the mid 1990’s.

KP_Portrait_Coke

The jewelry sold so well that Kathleen decided to put her graduate work in American Literature on hold and take the leap into launching her handcrafted jewelry and accesories nationally. Today, Smart Glass is in more than 500 stores nationwide and enjoys a diverse customer base.

Using a combination of vibrantly colored stained glass, silver solder and sterling silver, Kathleen makes every single piece by hand. So, while Smart Glass styles are simple and easy-to-wear and use, each piece is also a unique piece of handcrafted art. Kathleen designs all Smart Glass items and either makes or directly supervises the assembly of each piece, assuring optimal product quality.

For more information on Kathleen and Smart Glass Visit SmartglassJewelry.com

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Nike Announces World Cup Shirts Made Entirely From Recycled Plastic

Footballers including Cristiano Ronaldo and Robinho will take to the pitch in the World Cup in South Africa this summer wearing shirts made out of recycled plastic bottles.
Nike announced yesterday that for this first time its nine national teams, which include Brazil, Portugal and The Netherlands, will wear tops made entirely from polyester.
The environmentally-friendly move will see each shirt made from up to eight recycled plastic bottles.

Manufacturing the shirts this way has prevented nearly 13million plastic bottles, totaling almost 254 tonnes of polyester waste, from going into landfill sites.
This amount would be enough to cover more than 29 football pitches.

To make the 2010 national team kits, Nike’s fabric suppliers sourced discarded plastic bottles from Japanese and Taiwanese landfill sites and then melted them down to produce new yarn that was ultimately converted to fabric for the jerseys.
This process saves raw materials and reduces energy consumption by up to 30 per cent compared to manufacturing virgin polyester.

News Source: Daily Mail

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Vancouver Winter Olympics go Green with Recycled Metals for Medals

The gold, silver and bronze medallions slung around winning athletes’ necks as they step on to the winners’ podium at the Vancouver Winter Olympic Games could well be made from the guts of an old Belgian computer.

The manufacturer of medals for this Olympics is for the first time incorporating token amounts of recycled material into the medals. Medals historically have been made of freshly mines ores.

The innovation – though largely symbolic – was directed by an Olympic organising committee which had vowed to put on the greenest games ever, raising the bar for London in 2012.

Organisers aimed to cut greenhouse gas emissions by 15% from business as usual. The nine new buildings constructed for the games set a new green standard for any complex of buildings in North America, drawing heat from the ocean and exhaust systems, incorporating green roofs and solar panels. The village for the athletes will be converted into housing when the games are over.

However, efforts to put on a green games were undermined by unseasonably warm conditions, which forced organisers to fly and truck in snow for the freestyle skiiing and snowboarding venue.

Teck, the Canadian-based mining and metallurgical company charged with making the medals, said on its website that it had developed a process to recover metals from unwanted cathode ray tube glass, computer circuit and keyboards, cables and other e-waste.

“The process involves shredding, separating and heating of the various electronic components to recover a variety of metals,” the company said. It said the gold, silver and copper used in the medals was recovered from trashed circuit boards collected and processed in Belgium.

The company has touted the innovation as a means of avoiding some of the hundreds of thousands of tons of e-waste that would otherwise end up in landfills – although not all that much, even by Teck’s own admission.

Third-place finishers will get a medal that has just 1.11% recycled material when they go home with a bronze. Silver medals contain barely 0.12% recycled material. And for the gold, which is gold plate, the figure is 1.52%.

News Source : The Guardian

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5 Inspired Dresses Made From Recycled Materials

For the second season of The GreenShows during New York Fashion Week, models strutted down the runway showing off the best in sustainable, recycled and really awesome attire. This year the events were held at a new yet-to-be inhabited eco-friendly apartment building in New York City’s East Village.

The GreenShows opened with a unique showcase of Gary Harvey’s recycled couture. Newspapers and laundry bags rustled down the runway, along with old sweatshirts and baseball jackets repurposed into gowns.

The collection was designed to challenge people’s perception of secondhand clothing. Gary, who was previously creative director of Levi Strauss and Dockers Europe, believes, “Too many garments end up in landfill sites. They are deemed aesthetically redundant and get discarded at the end of the season when there are often years of wear left.” So, we say, long live the trench coat! Long live the baseball jacket! Long live whatever else Harvey uses to create his collections! The Daily Green featured 18 recycled dresses by Gary Harvey. Here’s a look at five of the most interesting.

The GreenShows was sponsored by natural beauty company Weleda, and their Skin Food lotion was honored in this creation. It took 350 boxes of lotion to create this masterpiece.

Who says print is dead? It’s alive and well, living as eco-couture. This dress was created using 30 copies of the Financial Times.

The Denim Kimono was created using recycled denim jackets and jeans.

It took 21 laundry bags to create this dry-clean-only garment.

The Baseball Puffball dress was created using 26 nylon baseball jackets.

News Source – Huffington Post

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Coke 3D Sidewalk Art

Move over, hopscotch boards. U.K. artist Julian Beever and German artist Edgar Mueller are two dudes who independently make some pretty amazing 3D chalk sidewalk murals. It’s almost as if the guy from Mary Poppins and Wile E. Coyote started giving art lessons. These optical illusions use perspective so that when seen from the right angle, the drawings seem as real as a photograph.

News Source – Huffington Post

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Sarah Turner Eco Art & Design

Sarah Turner is an eco artist & designer who specialises in making decorative lighting from waste plastic drinks bottles.  The bottles are collected from cafes and households in Nottingham, and then they are cleaned and sandblasted.  Then with some clever cutting they are transformed into decorative shapes, totally unrecognisable from their original state.

Sarah Turner Eco Art & Design Photo 1

Only 5.5% of plastic waste drinks bottle are recycled in the UK.  So these lights aim to do something creative with them and overall save a few bottles from the landfill sites.

Oasis Lamp

Sarah graduated from Nottingham Trent University in 2008 and has been developing her ideas since.  Her work has been shown at several exhibitions including the Ideal Home Show 2009, where her drinks bottle lights were awarded second place for Concept Product of the Year.  She has also been short listed for the Nottingham Creative Business Awards and has been interviewed live on the BBC Radio Nottingham’s programme, Design Heroes.  She has a Facebook group you can join to keep up to date with new designs and events and her lampshades are available to purchase from February 2010 on her website: http://www.sarahturner.co.uk.  (direct to the drinks bottle products is http://www.sarahturner.co.uk/products.html )

Sarah Turner Eco Art & Design Photo 2

Join the Sarah Turner Eco Art & Design Facebook group Here

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