Old is better than new
Old is better than new
Old is better than new
Old is better than new
Old is better than new
How rubbish has taken on a sustainable role for us
How rubbish has taken on a sustainable role for us
How rubbish has taken on a sustainable role for us
How rubbish has taken on a sustainable role for us
How rubbish has taken on a sustainable role for us
April 29, 2019 | Report
‘The icebergs are melting.’ – ‘Droughts are spreading.’ – ‘Dead whale with 40 kilos of plastic in its stomach.’ The environment is making headlines every day. To begin with it was just a few. Now they are everywhere. And it is not just the words that are reaching us. The consequences of our lifestyle are literally washing up on the shore. Plastic bottles can be found alongside mussels on the beaches. And snow that belongs in winter is falling in spring. That has unleashed a new wave: a wave of initiatives in the name of sustainability. Perhaps an individual cannot save the world. But many individuals could.
‘The icebergs are melting.’ – ‘Droughts are spreading.’ – ‘Dead whale with 40 kilos of plastic in its stomach.’ The environment is making headlines every day. To begin with it was just a few. Now they are everywhere. And it is not just the words that are reaching us. The consequences of our lifestyle are literally washing up on the shore. Plastic bottles can be found alongside mussels on the beaches. And snow that belongs in winter is falling in spring. That has unleashed a new wave: a wave of initiatives in the name of sustainability. Perhaps an individual cannot save the world. But many individuals could.
‘The icebergs are melting.’ – ‘Droughts are spreading.’ – ‘Dead whale with 40 kilos of plastic in its stomach.’ The environment is making headlines every day. To begin with it was just a few. Now they are everywhere. And it is not just the words that are reaching us. The consequences of our lifestyle are literally washing up on the shore. Plastic bottles can be found alongside mussels on the beaches. And snow that belongs in winter is falling in spring. That has unleashed a new wave: a wave of initiatives in the name of sustainability. Perhaps an individual cannot save the world. But many individuals could.
‘The icebergs are melting.’ – ‘Droughts are spreading.’ – ‘Dead whale with 40 kilos of plastic in its stomach.’ The environment is making headlines every day. To begin with it was just a few. Now they are everywhere. And it is not just the words that are reaching us. The consequences of our lifestyle are literally washing up on the shore. Plastic bottles can be found alongside mussels on the beaches. And snow that belongs in winter is falling in spring. That has unleashed a new wave: a wave of initiatives in the name of sustainability. Perhaps an individual cannot save the world. But many individuals could.
‘The icebergs are melting.’ – ‘Droughts are spreading.’ – ‘Dead whale with 40 kilos of plastic in its stomach.’ The environment is making headlines every day. To begin with it was just a few. Now they are everywhere. And it is not just the words that are reaching us. The consequences of our lifestyle are literally washing up on the shore. Plastic bottles can be found alongside mussels on the beaches. And snow that belongs in winter is falling in spring. That has unleashed a new wave: a wave of initiatives in the name of sustainability. Perhaps an individual cannot save the world. But many individuals could.
Three projects tell us the story of how it is possible to focus on different points in the waste creation chain and turn what would be a strain on the environment into new products that are not only attractive, but timeless in nature. And, thus, take their useful, environmentally friendly place again. Not just anywhere, but in the middle of our lives.
Three projects tell us the story of how it is possible to focus on different points in the waste creation chain and turn what would be a strain on the environment into new products that are not only attractive, but timeless in nature. And, thus, take their useful, environmentally friendly place again. Not just anywhere, but in the middle of our lives.
Three projects tell us the story of how it is possible to focus on different points in the waste creation chain and turn what would be a strain on the environment into new products that are not only attractive, but timeless in nature. And, thus, take their useful, environmentally friendly place again. Not just anywhere, but in the middle of our lives.
Three projects tell us the story of how it is possible to focus on different points in the waste creation chain and turn what would be a strain on the environment into new products that are not only attractive, but timeless in nature. And, thus, take their useful, environmentally friendly place again. Not just anywhere, but in the middle of our lives.
Three projects tell us the story of how it is possible to focus on different points in the waste creation chain and turn what would be a strain on the environment into new products that are not only attractive, but timeless in nature. And, thus, take their useful, environmentally friendly place again. Not just anywhere, but in the middle of our lives.
We are constantly building higher, wider, faster. And in-between we frequently tear something down, too. The disused building remains: in the form of construction debris. Luisa Rubisch and Rasa Weba, two students from Berlin, have found a way to turn that into something new. In line with the principles of traditional terrazzo art, they piece together the debris of concrete, bricks and other construction materials in new ways with the help of modern technologies. Instead of lying around on the ground, the debris melds into one. The name of this innovate project is:
URBAN TERRAZZO.
www.urbanterrazzo.com
We are constantly building higher, wider, faster. And in-between we frequently tear something down, too. The disused building remains: in the form of construction debris. Luisa Rubisch and Rasa Weba, two students from Berlin, have found a way to turn that into something new. In line with the principles of traditional terrazzo art, they piece together the debris of concrete, bricks and other construction materials in new ways with the help of modern technologies. Instead of lying around on the ground, the debris melds into one. The name of this innovate project is:
URBAN TERRAZZO.
www.urbanterrazzo.com
We are constantly building higher, wider, faster. And in-between we frequently tear something down, too. The disused building remains: in the form of construction debris. Luisa Rubisch and Rasa Weba, two students from Berlin, have found a way to turn that into something new. In line with the principles of traditional terrazzo art, they piece together the debris of concrete, bricks and other construction materials in new ways with the help of modern technologies. Instead of lying around on the ground, the debris melds into one. The name of this innovate project is:
URBAN TERRAZZO.
www.urbanterrazzo.com
We are constantly building higher, wider, faster. And in-between we frequently tear something down, too. The disused building remains: in the form of construction debris. Luisa Rubisch and Rasa Weba, two students from Berlin, have found a way to turn that into something new. In line with the principles of traditional terrazzo art, they piece together the debris of concrete, bricks and other construction materials in new ways with the help of modern technologies. Instead of lying around on the ground, the debris melds into one. The name of this innovate project is:
URBAN TERRAZZO.
www.urbanterrazzo.com
We are constantly building higher, wider, faster. And in-between we frequently tear something down, too. The disused building remains: in the form of construction debris. Luisa Rubisch and Rasa Weba, two students from Berlin, have found a way to turn that into something new. In line with the principles of traditional terrazzo art, they piece together the debris of concrete, bricks and other construction materials in new ways with the help of modern technologies. Instead of lying around on the ground, the debris melds into one. The name of this innovate project is:
URBAN TERRAZZO.
www.urbanterrazzo.com
We live in a time where no one has time anymore. We are modern nomads, always on the go. The most visible representation of this lifestyle is the coffee to-go. The problem: the coffee disappears in our stomach, but the ‘to-go’ remains – and is clear to see in the cardboard cups on the streets and in bins. For example: in the United Kingdom alone, seven million cups are used a day, but only one in 400 is recycled. Together with CupCycling by James Cropper, the London-based paper manufacturer G.F Smith is producing new, especially colourful paper from the discarded cups. In the process, 90% of the cup material becomes FSC-certified paper, with the remaining 10% plastic that is processed into other things such as electric cables.
extractpapers.co.uk
We live in a time where no one has time anymore. We are modern nomads, always on the go. The most visible representation of this lifestyle is the coffee to-go. The problem: the coffee disappears in our stomach, but the ‘to-go’ remains – and is clear to see in the cardboard cups on the streets and in bins. For example: in the United Kingdom alone, seven million cups are used a day, but only one in 400 is recycled. Together with CupCycling by James Cropper, the London-based paper manufacturer G.F Smith is producing new, especially colourful paper from the discarded cups. In the process, 90% of the cup material becomes FSC-certified paper, with the remaining 10% plastic that is processed into other things such as electric cables.
extractpapers.co.uk
We live in a time where no one has time anymore. We are modern nomads, always on the go. The most visible representation of this lifestyle is the coffee to-go. The problem: the coffee disappears in our stomach, but the ‘to-go’ remains – and is clear to see in the cardboard cups on the streets and in bins. For example: in the United Kingdom alone, seven million cups are used a day, but only one in 400 is recycled. Together with CupCycling by James Cropper, the London-based paper manufacturer G.F Smith is producing new, especially colourful paper from the discarded cups. In the process, 90% of the cup material becomes FSC-certified paper, with the remaining 10% plastic that is processed into other things such as electric cables.
extractpapers.co.uk
We live in a time where no one has time anymore. We are modern nomads, always on the go. The most visible representation of this lifestyle is the coffee to-go. The problem: the coffee disappears in our stomach, but the ‘to-go’ remains – and is clear to see in the cardboard cups on the streets and in bins. For example: in the United Kingdom alone, seven million cups are used a day, but only one in 400 is recycled. Together with CupCycling by James Cropper, the London-based paper manufacturer G.F Smith is producing new, especially colourful paper from the discarded cups. In the process, 90% of the cup material becomes FSC-certified paper, with the remaining 10% plastic that is processed into other things such as electric cables.
extractpapers.co.uk
We live in a time where no one has time anymore. We are modern nomads, always on the go. The most visible representation of this lifestyle is the coffee to-go. The problem: the coffee disappears in our stomach, but the ‘to-go’ remains – and is clear to see in the cardboard cups on the streets and in bins. For example: in the United Kingdom alone, seven million cups are used a day, but only one in 400 is recycled. Together with CupCycling by James Cropper, the London-based paper manufacturer G.F Smith is producing new, especially colourful paper from the discarded cups. In the process, 90% of the cup material becomes FSC-certified paper, with the remaining 10% plastic that is processed into other things such as electric cables.
extractpapers.co.uk
Plastic bags are everywhere. Their journey usually begins in the innumerable supermarkets and often ends as a rubbish bag in a bin at home, but unfortunately they frequently turn up dotted about here and there. On the back seat of a car for example, and then blown by the wind from there through the open window into the landscape and eventually the ocean – we have all seen the images. Mitsotso, a furniture manufacturer from Africa, has developed its own range from them. Mitsotso’s producers in Johannesburg went from door to door collecting unused bags. Using traditional African weaving techniques, they designed colourful seats out of them. This led to ‘Kopano’, an ongoing furniture range intending to keep African weaving art going by connecting it with a functional, environmentally friendly context.
www.mitsotso.com
Plastic bags are everywhere. Their journey usually begins in the innumerable supermarkets and often ends as a rubbish bag in a bin at home, but unfortunately they frequently turn up dotted about here and there. On the back seat of a car for example, and then blown by the wind from there through the open window into the landscape and eventually the ocean – we have all seen the images. Mitsotso, a furniture manufacturer from Africa, has developed its own range from them. Mitsotso’s producers in Johannesburg went from door to door collecting unused bags. Using traditional African weaving techniques, they designed colourful seats out of them. This led to ‘Kopano’, an ongoing furniture range intending to keep African weaving art going by connecting it with a functional, environmentally friendly context.
www.mitsotso.com
Plastic bags are everywhere. Their journey usually begins in the innumerable supermarkets and often ends as a rubbish bag in a bin at home, but unfortunately they frequently turn up dotted about here and there. On the back seat of a car for example, and then blown by the wind from there through the open window into the landscape and eventually the ocean – we have all seen the images. Mitsotso, a furniture manufacturer from Africa, has developed its own range from them. Mitsotso’s producers in Johannesburg went from door to door collecting unused bags. Using traditional African weaving techniques, they designed colourful seats out of them. This led to ‘Kopano’, an ongoing furniture range intending to keep African weaving art going by connecting it with a functional, environmentally friendly context.
www.mitsotso.com
Plastic bags are everywhere. Their journey usually begins in the innumerable supermarkets and often ends as a rubbish bag in a bin at home, but unfortunately they frequently turn up dotted about here and there. On the back seat of a car for example, and then blown by the wind from there through the open window into the landscape and eventually the ocean – we have all seen the images. Mitsotso, a furniture manufacturer from Africa, has developed its own range from them. Mitsotso’s producers in Johannesburg went from door to door collecting unused bags. Using traditional African weaving techniques, they designed colourful seats out of them. This led to ‘Kopano’, an ongoing furniture range intending to keep African weaving art going by connecting it with a functional, environmentally friendly context.
www.mitsotso.com
Plastic bags are everywhere. Their journey usually begins in the innumerable supermarkets and often ends as a rubbish bag in a bin at home, but unfortunately they frequently turn up dotted about here and there. On the back seat of a car for example, and then blown by the wind from there through the open window into the landscape and eventually the ocean – we have all seen the images. Mitsotso, a furniture manufacturer from Africa, has developed its own range from them. Mitsotso’s producers in Johannesburg went from door to door collecting unused bags. Using traditional African weaving techniques, they designed colourful seats out of them. This led to ‘Kopano’, an ongoing furniture range intending to keep African weaving art going by connecting it with a functional, environmentally friendly context.
www.mitsotso.com
An attractive terrazzo floor with construction debris from Berlin. A colourful woven seat at the desk. The modern nomad takes a break, sits down and writes a real letter for once on colourful paper that was once a cardboard cup they carried on the streets. That is smart design: putting what had been thrown away to new uses and bringing it back into our homes and the centre of our lives.
An attractive terrazzo floor with construction debris from Berlin. A colourful woven seat at the desk. The modern nomad takes a break, sits down and writes a real letter for once on colourful paper that was once a cardboard cup they carried on the streets. That is smart design: putting what had been thrown away to new uses and bringing it back into our homes and the centre of our lives.
An attractive terrazzo floor with construction debris from Berlin. A colourful woven seat at the desk. The modern nomad takes a break, sits down and writes a real letter for once on colourful paper that was once a cardboard cup they carried on the streets. That is smart design: putting what had been thrown away to new uses and bringing it back into our homes and the centre of our lives.
An attractive terrazzo floor with construction debris from Berlin. A colourful woven seat at the desk. The modern nomad takes a break, sits down and writes a real letter for once on colourful paper that was once a cardboard cup they carried on the streets. That is smart design: putting what had been thrown away to new uses and bringing it back into our homes and the centre of our lives.
An attractive terrazzo floor with construction debris from Berlin. A colourful woven seat at the desk. The modern nomad takes a break, sits down and writes a real letter for once on colourful paper that was once a cardboard cup they carried on the streets. That is smart design: putting what had been thrown away to new uses and bringing it back into our homes and the centre of our lives.
In this way, smart design brings strong colours into our rooms. To go along with this, SURTECO has developed a range of colour tones that play with the colour palette of water, among other things. Terrazzo and matured-timber decors also bring this thinking to the surface and thus into the room. And because every contribution makes a difference, we print on elementary chlorine-free bleached paper manufactured from regenerative wood or wood waste. Our impregnation and coating systems are water-based and we are the first company in the industry to work with environmentally friendly biological flue-air purification systems. Because it’s all about leaving behind good tracks.
In this way, smart design brings strong colours into our rooms. To go along with this, SURTECO has developed a range of colour tones that play with the colour palette of water, among other things. Terrazzo and matured-timber decors also bring this thinking to the surface and thus into the room. And because every contribution makes a difference, we print on elementary chlorine-free bleached paper manufactured from regenerative wood or wood waste. Our impregnation and coating systems are water-based and we are the first company in the industry to work with environmentally friendly biological flue-air purification systems. Because it’s all about leaving behind good tracks.
In this way, smart design brings strong colours into our rooms. To go along with this, SURTECO has developed a range of colour tones that play with the colour palette of water, among other things. Terrazzo and matured-timber decors also bring this thinking to the surface and thus into the room. And because every contribution makes a difference, we print on elementary chlorine-free bleached paper manufactured from regenerative wood or wood waste. Our impregnation and coating systems are water-based and we are the first company in the industry to work with environmentally friendly biological flue-air purification systems. Because it’s all about leaving behind good tracks.
In this way, smart design brings strong colours into our rooms. To go along with this, SURTECO has developed a range of colour tones that play with the colour palette of water, among other things. Terrazzo and matured-timber decors also bring this thinking to the surface and thus into the room. And because every contribution makes a difference, we print on elementary chlorine-free bleached paper manufactured from regenerative wood or wood waste. Our impregnation and coating systems are water-based and we are the first company in the industry to work with environmentally friendly biological flue-air purification systems. Because it’s all about leaving behind good tracks.
In this way, smart design brings strong colours into our rooms. To go along with this, SURTECO has developed a range of colour tones that play with the colour palette of water, among other things. Terrazzo and matured-timber decors also bring this thinking to the surface and thus into the room. And because every contribution makes a difference, we print on elementary chlorine-free bleached paper manufactured from regenerative wood or wood waste. Our impregnation and coating systems are water-based and we are the first company in the industry to work with environmentally friendly biological flue-air purification systems. Because it’s all about leaving behind good tracks.
Respire
We close the circles and create a better world.
Respire
We close the circles and create a better world.
Respire
We close the circles and create a better world.
Respire
We close the circles and create a better world.
Respire
We close the circles and create a better world.
The Whole World of
SURTECO
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