Circularity through play
-
How can we motivate the upcycling of packaging and waste generated by children to optimize the useful life of this material, in an innovative and fun way?
Actimake is a recycling system designed so that waste can become a system of lego-like connectors so that children can play creating structures and imagining any type of object. They are encouraged to exercise critical thinking by putting counterweights inside the bottles to make stable structures.
The joints we designed are printed in 3D with a bioplastic that comes from potato starch, but this is a work in progress and we believe that we can develop other types of joints with other materials and for more types of packaging.
© 2022 This work is licensed under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 license.
The current packaging system is unsustainable because it is still fundamentally linear: raw materials are used to manufacture a product's packaging and, once consumed, the packaging is thrown away. The "Take, Make, Waste" culture is creating major challenges, especially for the plastics industry, which ranks as the second largest polluter in terms of total greenhouse gas emissions. This problem is aggravated when it comes to toys, because their life cycle is much shorter than that of other products.
As designers, we have a responsibility to innovate so that all the packaging and products we (really) need are designed to be reused, recycled or safely composted; and to ensure that the material we produce is optimized and kept within a more sustainable economy.
What I propose is a new recycling system in which packaging is designed in a circular way, to optimize the useful life of the material through a second life as toys. And above all to raise awareness among children about recycling and circularity, because they are the generations of the future.
Comments