100 Plastic Bags Are Recycled Into One of These Beautiful Wireless Speakers
Waste materials destined for the landfill are turned into beautiful and unique marbled modular Bluetooth audio speakers.
With China recently announcing their disinterest in continuing playing the role of recycling receptacle for the West, discarded plastics are fast becoming a looming issue for economies and industries built around the convenience of single use, disposable materials. Brighton-based design studio Gomi proposes a small, but beautiful solution for what to do with discarded plastics, turning waste into want.
The lovely marbled design of the Gomi Speaker is the colorful melange of non-recyclable flexible plastic waste derived mostly from plastic bags, converted into malleable raw material swirled and shaped into the exterior housing for the company’s Bluetooth speaker. The speaker is made from three modular marbled-plastic components, and is made using a combination of traditional craft techniques and digital fabrication. The speakers are hand-marbled, which means that every product has its own individual aesthetic. Each speaker takes equivalent of 100 plastic bag worth of flexible plastics to make.
Gomi was co-founded by Tom Meades, Sustainable Designer and Maker based in Brighton. ?We were inspired by the cradle-to-cradle design process, thinking about our products full-lifecycle right from the beginning of our design process. With our bluetooth speakers, we want to intercept a waste stream that would otherwise be landfilled or incinerated....
With China recently announcing their disinterest in continuing playing the role of recycling receptacle for the West, discarded plastics are fast becoming a looming issue for economies and industries built around the convenience of single use, disposable materials. Brighton-based design studio Gomi proposes a small, but beautiful solution for what to do with discarded plastics, turning waste into want.
The lovely marbled design of the Gomi Speaker is the colorful melange of non-recyclable flexible plastic waste derived mostly from plastic bags, converted into malleable raw material swirled and shaped into the exterior housing for the company’s Bluetooth speaker. The speaker is made from three modular marbled-plastic components, and is made using a combination of traditional craft techniques and digital fabrication. The speakers are hand-marbled, which means that every product has its own individual aesthetic. Each speaker takes equivalent of 100 plastic bag worth of flexible plastics to make.
Gomi was co-founded by Tom Meades, Sustainable Designer and Maker based in Brighton. ?We were inspired by the cradle-to-cradle design process, thinking about our products full-lifecycle right from the beginning of our design process. With our bluetooth speakers, we want to intercept a waste stream that would otherwise be landfilled or incinerated....
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