Boxing Clever
‘As a society in London we’re so fat and lazy. It’s
very important as a designer to be eco-friendly because you can have a
massive impact on how people live,’ says product designer Jason
Iftakhar, 26, who graduated last year from the Royal College of Art.
His ‘Raw Bench’, made from compressed cardboard packing, is already
turning heads. Highly innovative, his forged steel die cutting tool
enables supermarket packing machines to turn old cardboard boxes into
simple furniture, allowing supermarkets to reuse waste product, rather
than recycle, and so save money and, more importantly, resources. The
idea blossomed after Iftakhar was struck by how much waste packaging
supermarkets generate. ‘My idea is about getting a big result without
wasting a lot of energy,’ he says. ‘The materials and the machinery
were already there, it just needed to be harnessed. It’s the perfect
environment to take advantage of a system that’s already established.’
He hopes that, because supermarkets won’t have to invest too much in
the technology, they’ll be more inclined to buy into it. The bench’s
simple lines give it a contemporary feel, with its durability belied by
its near weightlessness. With its looks and eco-friendly credentials,
it has future classic potential – hence the £450 price tag.
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Iftakhar’s current projects include a solar-powered motorboat, designed
in conjunction with Swiss designer Christoph Behling and to be
showcased later this year on the Serpentine. ‘Eco-design is about
actually doing it, not just talking,’ he says.
Raw Bench available from Chair, 98 Westbourne
Grove, W2 (020 7985 7460/www.chair-london.com) Bayswater tube. Open
Mon-Sat 10am-6.30pm, Sun 11am-5pm.
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London's recycling
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Eco-warriors