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The resulting 111 Navy Chair has the identical design of the 1006 Navy Chair. The one-piece design is scratch-resistant and suitable for heavy-duty use.<ref name=":0" />
The resulting 111 Navy Chair has the identical design of the 1006 Navy Chair. The one-piece design is scratch-resistant and suitable for heavy-duty use.<ref name=":0" />


The 111 Navy Chair is made of at least 111 recycled PET plastic bottles – 65% post consumer PET – with 35% glass fiber and pigment; this gives the chair its name.<ref name=":4">{{Cite book|url=http://www.amazon.com/product-design-award-yearbook-2011/dp/3942776014|title=iF product design award yearbook 2011|date=2011-05-01|publisher=iF Design Media|isbn=9783942776011|editor-last=GmbH|editor-first=iF International Forum Design|location=Hannover, Germany}}</ref> The chair comes in 6 colors and passes all commercial requirements—it is structurally strong, fire retardant and cleanable.<ref name=":4" />
Each 111 Navy Chair is made of at least 111 recycled PET plastic bottles – 65% post consumer PET – with 35% glass fiber and pigment; this gives the chair its name.<ref name=":4">{{Cite book|url=http://www.amazon.com/product-design-award-yearbook-2011/dp/3942776014|title=iF product design award yearbook 2011|date=2011-05-01|publisher=iF Design Media|isbn=9783942776011|editor-last=GmbH|editor-first=iF International Forum Design|location=Hannover, Germany}}</ref> The chair comes in 6 colors and passes all commercial requirements—it is structurally strong, fire retardant and cleanable.<ref name=":4" />


== Results ==
== Results ==

Revision as of 18:24, 23 December 2016

Emeco 111 Navy Chair
TypeFurniture
Inception2010
ManufacturerEmeco
AvailableYes
Current supplierEmeco
Last production yearCurrent
WebsiteOfficial website

The Emeco 111 Navy Chair is a recycled plastic chair manufactured by Emeco. It is based on the Emeco 1006 chair originally built for Navy warships during World War II.[1]

History

In 2006, Coca-Cola sought a means to keep their plastic bottles their plastic bottles out of landfills, and sought product applications via manufacturing partnerships. They approached chair manufacturer Emeco, best known for manufacturing chairs from aluminum.[2][3] Emeco's leadership "jumped on the project."[1] The company saw it as an opportunity to develop an innovative, structurally sound material and keep plastic bottles out of the landfill.[4] The two companies began to talk about the possibilities of recreating the iconic Navy Chair using rPET.[5]

Development

A cafe using Emeco 111 Navy Chairs

At the time Emeco began working to create the chair out of rPET, other companies were making rPET products such as T-shirts, bags, caps and notebooks.[3] Soft recycled PET plastic was originally intended for short-lived fabric and textiles and Emeco needed to build a tough, one-piece, scratch-resistant chair for heavy-duty use.[6]

Emeco’s engineering team worked for 4 years to create a material made of recycled PET plastic that is made into pellets. Those pellets are mixed with glass fiber and color pigment.[3] Each chair starts out as six kilograms of plastic pellets that are melted down and then injection-molded into the shape of the 1006 Navy Chair. Craftsmen add the H brace to make the chair sturdier and they smooth out any imperfections that result from injection moulding.[3][5]

The resulting 111 Navy Chair has the identical design of the 1006 Navy Chair. The one-piece design is scratch-resistant and suitable for heavy-duty use.[2]

Each 111 Navy Chair is made of at least 111 recycled PET plastic bottles – 65% post consumer PET – with 35% glass fiber and pigment; this gives the chair its name.[7] The chair comes in 6 colors and passes all commercial requirements—it is structurally strong, fire retardant and cleanable.[7]

Results

As of late 2016, over 22 million plastic bottles have been kept out of the landfill and made into 111 Navy Chairs. Emeco CEO Gregg Buchbinder said in an interview with Forbes magazine “We’ve turned something many people throw away into something you want and can keep for a long, long time.”[1]

The chair sells at a much lower price than the original.[1][3]

References

  1. ^ a b c d Hickman, Matt (2010-04-14). "A Second Life For Coke Bottles". Forbes. Retrieved 2016-12-22.
  2. ^ a b Proctor, Rebecca (2015). The Sustainable Design Book. London: Laurence King. ISBN 1780674732.
  3. ^ a b c d e Bolchover, Joshua (2012). Vitamin Green. New York: Phaidon Press. ISBN 0714862290.
  4. ^ Kingswell, Tamsin (2016). "Materials Spotlight Rethinking Plastic". MIX. 39: 76–79.
  5. ^ a b "MADE TO LAST – DAMN° Magazine". Retrieved 2016-12-22.
  6. ^ Deppieri, Andrea (2014). "TETE DE BOIS". Pasajes Arquitectura (in Spanish). 133: 52–60. ISSN 1575-1937.
  7. ^ a b GmbH, iF International Forum Design, ed. (2011-05-01). iF product design award yearbook 2011. Hannover, Germany: iF Design Media. ISBN 9783942776011.