Construction Waste Upcycling Project 2.0—Floor Image
Firewood (end tables) waiting to be placed in the campfire Since they are farther away from the campfire table, mushrooms (lights) have emerged due to the humidity
The chair is made from discarded formwork from a construction site, and the nail holes on its surface have been kept. The structure is an homage to the I-beam, which is used as scaffolding at construction sites.
The chair is made from discarded formwork from a construction site, and the nail holes on its surface have been kept. The structure is an homage to the I-beam, which is used as scaffolding at construction sites.
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Pieces of stone removed during the renovation of the stairwells on each floor were recycled and re-cut for a new design.
The seats of the chairs are made of two different materials. They are either made of recycled boards made from pressed debris nets, or rust-dyed cotton seat cushions whose patterns come from rubbings of leftover construction site materials. A seat with a choice of two materials is the best kind of proof for the transformation that can happen through the Construction Waste Upcycling Project.
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Object location24F
Collaborative Production Team
META Design
Material source:
Waste from renovation of Farglory headquarters
Material features:
Large sheets of stone removed during the renovation of the stairwells on each floor were recycled for an innovative design.
The tabletop of the main table is mostly made of the large sheets of precious stone removed during the renovation of the stairwells on the 23rd and 24th floors. The sheets were carefully processed to turn them into smaller pieces, which were then vertically stacked to form a three-dimensional image of a campfire with simple and clean lines.
From the outside to the inside, the ink-black and gray layers of granite wrap around the warm-colored stone and create a visual effect that is reminiscent of a campfire, transforming the cold and hard stone as if new warmth and luster have emerged from the abandoned materials.
Large sheets of stone removed from various floors of Farglory headquarters.
The slabs of stone were cut into pieces and stacked vertically.
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