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Comprehensive Evolution of Waste;
The Industrial Revolution of Recycling

Farglory Construction Waste Upcycling Project 3.0

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Fighting against time, against limits, against the impossible.

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This photo shows a chair made of discarded formwork from a construction site. The wood was transformed into a rounded structure using steam.

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The transformation of recirculated building materials
An army of revolutionaries that overcame obstacles

A simple tabletop came from a diverse production team

A Rectangular Table with Three Souls

Friction

Integration

A Rectangular Table with Three Souls

Granite, about to be abandoned as a material, was able to be recirculated.

The Reclaimed Stone for Restrooms Faced Many Twists and Turns.

Stagnation

A Turn for the Better

The Reclaimed Stone for Restrooms Faced Many Twists and Turns.

Tiny pieces of plastic make their way across the world

Transforming Household Waste into Restroom Partitions

Limitations

Expansion

Transforming Household Waste into Restroom Partitions

Wall lights in the booth area

Irregular Transformations Makes for More Diverse Inspirations

Glass generated from household waste was recycled and remade into a brand-new building material that can be used in large quantities.

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Round tables in the booth area

Waste Concrete and Red Bricks Come Together to Make a Tabletop

Concrete, red bricks, glass, metal pipes, and other leftover materials from a construction site were recycled and used to assemble the table, which is a representative piece of the recycled furniture produced by the second interdisciplinary collaboration between META and Saiens.

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Long sofa in the common area

Rustic Textures Give the Feeling of Being at a Construction Site

The structure of the sofa is made from discarded formwork from a construction site, and the roller cushions are made of the blue plastic protective foam that is wrapped around aluminum door frames during construction. The original size of the foam was retained; after it was pressed, it created a unique texture.

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Overview of
Construction
Waste Upcycling
Project 3.0

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Bar stools in the common area

Object location11F

Collaborative Production Team

META Design

Material source:

Ordinary residential project

Material features:

Materials such as pieces of formwork, yellow and green safety nets, and blue-and-white debris nets from construction sites were recycled and repurposed to create the bar stools, which were then coated with natural German varnish.

Steam was used to bend the discarded formwork from construction sites into rounded pieces of wood that formed the structure of the stool. The rusted nail holes can still be seen on the surface of the chair from where the iron nails were removed.
The seats of the chairs are made from two different materials. They are either made of recycled boards made from pressed debris netting, or rust-dyed cotton seat cushions whose patterns come from rubbings of leftover construction site materials (Note 3). 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.

Steam was used to bend the wood.

Steam was used to bend the wood.

A building material made from recycled yellow-and-green safety nets and blue-and-white canvas.

A building material made from recycled yellow-and-green safety nets and blue-and-white canvas.

The cotton seat cushions were rust-dyed using construction site waste.

The cotton seat cushions were rust-dyed using construction site waste.

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Sense the Beauty of Resources