- Title: Designer turns plastic bags into skateboards
- Date: 6th July 2017
- Summary: LONDON, ENGLAND, UK (RECENT - JUNE 15, 2017) (REUTERS) (SOUNDBITE) (English) JASON KNIGHT, INDUSTRIAL DESIGN STUDENT AT BRUNEL UNIVERSITY, SAYING: "You take the shredded material, you load it into the mould. In my press, the actual mould itself heats up, so the base of the mould heats up to about 200 degrees (Celsius). You load all the material in, it takes between an hour and two hours to melt and then you just leave it to set - it takes about three hours to set - and then you take it out and finish it with grip tape and sanding the edges." CLOSE OF MOULD PRESS WIDE OF KNIGHT TALKING TO PERSON ABOUT THE MOULDING PROCESS CLOSE OF SIGN READING: "PRESS TO MAKE SKATEBOARDS DECKS FROM RECYCLED PLASTIC" TILT UP OF SKATEBOARD DECK MADE FROM WASTE PLASTIC VARIOUS OF SKATEBOARD DECKS ON DISPLAY (SOUNDBITE) (English) JASON KNIGHT, INDUSTRIAL DESIGN STUDENT AT BRUNEL UNIVERSITY, SAYING: "The physical properties are really useful, it's ridiculously strong, as well as looking good. I picked a skateboard because it exhibits that quality, so everyone knows a skateboard has to be strong and flexible so I thought making a skateboard and then being able to show people using it successfully is really going to emphasise the qualities of the material and that because it's recycled. It's not some crappy, second-hand material - it's good and it is actually usable and has a function." CLOSE OF SKATEBOARD MADE FROM WASTE PLASTIC MORE OF KNIGHT WITH SKATEBOARD SKATEBOARDER JUMPING AND GRINDING SKATEBOARD ON LEDGE SKATEBOARD AT PERSON'S FEET (SOUNDBITE) (English) JASON KNIGHT, INDUSTRIAL DESIGN STUDENT AT BRUNEL UNIVERSITY, SAYING: "People really like the idea, no one's seen anything like it before. They like the flexibility, it means you can jump higher because of, they call it the 'pop', because of the 'pop' you can jump quite high because it's got quite an elastic property. So it allows you to jump really high easily." CLOSE OF REGULAR SKATEBOARD WIDE OF SKATEPARK WITH SKATEBOARDERS RIDING BY SKATEBOARD MADE FROM RECYCLED PLASTIC AT KNIGHT'S FEET / PAN UP TO KNIGHT WITH SKATEBOARDERS (SOUNDBITE) (English) JASON KNIGHT, INDUSTRIAL DESIGN STUDENT AT BRUNEL UNIVERSITY, SAYING: "After speaking to some professional skateboarders I think the thing I need to address most is the weight; it's important for doing tricks that I try and bring the weight down. And also if I try and finish it with a slippy surface so that people can grind with it." SKATEBOARDER ATTEMPTING AND FAILING TO GRIND WITH RECYCLED PLASTIC SKATEBOARD (SOUNDBITE) (English) JASON KNIGHT, INDUSTRIAL DESIGN STUDENT AT BRUNEL UNIVERSITY, SAYING: "So the next step for me is to make a tutorial of how to make the board and then publish that on the internet. So hopefully it spreads around the world and then people will start building them and setting up these local recycling schemes." MORE OF SKATEPARK WITH BIKE RIDERS AND SKATEBOARDER
- Embargoed: 20th July 2017 15:16
- Keywords: skateboard skateboarding plastic pollution waste plastic plastic bags Brunel University
- Location: LONDON, ENGLAND, UK
- City: LONDON, ENGLAND, UK
- Country: United Kingdom
- Topics: Science
- Reuters ID: LVA0036OKVEQJ
- Aspect Ratio: 16:9
- Story Text: Plastic waste is a major environmental problem, clogging up landfill sites and polluting our oceans. Plastic shopping bags are one of the main culprits, but a design student has come up with a novel way to re-use plastic bags by turning them into skateboard decks.
By shredding around 1,500 plastic bags, or 1.8 kilograms worth (approx. 4 lbs), designer Jason Knight can turn the waste into a fully functioning skateboard deck using his self-built heated mould. The 22-year-old student at Brunel University hopes the novel approach to recycling will encourage people to see waste plastic as a useful commodity.
"We all know recycling is the right thing to do but it doesn't have any direct reward," Knight told Reuters. "I thought if people have a tangible reward like a skateboard for recycling it would incentivise people to do so."
Knight said the most time consuming and laborious task is the initial shredding of the plastic bags. So he built an automatic shredder to make the process more efficient. Using scrap metal from a junk yard he constructed a heating and pressing machine that turns the plastic fragments into a clay-like, malleable, material that can bind together.
"The base of the mould heats up to about 200 degrees (Celsius). You load all the material in, it takes between an hour and two hours to melt and about three hours to set. You finish it with grip tape and sand the edges," said Knight.
Sustained pressure moulds the plastic into a solid object and, with air pockets removed, creates a strong material with a unique mottled surface finish that resembles marble.
Surprisingly, Knight himself is not a skateboarder so took one of his finished boards for the professionals to try out at a skatepark on London's Southbank.
"People really like the idea; no one's seen anything like it before. They like the flexibility, it means you can jump higher," said Knight, adding he's picked up a few tips on where to improve the design. "The thing I need to address most is the weight; it's important for doing tricks that I try and bring the weight down."
Skateboard decks are traditionally made out of plywood from Canadian maple trees, and typically cost anywhere between 40-60 pounds (50-75 U.S. dollars). Professional skateboards can go through dozens of decks a year, while amateur riders can find the cost of replacing decks prohibitive. Knight believes his idea could be easily implemented by local communities to encourage young people to collect enough waste plastic in exchange for use of a press similar to the one he built.
He added that other types of plastic that often end up in landfill could also be broken up and melted down in a similar way. "Plastic bags aren't the only type of material that can go into it. It can be anything; car bumpers, it can be electronic housing, anything," he said. - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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