Repurposing: It's the New Recycling
January 2, 2013
Erich Burnett
Photo credit: Yvette Chen
A painful reminder of Rosalie Ecks first experience with the Recycled Products Co-op still hangs on the groups office door high up in Wilder Hall. Its a promotional poster that she created four years ago, copies of which ended up all over campus.
People asked me what I made them out of, and I was so embarrassed, remembers Eck, now a senior studio art major. She had printed them on stacks of brand-new paper. Its a lesson she learned very quickly.
On a campus where recycling has been second nature for years, more homespun efforts to cut down on consumption contribute to the latest wave of environmentalism. Members of the Recycled Products Co-op dive for discarded paper, supplies, and other campus waste and repurpose it for a new wave of students to use. In some ways, its the school-supply counterpart to the Resource Conservation Team (RCT), which operates the campus Free Storea sort of permanent garage sale of student clothing, housewares, and other assorted items cast off at the end of each semester.
Together, the two groups manage to make just about everything thats old new again, turning 厙ぴ勛圖s trash into treasure every day.
Im really proud of all we do, as well as the social-justice implications of it, says Caroline Meister, a third-year student majoring in politics and environmental studies who claims membership in both the co-op and the RCT. We give away a lot of stuff to those who need it, and it fosters a lot of compassion among our students.
Discarding Wastefulness
The Recycled Products Co-ops cramped office recalls an exploded OfficeMax circa 1992. There are stacks of outmoded floppy disks and CDs, and a shelving unit piled high with used binders of all sizes. The drawers on a series of artfully repainted file cabinets label the groups bounty: manila paper, bubble wrap, cardboard, and bags, among other odds and ends. A recent donation from the local Democratic Party has resulted in a cache of paper and unused campaign stickers. Eck marvels at the new uses she might find for them.
If it all resembles a stockpile of worthlessness to the untrained eye, the co-op sees mountains of possibility in it.
The next step is not recycling by putting things in a bin, Eck says, but by reusing things or by not buying new things if you dont have tonot buying a new notebook if you can make one.
And so every other Tuesday evening, Eck totes bins loaded with discarded materials to the groups Craft Nights in the Science Center Atrium. There, they turn scrap paper into pocket-sized notebooks and transform CDs by the dozen into luminescent fish mobiles that will hang in the Science Center someday.
According to Eck, Craft Nights came about as a sort of rejection of the guilt that came along with students creative urges. Lots of people in our craft group really like to make things, but they dont want to feel like theyre being wasteful, she says.
The key, as she sees it, is in transforming unwanted materials into products that are always in demand. So in addition to more fun and frivolous creationssee fish mobiles, abovethe group has taken to fashioning notebooks from recycled paper collected from offices and bulletin boards around campus; the pages are collated, then bound for free by the colleges Printing Services department. Eck has also found a receptive market for multi-pocket binders made out of used manila folders.
Each Monday through Thursday evening, and Saturdays from 1-3, students are welcome to the basement of Asia House to peruse the RCTs Free Store. There, an ever-rotating selection of clothing, shoes, books, appliances, and other items can be foundall of it free for the taking. The groups various Swap events take place at the beginning and end of each semester and help keep the Free Store stocked.
Our swaps have a huge impact, says Meister, noting that the Fresh Swap held at the beginning of fall semester resulted in more than 1,000 items changing hands. Without the swaps, all of that stuff would be thrown away.
In ways minute and monumental, 厙ぴ勛圖s penchant for what Eck calls anti-consumerism is evidenced everywhereincluding increased membership in the Recycled Products Co-op this fall.
Were seeing more people than weve had in recent years, and that allows us to do more than we used to, she says. It also introduces a conundrum theyve begun to ponder this year: How will they create new crafts once theres no waste left to create them with?
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