Diploma Project
Profit is at the core of production today. We see that businesses and leading industries are
driven by expanding profits while minimizing labor costs. They export pollution and maximize
production, while advertising for products we don’t really need. Moreover, they
manufacture products with materials, and resources extracted in exploitative ways, with both
social and environmental consequences. These cataclysmic events, such as heatwaves,
coldwaves, fires, droughts, flooding, marine heatwaves, tropical cyclones, and coastal
erosion, ultimately harm the people and communities least prepared to overcome these
challenges.
At the core of these issues lies the way in which we consume, produce and dispose of. We need
to turn our focus away from individual responsibility, to the root of the manufacturing process
and the systems these processes operate within.
This diploma looks at how we, as creators of products, might look at materials through
a radically different lens. The way in which we source these materials, and utilize them in
the products we design and manufacture.
The aim of this project is to demonstrate the potential of using locally sourced materials
in the production of new products. I hope to inspire and motivate entrepreneurs to seek out
novel materials or consider existing materials in radically different ways. Additionally, I
aim to encourage these actors to share their knowledge and information about these methods
of production, material sourcing and product development openly, so that others may
replicate, learn from, and build upon them.
A result of this is a backpack, a proof of potential, made from bicycle inner tubes,
milk bottle caps and plastic packaging. All sourced from within five kilometers of its final
assembly.