Brazilian company Clever Pack designs reusable tops for water bottles that double as building bricks
Consider the lowly water bottle cap. Every year people untwist and discard billions of these plastic tops, generating enormous amounts of waste to be dumped, recycled, or left littering the ground. Every year money and energy are spent collecting, transporting, processing and remanufacturing the recycled caps alone. But Brazilian company Clever Pack has developed an innovative new twist on the plastic bottle cap: Clever Caps.
Clever Caps, the brainchild of Henry Suzuki and Claudio Patrick Vollers, are designed to interlock with each other and with commercially available toy building bricks such as LEGO. Consumers can use the caps to create toys, artworks or even furniture. Imagine desk accessories, lamps, storage bins, tables—anything you can dream up—made in a variety of colors.
Best of all, instead of throwing them away, the consumer repurposes the caps, saving the costs and energy of recycling or trashing them and reducing the carbon footprint normally associated with such endeavors.
“Recycling is a good option. Reusing is even better,” says the Clever Pack website, noting that their bottle caps have two lives built in. “On their first life, they are an efficient closure system. On the second one, they are mounting blocks that work among themselves and also with other blocks already available on the market.” Molded from the same plastic as normal caps, Clever Caps should cost about the same as well.
Read more: Plastic Caps Connect with LEGO to Save the Planet
The Latest on: Reuse
[google_news title=”” keyword=”Reuse” num_posts=”10″ blurb_length=”0″ show_thumb=”left”]
via Google News
The Latest on: Reuse
- Four options unveiled for reuse of St. E'son May 7, 2024 at 5:00 pm
The future of the former St. Elizabeth Medical Center hospital became a little more clear on Thursday, as four potential options were unveiled for the property’s reuse.
- TUES: State regulators to consider ‘produced water’ reuse rule next week, + Moreon May 7, 2024 at 4:54 am
The New Mexico Environment Department’s Water Protection Division wants to set regulations on new ways water is reused after it mixes with waste.
- State regulators to consider ‘produced water’ reuse rule next weekon May 6, 2024 at 10:30 pm
The New Mexico No False Solutions Coalition and members of the Defend NM Water Campaign held a rally to share their concerns about the proposed oil and gas wastewater reuse rule on May 6, 2024 outside ...
- Connecticut Bill Could Streamline Adaptive Reuseon May 6, 2024 at 5:00 am
The proposed law would exempt some conversion projects from local zoning regulations.
- OPINION: Misinformation and fearmongering clouding truth about water reuse ruleon May 5, 2024 at 7:30 am
OPINION: There is considerable misinformation and fearmongering about the proposed regulations being circulated by groups, especially surrounding produced water. Let me be very clear – this rule does ...
- 13 Things In Your Kitchen You Should Never Reuseon May 4, 2024 at 3:30 pm
The kitchen tends to be a hub of clutter for many of us. But when it comes to repurposing and reusing, there are some things just better left in the trash.
- Plan of Steel: Raleigh's Newest Adaptive-Reuse Projecton May 3, 2024 at 5:13 pm
Transforming a nearly century-old industrial site in Raleigh, North Carolina, into a high-end mixed-use development wasn’t anything new for Brasfield & Gorrie. But that doesn’t mean the project was ...
- The Repurpose Project opens third reuse store in Gainesvilleon May 3, 2024 at 8:21 am
Renovator Reuse is the third store of the Repurpose Project’s network of reuse stores.The non-profit’s goals is to model a circular economy by keeping materials out of landfills.The expansion comes ...
- Nearly 100-year-old Laveen farmhouse, slated for reuse as a restaurant, destroyed in fireon May 1, 2024 at 6:04 am
A nearly 100-year-old farmhouse in Laveen that was planned to be a centerpiece of a new retail development was destroyed April 30 in a fire.
- Reduce, reuse, resale : Sunnyvale nonprofit supplies leftover fabric, craft supplies at affordable costson April 26, 2024 at 1:01 am
The average American throws away 82 pounds of fabric material every year, contributing to 92 million tons of global textile waste. A Sunnyvale nonprofit is on a quest to reduce that amount, while also ...
via Bing News