Thursday, 11 February 2021

I Am Always Very Dubious About Recycling Products,

in the real world once the true figures are computed, 


taking into account the cost of the recycle plant, rent, wages, transport costs of picking up the material to be recycled and cleaning it, I have yet to see one that with out some sort of aid can stand on it's own two feet, that could make it in a first world country, until today, 

Nzambi Matee, a 29-year-old entrepreneur from Nairobi, is combating one global crisis by recycling bags, containers, and other waste products into bricks used for patios and other construction projects,

prior to launching her company, Gjenge Makers, Matee worked as a data analyst and oil-industry engineer. After encountering plastic waste along Nairobi’s streets, she decided to quit her job and created a small lab in her mother’s backyard, testing sand and plastic combinations,

Matee eventually received a scholarship to study in the materials lab at the University of Colorado Boulder, where she ultimately developed a prototype for the machine that now produces the textured bricks,

made from a combination of plastic and sand, the pavers have a melting point higher than 350°C and are more durable than their concrete counterparts. Matee and her team source much of the raw product from factories and recyclers, and sometimes it’s free, which allows the company to reduce the price point on the product and make it affordable for schools and homeowners. So far, Gjenge Makers has recycled more than 20 tons of plastic and created 112 job opportunities in the community,

“It is absurd that we still have this problem of providing decent shelter–a basic human need,” Matee said in a statement. “Plastic is a material that is misused and misunderstood. The potential is enormous, but its afterlife can be disastrous.”

right now, the company generates between 1,000 and 1,500 bricks per day,  and Matee hopes to expand across Africa. You can see more of Gjenge Makers’ production and finished projects on Instagram, all images via Gjenge Makers, as an aside we use a staggering amount of single-use plastic each year—we buy one million plastic bottles each minute around the world—most of which ends up in landfills, oceans, and other natural spaces, I am not sure about the use of these bricks for buildings regarding a fire, but what a neat thing it would be if in the west we could produce these for paving in public and privates places.


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