Building Castles out of Debris: Reuse Interior Design as a ‘Design of the Concrete’

Large amounts of waste are produced when old furniture is routinely replaced with new as a result of relocations and reorganizations in both the private and the public sector. This article is an anthropological study of reuse interior design, an emerging field of interior design that seeks to enhanc...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Staffan Appelgren
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The White Horse Press 2019-01-01
Series:Worldwide Waste
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.worldwidewastejournal.com/articles/19
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author Staffan Appelgren
author_facet Staffan Appelgren
author_sort Staffan Appelgren
collection DOAJ
description Large amounts of waste are produced when old furniture is routinely replaced with new as a result of relocations and reorganizations in both the private and the public sector. This article is an anthropological study of reuse interior design, an emerging field of interior design that seeks to enhance sustainability in homes and work spaces through using existing furniture and materials. Redesigners interact with materials not only to explore what they offer 'within' the design concept but also how they may 'affect' that concept. Recent theoretical debates within posthumanism and new materialism illuminate how human and non-human forces together co-produce socio-material outcomes. This perspective is here brought into productive conversation with Claude Lévi-Strauss’ work on the science of the concrete, where he outlines a method for producing new knowledge about the world based on available resources. Building on this conversation, the article argues that the redesigners’ work–assisting existing materials and things in their continuous becoming and turning them into new designs–can be seen as a ‘design of the concrete’. This has wider implications for current debates about the transition into circular economy where recycling, rather than reuse and repair, plays an important role. However, recycling tends to reduce used things simply to their material constituents, depriving them of important social, cultural, and material values. The redesigners’ studio represents a space in which used things and materials are creatively repaired, redesigned or upcycled to be used for new purposes rather than being reduced in material recovery and recycling schemes.
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spelling doaj.art-609b49a037e6426c9b1744c172f87bac2024-02-03T09:31:20ZengThe White Horse PressWorldwide Waste2399-71172019-01-012110.5334/wwwj.1912Building Castles out of Debris: Reuse Interior Design as a ‘Design of the Concrete’Staffan Appelgren0School of Global Studies, University of GothenburgLarge amounts of waste are produced when old furniture is routinely replaced with new as a result of relocations and reorganizations in both the private and the public sector. This article is an anthropological study of reuse interior design, an emerging field of interior design that seeks to enhance sustainability in homes and work spaces through using existing furniture and materials. Redesigners interact with materials not only to explore what they offer 'within' the design concept but also how they may 'affect' that concept. Recent theoretical debates within posthumanism and new materialism illuminate how human and non-human forces together co-produce socio-material outcomes. This perspective is here brought into productive conversation with Claude Lévi-Strauss’ work on the science of the concrete, where he outlines a method for producing new knowledge about the world based on available resources. Building on this conversation, the article argues that the redesigners’ work–assisting existing materials and things in their continuous becoming and turning them into new designs–can be seen as a ‘design of the concrete’. This has wider implications for current debates about the transition into circular economy where recycling, rather than reuse and repair, plays an important role. However, recycling tends to reduce used things simply to their material constituents, depriving them of important social, cultural, and material values. The redesigners’ studio represents a space in which used things and materials are creatively repaired, redesigned or upcycled to be used for new purposes rather than being reduced in material recovery and recycling schemes.https://www.worldwidewastejournal.com/articles/19reuseinterior designbricoleurcircular economyanthropology
spellingShingle Staffan Appelgren
Building Castles out of Debris: Reuse Interior Design as a ‘Design of the Concrete’
Worldwide Waste
reuse
interior design
bricoleur
circular economy
anthropology
title Building Castles out of Debris: Reuse Interior Design as a ‘Design of the Concrete’
title_full Building Castles out of Debris: Reuse Interior Design as a ‘Design of the Concrete’
title_fullStr Building Castles out of Debris: Reuse Interior Design as a ‘Design of the Concrete’
title_full_unstemmed Building Castles out of Debris: Reuse Interior Design as a ‘Design of the Concrete’
title_short Building Castles out of Debris: Reuse Interior Design as a ‘Design of the Concrete’
title_sort building castles out of debris reuse interior design as a design of the concrete
topic reuse
interior design
bricoleur
circular economy
anthropology
url https://www.worldwidewastejournal.com/articles/19
work_keys_str_mv AT staffanappelgren buildingcastlesoutofdebrisreuseinteriordesignasadesignoftheconcrete