Jordan Anthony Process Book
Process book for Melt collective project
Process book for Melt collective project
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process book<br />
melt collective<br />
<strong>Jordan</strong> <strong>Anthony</strong> Tate COMD 400 Katherine Gillieson<br />
1
contents<br />
project<br />
introduction<br />
research and<br />
proposals<br />
5 11<br />
2
design phase<br />
appendices<br />
40 62<br />
3
project introduction<br />
problem space<br />
infrastructure /<br />
facilities<br />
behavior / practice<br />
/knowledge<br />
recycling culture<br />
Is the motivation related to the<br />
recycling behavior. Meaning the<br />
attitudes, knowledge, and awareness<br />
of the relative society on the concept<br />
of recycling which depends on the<br />
behavior/ practice/ knowledge.<br />
recycling behavior<br />
Is the actual act and practice of<br />
recycling which depends on the<br />
facilities and infrastructure<br />
of the campus.<br />
I had some difficulty discerning the problem space for this project. Essential the main<br />
goal of this project was to achieve sustainable behavior change in plastic recycling and<br />
sorting practices and an improved change in perspective of discarded plastic from waste<br />
to resource within the UBC community.<br />
At first, I considered UBC campus as the only problem space involved within this project<br />
but as I moved further into research I discovered that the problem also lies internally<br />
within each member of the UBC community.<br />
Further research presented two relative problems spaces to investigate concerning the<br />
UBC campus and its community.<br />
4
zero waste action plan<br />
In the fall of 2010, UBC initiated a process to engage<br />
the Vancouver (Point Grey) campus community<br />
in the development of a Zero Waste Action<br />
Plan. The Plan sets out goals, targets, and actions<br />
that will move the campus toward a vision of UBC<br />
as a zero-waste community. In the context of this<br />
plan, Zero Waste is as much a guiding principle<br />
or philosophy as an aspirational target, where all<br />
unwanted products and materials will be treated<br />
as resources that can be used again, resulting<br />
in virtually zero garbage. UBC has implemented<br />
many successful recycling and composting programs<br />
and policies to date. During the three years,<br />
2011/12/13 period, the operational waste diversion<br />
(away from landfill and incineration disposal) was<br />
approximately 45%, slowly and steadily increasing,<br />
and construction and demolition waste diversion<br />
were fluctuating around 84%. This led to approximately<br />
61% of UBC’s overall waste being diverted<br />
during this period. On the path to zero waste,<br />
UBC’s Vancouver campus is targeting an increase<br />
in its overall diversion rate to 70% by 2016 and<br />
80% by 2020, despite inevitable campus growth.<br />
With decreased disposal comes decreased the<br />
cost for many materials, bringing the potential for<br />
a cost-neutral plan to be implemented over the<br />
longer term.<br />
(UBC Vancouver Campus Zero Waste Action Plan)<br />
5
zero waste action plan<br />
Even though UBC has implemented multiple<br />
sustainability-related initiatives and infrastructure<br />
they have not been able to meet their projected<br />
waste diversion metrics stated in the 2014 Zero<br />
Waste Action Plan.<br />
The UBC Zero Waste Action plan (UBC Vancouver<br />
Campus Zero Waste Action Plan) intended to<br />
- through the use of newly implemented strategies<br />
such as the multi-stream waste bins- increase the<br />
re-usable operational waste diverted from landfills<br />
to 70% by 2016. However according to the Zero<br />
Waste Action Plan – 2016 Status Report (UBC Zero<br />
Waste Action Plan – 2016 Status Report and Update)<br />
waste diversion only showed an insignificant<br />
increase from last years (2015) 63% to (2016) 67%.<br />
The report mentions various factors that might<br />
have affected these results but various studies and<br />
reports from the UBC Social Ecological Economic<br />
Development Studies (SEEDS) department related<br />
to the Zero Action Plan initiative, highlights other<br />
critical issues which might have had a significant<br />
effect on the 2016 diversion metrics.<br />
infrastructure/ facilities<br />
Based on the results of quantitative and qualitative<br />
methods of research done in the GEOG 371<br />
Zero Waste Campus Project student report (Fazel<br />
et al.), there was suggestion of multiple factors<br />
that played an instrumental part in the lackluster<br />
recycling behavior and waste diversion. All the<br />
mentioned suggestions from the report involved<br />
strategic placement of the multi stream waste<br />
bins on the campus within the context these main<br />
influencer which were convenience, proximity to<br />
food outlets, accessibility in high traffic areas and<br />
bin capacity.<br />
Another factor related to the infrastructure / facility<br />
issue was the confusion and misinterpretation<br />
of signage found at the individual waste stations.<br />
This issue usually results in missorting of discarded<br />
waste in the waste stations causing cross-contamination.<br />
Missorting of waste at waste stations is<br />
a prominent issue as missorted waste whether it is<br />
recyclable or not will ultimately end up in a landfill<br />
which is the overarching issue and end state in<br />
which we want to avoid. A report on the Reasons<br />
for Contamination of Outdoor Organic Waste Stations<br />
at the University of British Columbia ( Barnes<br />
et al.) states that “Without even reducing the<br />
amount of waste produced or making infrastructural<br />
changes, UBC could reduce the amount of<br />
garbage sent to the landfill by 45% if UBC students<br />
and staff sorted out their waste correctly”. (Smyth,<br />
Fredeen, and Booth) and (“Waste Audit”) both<br />
highlight the importance of conducting research<br />
on the characterization of waste composition<br />
and its spatial variability in order to enhance the<br />
sustainability of an on-campus waste management<br />
6
system.” Various studies of the effectiveness of<br />
visual cues and signage present at waste stations<br />
found at UBC campus highlights important issues<br />
that should be addressed to improve waste sorting<br />
behavior. Studies done by the SEEDS department<br />
examines the reasons associated with the missorting<br />
of waste. From the information studied<br />
from the reports, there were three major factors<br />
which influenced waste-sorting behavior: clarity<br />
of information, proximity to receptacles and the<br />
emotions they evoke. (Chiykowski et al.)<br />
behavior/ practice/ knowledge<br />
Along with the variables presented in the Infrastructure<br />
and facilities category, there are other<br />
factors related to the recycling culture which<br />
influences diversion metrics. According to a<br />
study on increasing recycling at Leeds University<br />
(Clay), there are 4 relevant variables that influence<br />
recycling culture: knowledge of recycling scheme<br />
and awareness of recycling, social pressure and<br />
the creation of social norms, belief in the benefits<br />
of recycling, general environmental concern and<br />
conservation behaviour.<br />
The following extract from the GEOG 371 Zero<br />
Waste Campus Project student report (Fazel et al.)<br />
effectively summarizes the importance of recycling<br />
culture in improvring recycling behavior and<br />
ultimately diversion rates.<br />
Multiple scholarly articles have emphasized the<br />
importance of educating recycling bin users in<br />
creating a sustainable community (Olson, Arvai,<br />
and Thorp) , surveyed a sample of undergraduate,<br />
graduate students, as well as the faculty members<br />
of Michigan State University (MSU). They created<br />
a general mental model representing the subjects’<br />
understanding of the MSU concept of recycling<br />
(Olson, Arvai, and Thorp) Their results demonstrated<br />
that consumer participation is the most<br />
significant factor in recycling rate, and educating<br />
the consumer promotes consumer participation.<br />
(Pike et al.) also argued that for a green sustainable<br />
campus, students must be educated on where<br />
recycling stations are and what can be recycled.<br />
The researchers focused on the university student<br />
residence at Francis Marion University in<br />
South Carolina and concluded that students who<br />
received both the recycle bins and the recycling<br />
education had the highest rate of recycling. This<br />
study carefully considered the correlation between<br />
recycling behaviors and implementation of<br />
recycling culture through education.<br />
Installing recycle bins without implementing the<br />
culture of recycling does not promise a sustainable<br />
campus. It is through combining education<br />
and real life practices that we can achieve the<br />
UBC’s goal of waste reduction.<br />
7
These extracts from Sean Clay’s study on increasing<br />
recycling at Leeds University (Clay) also adds supplementary<br />
confirmation to the previous summary.<br />
It is clear that recycling behaviour is determined by<br />
complex interactions between a variety of factors, and<br />
that increasing recycling participation will require<br />
careful management of these factors. This study has<br />
demonstrated high levels of environmental concern<br />
and a strong support for recycling among the students<br />
of the University, although this is not always translated<br />
into effective action. However, there are various<br />
means by which this attitude-behaviour inconsistency<br />
can be changed.<br />
Improving the recycling knowledge and awareness<br />
of the students has been shown to be vital to improving<br />
recycling rates. Fortunately, this is relatively<br />
easy to achieve, through the use of simple information<br />
provision and prompting techniques. This should<br />
include information about the relevance and effectiveness<br />
of recycling in alleviating waste management<br />
and consumption problems, specific details of the<br />
recycling facilities available in the University and the<br />
importance of recycling to the community and wider<br />
national interests. In a University setting, such information<br />
can be easily communicated to a large section<br />
of the student population by posters, flyers or email.<br />
The promotion of recycling as a social norm should<br />
be encouraged as social influence can greatly affect<br />
recycling. Those students already recycling should<br />
attempt to engage their peers in this activity, or in a<br />
more structured use of social influence special recycling<br />
volunteers could be selected to actively promote<br />
recycling among their peers. The use of behavioural<br />
experience can also be employed, as students are<br />
more likely to start recycling items they are already<br />
familiar with. Recycling forums could be set up to<br />
determine such information, and to elicit recommendations<br />
from the wider student body on how recycling<br />
could be made more accessible in the University. Fostering<br />
good environmental concern and promoting<br />
other conservation behaviours among students will<br />
also serve to benefit recycling.<br />
The single variables found to be of the most significance<br />
in this study were knowledge of recycling<br />
followed by perceived social influence. Personal<br />
satisfaction derived from recycling and ecological<br />
concern were also significant, along with the<br />
frequency of collection, although this factor is not<br />
relevant in terms of University recycling. The study<br />
concludes that the best and most practical method of<br />
inducing good recycling behaviour in the long term is<br />
to concentrate on increasing internal incentives and<br />
facilitators, specifically knowledge of recycling and<br />
its benefits, and reduce external barriers to recycling.<br />
Taking the outlined factors of recycling behaviour<br />
and recycling culture into consideration the UBC<br />
waste diversion metrics can be significantly improved.<br />
8
However Influencing behaviour change is a complex task, especially recycling behaviour.<br />
Considering the constraints and scope of my project I decided to focus only<br />
on plastic recycling. Moreover;<br />
How can design inform/ influence the best methods or strategies to change or improve<br />
the narrative of discarded plastic from waste material to valuable resource<br />
- and also the best ways to inform and provide information and awareness to the<br />
UBC community of plastic recycling?<br />
9
esearch and proposals<br />
here enters<br />
Melt Collective is a creative sustainability<br />
hub which gives students the opportunity<br />
to bring their product ideas to life from<br />
free waste materials. At the same time<br />
helping to close the loop and to localise<br />
recycling, we reduce the carbon and economic<br />
cost of recycling this material.<br />
Melt Collective is an Information, awareness,<br />
knowledge/ learning hub which will<br />
provide the UBC community with handson<br />
learning on various plastic recycling<br />
related topics such as; best practices and<br />
issues of improper recycling. Students<br />
will also learn immersively about how<br />
different materials can be reused, and<br />
the different properties that make the<br />
materials useful.<br />
10
project proposal<br />
Melt Collective is a student-led recycling workshop and<br />
laboratory based out of UBC campus. Our primary goal<br />
is to prove that UBC’s waste plastics can be upcycled<br />
and sold on campus, by developing a community that<br />
promotes transparency in recycling and spreads education<br />
about closed-loop economies and extended product<br />
life-cycle awareness.It is also a project for student involvement,<br />
skill development and ongoing research, built<br />
on the sustainable principles of reusing waste and saving<br />
marine ecosystems--the primary victims of plastic waste.<br />
By creating useful products and resources from this waste,<br />
we can foster an economic incentive for ocean clean-up.<br />
My project aims to through research, find and implement<br />
the most suitable and viable communications/education/engagement/design<br />
strategy into the form of a<br />
sustainability campaign. Then, through collaborating with<br />
the”Melt Collective”;<br />
• Provide information and awareness to the UBC community<br />
on various plastic recycling related topics such<br />
as; best practices and issues of improper recycling<br />
• Promote the Melt Collective and its services within the<br />
UBC community.<br />
• And chiefly to make an attempt to change the narrative<br />
of discarded plastic from waste to valuable resource.<br />
11
pillars<br />
oceans<br />
education<br />
Our oceans are littered with plastic waste. We<br />
see photos of sea birds, stomachs askew with a<br />
lifetime of ingested plastic. Surfing in Morocco,<br />
the beaches were littered with plastic waste. The<br />
first of these factories will be in Vancouver, then<br />
soon around the world. Waste will be transformed<br />
into useful goods, creating an economic<br />
imperative for the material. In turn the profits<br />
can be used to help clean our beloved oceans.<br />
For starters, regular Beach Cleanups (in partnership<br />
with Surfrider and Northwest Wildlife<br />
Preservation Society) with a twist: after cleanup,<br />
involve the volunteers in the recreation process,<br />
making new things directly from the waste<br />
Outreach to local environmental groups and<br />
especially elementary and high schools will begin<br />
in 2017, once our AMS club has established operations<br />
and is collecting, sorting and producing.<br />
The school and group tours will involve collecting<br />
plastic waste, touring the recycling workshop,<br />
live demonstrations of the machines and discussions<br />
about research and the future of recycling,<br />
including globally in developing nations as well<br />
as the large-scale ocean cleanup that must occur.<br />
Overall, the goal of these tours will be to present<br />
a transparent walkthrough of how recycling can<br />
work.<br />
12
esearch<br />
community awareness<br />
In developing nations like India and Ghana,<br />
overrun by e-waste and plastic trash, people<br />
struggle to recycle it into new things. Without the<br />
tools and information to properly recycle, they<br />
often resort to burning the plastic for energy,<br />
or using the ‘burn-and-sniff’ sorting method,<br />
to guess at what material a plastic might be. As<br />
UBC is a leading research institution, the Plastic<br />
Workshop will support student research into<br />
novel sorting and processing methods, with the<br />
goal of creating affordable sorting technology<br />
that can be spread around the world to help<br />
improve the health of amateur recyclers. By preventing<br />
exposure to the dangerous fumes burning<br />
plastic expels, health risks can be mitigated.<br />
Plastic doesn’t come from the store and go to<br />
the recycling bin, but it sure seems so. We aim<br />
to reshape this narrative; creating long-lasting<br />
plastic products. More deeply, though, by developing<br />
a craft from recycling plastic, people will<br />
create objects that they value--like that ceramic<br />
mug or wooden chair you treasure, a plastic<br />
plant pot you create could be a beautiful, long<br />
term possession. Fostering a deeper connection<br />
with the objects we use, plastic can cease to<br />
be viewed as a disposable, and be appreciated<br />
for its unique properties and cherished, when<br />
shaped by hands, with love. While we create<br />
these products, we hope to foster a community<br />
of like-minded ‘melters’, intent on sharing<br />
knowledge about the new craft.<br />
13
process flow diagram<br />
Gathering metrics about<br />
waste streams and<br />
separating different types<br />
of plastics into groups.<br />
Removing of contaminants<br />
and debris which helps reduce<br />
machine clogging.<br />
Plastic is broken down into small<br />
pellets to allow for easy and<br />
accurate manipulation of the<br />
plastics.<br />
Compression mold is used for<br />
molding more creative items.<br />
Injection mold is used for<br />
industrial molded parts or items.<br />
Extrusion machine creates<br />
spaghetti like material which is<br />
used as material for 3D printers.<br />
14
materials<br />
Fig 1<br />
Diagram illustrating the<br />
process and products of the<br />
Melt Collective<br />
Discarded plastic is retrieved and<br />
sorted from the recycling bins.<br />
Stickers are removed and plastic is<br />
cleaned so no contaminants and<br />
debris will aect later processes.<br />
Plastic is broken down into small<br />
pellets to allow for easy and<br />
accurate manipulation of the<br />
plastics.<br />
Extrusion filament<br />
used for 3D printers<br />
Industrial parts. Injection molding<br />
is the most common modern<br />
method of manufacturing plastic<br />
parts; it is ideal for producing high<br />
volumes of the same object. (Surf<br />
Fins, Penny boards etc).<br />
Compression molding can<br />
be used for creative one<br />
time items. (Plant Pots.)<br />
15
ubc sustainability and sort-it-out campaign analysis<br />
An analysis of the current sustainability clubs;<br />
“Sort-It-Out” identity/ informational/ educational<br />
material was done to assess the efficiency and<br />
effectiveness. Points and information from other<br />
assessment of similar cases were taken into consideration<br />
and used in my assessment to ensure<br />
an unbiased conclusion.<br />
The Sort-it-Out campaign is a child initiative of<br />
the UBC sustainability brand. The implementation<br />
of the Sort-it-Out campaign resulted in the campus-wide<br />
rollout of multi-waste stream stations<br />
which allowed the UBC community to effectively<br />
recycle their waste in most areas on campus.<br />
Along with the improved facilities and infrastructure,<br />
there were multiple campaign materials such<br />
as posters, banners, social media implementation,<br />
events etc.<br />
Even though these additional materials have<br />
proven to be beneficial to improving waste sorting<br />
behaviour (Cohen, Hockley, and Tims), it has yet<br />
to prove as effective as the projections from the<br />
zero waste action plan anticipated. In fact current<br />
unpublished research conducted in the form of<br />
a waste audit organised by UBC’s largest student-run<br />
sustainability club on campus, Common<br />
Energy, determined that in March 2014, 73% of the<br />
waste in the garbage streams in the Old SUB was<br />
incorrectly sorted and could have been redirected<br />
into the other three streams. In March 2016, a<br />
waste audit was conducted of the Nest that determined<br />
80% of the waste in the garbage stream was<br />
incorrectly sorted, suggesting that waste-sorting<br />
behaviours of users worsened from the Old SUB<br />
to the Nest. (Foster)<br />
According to the UBC Sustainability Communications<br />
Guidelines<br />
The UBC sustainability visual strategy was designed<br />
to:<br />
• Share the UBC sustainability story in ways that<br />
engage and inspire target audiences.<br />
• Reflect “Tier One” quality through messaging<br />
and creative.<br />
• Align with the UBC Brand.<br />
• Scale across diverse print and digital media<br />
channels<br />
(“Sustainability Communications Guidelines”)<br />
The UBC sustainability brand has also defined a<br />
set of “sustainability criteria” to support their collective<br />
efforts and ensure campus-wide cohesion.<br />
The Waste criteria are;<br />
• Contributes to campus zero waste (recycling,<br />
reduction, reuse)<br />
• Contributes to closed loop waste management<br />
(“Sustainability Communications Guidelines”)<br />
16
There are 5 key considerations that need to be applied<br />
when utilising the UBC sustainability brand<br />
USE THE OFFICIAL RIPPLE VISUAL ELEMENT<br />
For institutional communications relating to climate and<br />
energy, recycling and waste, food and purchasing, transportation<br />
and social well-being,<br />
PROMPT SUSTAINABILITY BEHAVIOURS<br />
The Ripple is a visual reminder to behave more sustainably.<br />
Be strategic about where you use the Ripple and ensure it<br />
has good visibility and can be easily understood by a broad<br />
audience.<br />
USE EMILY CHARACTER IN STUDENT FOCUSED<br />
COMMUNICATIONS<br />
For student communications on sustainability, the character<br />
and messaging of ‘Emily’ is used to engage and educate<br />
students on various sustainability initiatives at UBC.<br />
UBC sustainability communications<br />
should employ aspirational language that<br />
creates a desire in our audience to become<br />
change-agents, community leaders,<br />
and responsible global citizens. By using<br />
cohesive, enterprise-wide visual elements,<br />
sustainability at UBC becomes a societal<br />
conversation about the world we want<br />
to live in and an active realization of our<br />
commitment to being a living laboratory.<br />
(“Sustainability Communications Guidelines”)<br />
USE THE OFFICIAL SUSTAINABILITY URL<br />
AND HASHTAG<br />
On all digital sustainability communications, please use<br />
the official UBC sustainability website URL, sustain.ubc.ca,<br />
and utilise the Ripple Effect hashtag, #RippleEffectUBC, to<br />
engage audiences at UBC and beyond on important sustainability<br />
issues, events, campaigns and research.<br />
BE POSITIVE<br />
The language and tone for sustainability communications at<br />
UBC should be positive and encourage versus negative and<br />
punitive.<br />
17
ubc sustainability and sort-it-out campaign analysis<br />
Fig 2<br />
Ripple effect visual device<br />
The ripple effect is a core visual device for UBC sustainability,<br />
intended to help communicate our story in<br />
a simple, creative and inspiring way.<br />
The term ripple effect was coined by educational<br />
theorist Jacob Kounin: “One small change can create<br />
a ripple effect that leads to greater changes with profound<br />
impact.”<br />
In our sustainability efforts at UBC, one small change<br />
can create a ripple that leads to greater changes on<br />
campus, in our local community and, ultimately,<br />
around the world. It speaks to a convergence of ideas<br />
and conceptual integration.<br />
Food Scraps:<br />
Cooked food waste<br />
Raw fruit, vegetables & grains<br />
Bones & egg shells<br />
Dairy products<br />
Paper towels & napkins<br />
Compostable* paper plates<br />
Compostable* food containers<br />
Non-synthetics tea bags<br />
Plain, uncoated wood chopsticks<br />
Keep Out:<br />
Plastic bags & plastic containers**<br />
Biodegradable plastic bags<br />
All plastic cutlery &<br />
plastic chopsticks<br />
Diapers<br />
Dog waste<br />
** Food containers must be certified compostable, fibre based.<br />
** Certified compostable plastic products are not acceptable<br />
in the Food Scraps bin.<br />
Recyclable Containers<br />
(clean/empty only):<br />
Plastic #1-7 containers<br />
Glass bottles & jars<br />
Metal cans<br />
Milk cartons<br />
Recyclable plastic bottles<br />
Recyclable cups & cutlery<br />
Juice boxes<br />
Tetrapak containers<br />
Non-paint aerosol cans<br />
(empty, no toxic residues)<br />
Keep Out:<br />
Food & Liquids<br />
Plastic bags & styrofoam<br />
Dishes, glassware or ceramics<br />
Windows or mirrors<br />
Unstamped plastics<br />
Paper (clean only):<br />
Newspapers & magazines<br />
Envelopes<br />
Computer paper<br />
Paper cup sleeves<br />
Cereal boxes<br />
Telephone books<br />
Sticky notes<br />
Soft cover books<br />
Keep Out:<br />
Milk cartons<br />
Paper cups<br />
Used paper plates<br />
Pizza boxes<br />
Soiled paper<br />
Garbage:<br />
Plastic bags<br />
Styrofoam<br />
Plastic wrap<br />
Candy bar wrappers<br />
Chip bags<br />
Non-recyclable cutlery<br />
Waxed paper<br />
Aluminum foil<br />
Keep Out:<br />
Anything compostable<br />
or recyclable<br />
The visual concept of the ripple creates a fluid expression<br />
across diverse media in graphic, photographic<br />
and video form, immediate Sort it out ly identifying<br />
the content as sustainability-related.<br />
The graphic representation of the ripple effect depicts<br />
the intersection of three sustainability perspectives:<br />
economic, environmental and social. The ripples carry<br />
static animation, with the larger set of rings being the<br />
first drop and the smallest being the most recent.<br />
Fig 3<br />
Use of Emily mascot in campaign<br />
material<br />
18
DID YOU KNOW<br />
Most of UBC’s<br />
garbage can<br />
be recycled?<br />
TOWARDS ZERO WASTE<br />
Composting and<br />
recycling at UBC:<br />
Right now, we’re<br />
only recycling<br />
LESS THAN 50%<br />
Our goal is to reach<br />
60% BY 2016 &<br />
80% BY 2020<br />
GARBAGE WE SENT<br />
TO LANDFILL IN 2013:<br />
3000<br />
TONNES<br />
OR 19 BLUE<br />
WHALES<br />
NUMBER OF YEARS<br />
TO DECOMPOSE IN<br />
THE LANDFILL:<br />
PAPER<br />
5 20 200 500 1,000,000 NEVER<br />
FOAM<br />
AMOUNT OF RECYCLABLE MATERIAL IN UBC’S GARBAGE:<br />
FOOD SCRAPS<br />
AND COMPOST 48%<br />
PAPER<br />
PLASTICS<br />
METAL AND<br />
GLASS<br />
17.5%<br />
11%<br />
7.5%<br />
Garbage in landfills creates a higher risk of<br />
soil, water and air pollution. It also creates<br />
the greenhouse gas methane, which is 20<br />
times worse than CO .<br />
UBC is aspiring to be a “Zero Waste” campus where all<br />
unwanted products and materials will be treated as resources<br />
that can be used again. To reduce environmental impacts,<br />
greenhouse gas emissions and garbage disposal costs we can<br />
all do our part. Please take an extra second and Sort it Out.<br />
and create a green, zero waste campus:<br />
USE RECYCLING STATIONS TO SORT YOUR FOOD SCRAPS AND RECYCLABLES INTO THE PROPER BINS.<br />
FOOD SCRAPS RECYCLABLE<br />
CONTAINERS<br />
Fig 4 Sort-It-Out Infographic<br />
PAPER GARBAGE<br />
To reduce our environmental<br />
footprint and reuse our resources,<br />
UBC is replacing garbage cans<br />
with multi-bin recycling stations.<br />
sustain.ubc.ca/sortitout<br />
Keep plastics out of<br />
green bins.<br />
Plastics of any kind<br />
including regular and<br />
compostable plastic<br />
bags and plastic food<br />
containers, must not be<br />
put in food scraps bins.<br />
sustain.ubc.ca/sortitout<br />
Did you know most of UBC’s garbage can be recycled? You can recycle everyday waste<br />
materials—like food scraps, paper and food or drink containers—at recycling stations. Please<br />
refer to the Sorting Guide at the end of this document for specific information on what goes<br />
into which bin. You can also find more information on the Sort it Out webpage.<br />
recycling stations.<br />
Frequently Asked Questions<br />
Q: What can be recycled and composted?<br />
mixed paper. Refer to the Sorting Guide at the end of this FAQ for more information.<br />
Q: What can’t be recycled?<br />
A: Materials that are not recyclable must go into the garbage. These include: Styrofoam,<br />
plastic bags, potato chip bags and unmarked plastic containers. Materials such as batteries<br />
and electronics can be recycled elsewhere, but not at recycling stations. A good resource<br />
for recycling options is the comprehensive Sorting Guide.<br />
Q: Where are the recycling facilities at UBC?<br />
A: There are over 700 recycling stations located in buildings across campus. Recycling carts<br />
are generally located in student housing recycling rooms, with recycling stations found in<br />
dining halls and food service outlets across campus.<br />
Q: How much garbage does UBC divert from the landfill?<br />
A: As of 2014, we were able to divert about half of all operational waste (not including<br />
construction waste) away from the landfill. However, with proper separation (putting the right<br />
materials in the right bins), most of your garbage can be diverted from the landfill using<br />
UBC’s recycling stations.<br />
Fig 5<br />
Sort-It-Out FAQ<br />
19
ubc sustainability and sort-it-out campaign analysis<br />
Food Scraps:<br />
Cooked food waste<br />
Raw fruit, vegetables & grains<br />
Bones & egg shells<br />
Dairy products<br />
Paper towels & napkins<br />
Compostable* paper plates<br />
Compostable* food containers<br />
Non-synthetics tea bags<br />
Plain, uncoated wood chopsticks<br />
Keep Out:<br />
Plastic bags & plastic containers**<br />
Biodegradable plastic bags<br />
All plastic cutlery &<br />
plastic chopsticks<br />
Diapers<br />
Dog waste<br />
Recyclable Containers<br />
(clean/empty only):<br />
Plastic #1-7 containers<br />
Glass bottles & jars<br />
Metal cans<br />
Milk cartons<br />
Recyclable plastic bottles<br />
Recyclable cups & cutlery<br />
Juice boxes<br />
Tetrapak containers<br />
Non-paint aerosol cans<br />
(empty, no toxic residues)<br />
Keep Out:<br />
Food & Liquids<br />
Plastic bags & styrofoam<br />
Dishes, glassware or ceramics<br />
Windows or mirrors<br />
Unstamped plastics<br />
Paper (clean only):<br />
Newspapers & magazines<br />
Envelopes<br />
Computer paper<br />
Paper cup sleeves<br />
Cereal boxes<br />
Telephone books<br />
Sticky notes<br />
Soft cover books<br />
Keep Out:<br />
Milk cartons<br />
Paper cups<br />
Used paper plates<br />
Pizza boxes<br />
Soiled paper<br />
Garbage:<br />
Plastic bags<br />
Styrofoam<br />
Plastic wrap<br />
Candy bar wrappers<br />
Chip bags<br />
Non-recyclable cutlery<br />
Waxed paper<br />
Aluminum foil<br />
Keep Out:<br />
Anything compostable<br />
or recyclable<br />
** Food containers must be certified compostable, fibre based.<br />
** Certified compostable plastic products are not acceptable<br />
in the Food Scraps bin.<br />
Fig 6 Sort-It-Out Sorting Guide<br />
20
issues with identity<br />
The Sort it out guide (fig 6) is not designed effectively.<br />
when taking into consideration the context<br />
in which this guide would be read- which is at the<br />
moment of recycling, This guide does not allow for<br />
quick and easy comprehension. when in the act of<br />
recycling time and convenience is an important<br />
factor as stated earlier. this guide does not compensate<br />
for this.<br />
The sort it out infographic (fig 4) is a good way of<br />
educating users on the importance and purpose<br />
of the campaign but the design of this campaign is<br />
not inviting to readers. It is too heavily saturated<br />
with colour which overbears on the legibility of<br />
the document.<br />
The use of Emily mascot (fig 3) is a creative platform<br />
to connect with the student body but studies<br />
into the effectiveness of the use of the Emily<br />
character states that it has had an adverse effect.<br />
(Ho et al.) study on the awareness of 3 sustainability<br />
campaign including Sort-It-Out, Ripple Effect<br />
and Emily stated that most students assessed,<br />
was unfamiliar with the Ripple effect and Emily<br />
campaign. The study also stated that participants<br />
thought that these campaigns belonged to other<br />
AMS campaigns not belonging to the sustainabilty<br />
department. It was also stated in the study that the<br />
Emily Campaign was also regarded as “creepy”<br />
The Sort-It-Out FAQ (fig 5) sheet is an essential<br />
element for the sustainability campaign as it<br />
provides pertinent and summarises information to<br />
concerns and questions users will have. however,<br />
it could be improved by introducing more hierarchy<br />
of information, meaning questions or concerns<br />
which have been expressed more frequently<br />
can have a higher visual hierarchy.<br />
21
esearch<br />
In order to properly create an effective campaign to influence the behaviour of the<br />
user involved, I researched into behaviour change theories<br />
The theory of reasoned action was used to map out and fully<br />
understand the problem.<br />
The theory of reasoned action explains behaviour as a result of the person’s intention<br />
to perform that behaviour. That intention is influenced by (i) the person’s<br />
own attitude towards the behaviour, or (ii) the belief that people important to the<br />
person think she/ he should or should not perform the behaviour. Of course, the<br />
person’s own ideas are influenced by the society she or he lives in.<br />
(Ajzen and Fishbein)<br />
motivation ability trigger<br />
If a person believes that the most favourable<br />
outcome will result from a<br />
behaviour, then the person is said to<br />
have a favourable attitude towards<br />
the behaviour<br />
If anticipated outcomes are believed<br />
to be negative then the person will<br />
have a negative attitude towards<br />
that behaviour.(Ajzen)<br />
If the student has a positive attitude<br />
towards the outcome then<br />
they will perform the behaviour.<br />
With the implmentation of the Zero<br />
Waste Action Plan UBC has adopted<br />
a positive sustainabilty culture.<br />
Does the person have the skill set<br />
and knowledge to perform the behaviour?<br />
Does the behaviour require a new<br />
skill set and knowledge?<br />
How can you educate the user?<br />
Most students of the UBC community<br />
posses the required skills to<br />
recycle,<br />
but the knowledge of proper waste<br />
sorting is absent.<br />
Object or interface the user<br />
interacts with<br />
If a trigger is not clear in its purpose<br />
or instruction a friction point<br />
will be the result.<br />
friction point<br />
waste sorting guides are hard to<br />
read and understand.<br />
22
addressing motivation<br />
Eventhough there is a prominent recycling culture<br />
within the UBC community, there is a clear<br />
disparity with the collective mind set of the UBC<br />
community and the resulting behavior.<br />
A UBC sutdent run newspaper (Ubyssey) adequately<br />
summarises this disparity<br />
UBC pats itself on the back for being super<br />
eco-friendly, and one cannot ignore the numerous<br />
campaigns that AMS sustainability and UBC<br />
throw each year. Ripple Effect, Sort-It-Out and<br />
Doing It Green are some of the initiatives that<br />
have become part of our everyday lives. It would<br />
be hard to find someone to argue that UBC is not<br />
respectful of the environment, as ecology is maybe<br />
the one theme that unites students in a pseudo<br />
campus spirit.<br />
Yet, there is still a culture of non-recycling on<br />
campus. “I think most people are like me in the<br />
sense that they won’t walk the extra mile to just<br />
find a bin, even if it is overflowing,” said Brauner.<br />
“They just think that someone will take care of it.”<br />
If students were bored enough to play the thrilling<br />
game of ‘watching how people act when they<br />
approach a recycling station’, they would discover<br />
that a not-negligible fraction of them stop in awe,<br />
before dumping whatever they have in the garbage<br />
bin. Even if it is plastered with the phrase: “Stop!<br />
Is that really garbage?”<br />
David Stonham, who is the Sustainability Projects<br />
Coordinator at AMS sustainability, tried to explain<br />
this particular concern. “If you contaminate one<br />
of the bins, then … there is a big chance that the<br />
whole bin will be rejected and turned into the garbage<br />
stream,” said Stonham before inviting unsure<br />
students to prefer the garbage bin to an<br />
unsafe choice.<br />
But fear of contamination is most likely not the<br />
only factor to account for the persistence of the<br />
non-recycler community. “Maybe they feel like<br />
they do not have a lot of time and they cannot be<br />
bothered to sort through their things,” said Alyson<br />
Small, a first-year Arts student. It is no breaking<br />
news that students are lazy. It is however interesting<br />
to see how laziness, a trait about which many<br />
boast, is suddenly concealed when it comes to recycling.<br />
When we approach a recycling station and<br />
take the daring decision to dump everything in the<br />
garbage, we tend to do it with a muttered slur, and<br />
usually with unnaturally quick movements.<br />
Is that a product of the “green norm” that is commonly<br />
accepted on campus? “If it is the social<br />
norm to recycle, people are going to conform to<br />
that,” said Stonham. “We are trying to make it a<br />
norm.” An enforcement that Freedom Fighters will<br />
not dare criticize. If there are still students who<br />
really do not care about the environment, they are<br />
not very loud, proof that UBC and AMS sustainability<br />
are succeeding in establishing those social<br />
attitudes. “The Sort-It-Out campaign is doing a<br />
pretty good job so far,” stated Stonham.<br />
Yet, as Brauner said, “you can try to educate people,<br />
but that is not always effective.” Be it a product<br />
of this lack of interest or not, the garbage bins<br />
are overflowing at least once a day in the SUB.<br />
(UBC Vancouver Campus Zero Waste Action Plan)<br />
23
primary research; survey<br />
24
25
primary research; survey<br />
26
This participants of this survey included a range of members from<br />
the Melt Collective team. They were chosen because they of all<br />
people considered would know what values and characteristics<br />
best represented the Melt Collective<br />
27
3m communication strategy<br />
appeal to positive emotional state<br />
Positive messaging is seen as more credible and<br />
results in more creative open minded behaviour.<br />
(Fredrickson)<br />
Various studies state that putting readers in a good<br />
mood, through appropriate positive language and<br />
colourful visuals can encourage recall. Designs<br />
should utilise a simple but vivid colour pallet,<br />
and encouraging tone. Use of reprimanding tones<br />
can result in reactance, or intentional defiance<br />
of prompt but good moods have been shown to<br />
encourage recalling of behaviour at future opportunities.<br />
(Sussman and Gifford)<br />
Appealing to negative emotions can lead to scepticism,<br />
feelings of helplessness, and decreased<br />
intention to act (Carter) (Feinberg and Willer).<br />
Negative emotions have also been shown to limit<br />
individuals to think only short term and be less<br />
able to plan for the future. (Carter)<br />
implementation of sort it out visual<br />
elements and identity<br />
The sort it out campaign is one of the most easily<br />
recognisable, understood and accepted sustainability<br />
campaigns within the UBC community.<br />
(Ho et al.) Using aspects of the campaign identity<br />
will allow users to quickly understand the context<br />
and purpose of the campaign. Implementing the<br />
sort it out campaign will also add credibility to the<br />
3m campaign.<br />
implement connection to societal<br />
norms and values<br />
confirmation to society / describing/ promoting<br />
the practive or behaviour as common. “Be like<br />
everyone else” or socially acceptable behaviour.<br />
Robert B. Cialdini’s research on influence states;<br />
“One of the best-studied nudges is the concept of<br />
social norms that can activate particular human<br />
tendencies and trigger automatic behavioural<br />
responses (Cialdini). The fact that people are more<br />
likely to (automatically) accept and follow rules<br />
that are desirable and approved by their group (or<br />
society) makes the “choice architects” empowered<br />
to draw on social norms as a persuasive “weapon<br />
of influence.”<br />
(Byrne and O’Regan) emphasize the importance<br />
of creating positive social norms, because it will<br />
promote positive indi<br />
28
vidual values, attitudes, beliefs and sense of responsibility<br />
towards waste reduction.<br />
relaying “ease” of behavior.<br />
Communicating a notion that recycling is easy<br />
and not hard will result in the user’s likelihood of<br />
accepting the behaviour. “Th eory of Planned Behaviour<br />
(TPB) postulates three independent factors<br />
to determine a behaviour: attitudes towards<br />
the behaviour (refers to the degree to which a person<br />
has favourable or unfavourable attitudes towards<br />
the behaviour); subjective norm (perceived<br />
social pressure to perform or not to perform the<br />
behaviour) and perceived behavioural control<br />
(the perceived ease or the difficulty of performing<br />
the behaviour). Perceived behavioural control can<br />
also be understood as the convenience. If people<br />
perceive recycling to be convenient and easy,<br />
they are more likely to engage in this behaviour.”<br />
(Ummat)<br />
29
3m education strategy<br />
In order to effectively educate and relay knowledge<br />
to the UBC community, the “3M”campaign must<br />
implement an education strategy.<br />
Transparency- if the UBC community knew where<br />
their discarded waste ended up they would be more<br />
mindful of their sorting and recycling behaviour.<br />
Categorical confusion was noticed to be a frequent<br />
issue - use of anti-contamination stickers<br />
Cutlery was highly incorrectly sorted because users<br />
group their waste into a bag or container then dispose<br />
of it altogether<br />
Education should target HOW to recycle as a priority<br />
and why less<br />
Education should address the misconception of<br />
difficulty and inconvenience.<br />
Misinterpretation of difficulty of a service usually<br />
occurs at the initialization phase. Melt Collective<br />
should employ a demo event to not only promote<br />
the campaign but to relay the ease of use. experiencing<br />
the service can change attitudes towards<br />
behaviour.<br />
topics to include<br />
• Where are recycle stations<br />
• Proper recycling behaviour spread awareness of<br />
highly sorted items so special attention is given to<br />
that. benefits of recycling<br />
• Information on the distinction of hard and soft<br />
plastic.<br />
The issue of users not having time to pay attention<br />
to learning materials according to studies are<br />
frequent. In order to address the 3M campaign will<br />
position learning material of the melt collective and<br />
plastic recycling behaviour in areas where users are<br />
more likely to<br />
pay attention<br />
• Table toppers<br />
• At the point of sale<br />
• At the multi-stream recycling stations<br />
( when users utilise the multi-stream waste stations<br />
most users are in a hurry and not much<br />
attention is given to any prompts, therefore,<br />
prompts would have to be attention-grabbing<br />
and easy to follow.)<br />
30
• Floor vinyl which guides the user to the proper<br />
waste stream before they reach. Floor graphics are<br />
a great way of catching attention, as people are<br />
always instinctively scanning the ground as they<br />
walk (Yellow Dog Blog). Floor graphics are most<br />
effective when they are linking orguiding the user<br />
to an item that is at eye level, and in this case,<br />
the floor graphics will lead to the recycling bins<br />
(Jessup) . They are effectively used in retail advertising,<br />
as they catch the eye of consumers and<br />
influence their decision making. (Theses, School,<br />
and Zandecki)<br />
• Ka-ching- sound prompt when depositing plastic<br />
waste. ( Reward of recycling)<br />
• The 3M campaign could also implement a sorting<br />
guide specific to the geographical location on<br />
campus, respective to the restaurants or stores<br />
found in that general area.<br />
(For example, in the village, there is a bubble tea<br />
store, a McDonald’s and the basement consisting<br />
of multiple restaurants that share the same type<br />
of material.)<br />
If waste streams represented these takeaway materials<br />
from the respective restaurants at the right<br />
waste stream users would understand easier and<br />
quicker which waste stream their discard items<br />
belongs. Which would improve sorting behaviour<br />
and ultimately improve diversion rates.<br />
ka-ching<br />
31
values and characteristics<br />
voice<br />
Crafty or Creative<br />
Hands-on<br />
Active<br />
culture<br />
Pro-Environmental<br />
Youthful<br />
Resourceful<br />
emotional<br />
benefit<br />
Satisfied<br />
Community<br />
learning<br />
impact<br />
x-factor<br />
Knowledge & Skill development<br />
Community<br />
Creative Alternative<br />
Self Expression<br />
Transparency<br />
Artsy<br />
Creative<br />
Self Expression<br />
32
33
users/personas<br />
Sally Yen<br />
friction point<br />
Inconsistent behavior and practice<br />
with attitude and beleif.<br />
information<br />
• Business Student<br />
• Loves to go out and have fun<br />
with many friends<br />
• Has a Pro-Enviromental<br />
attitude<br />
how melt collective addresses<br />
the problem.<br />
Melt Collective will provide a community activity<br />
for user and friends as a weekly event.<br />
Melt Collective will also address the attitude/<br />
behavior inconsistency by providing knowledge<br />
and skill development on proper recycling<br />
practices through hands on fun/ artsy<br />
activities.<br />
users like this will help melt<br />
collective community grow.<br />
34
Bradley Meechum<br />
friction point<br />
Doesnt really care about recycling<br />
information<br />
• Introvert/ loner<br />
• Comp Science major<br />
how melt collective addresses<br />
the problem.<br />
Melt Collective will instill pro-enviromantal<br />
attitudes and knowledge by providing a<br />
medium of expression, customization and<br />
personlistion. While developing proper recycling<br />
skills.<br />
• Loves playing video games<br />
• doesnt like spending money.<br />
• Likes customiztation and<br />
personlisation<br />
35
users/personas<br />
Suzy Burns<br />
friction point<br />
unware of improper recycling<br />
practices and or wants a more<br />
transparent alternative of recycling<br />
plastic<br />
how melt collective addresses<br />
the problem.<br />
Melt Collective will properly educate user<br />
on proper plsatic recyling practices. and also<br />
provide a transparent recycling service.<br />
information<br />
• Has a few friends<br />
• Enviromental Engineer major<br />
• Has strong pro-enviromental<br />
attitudes and recycles to the<br />
best of her knowledge<br />
36
37
mood board<br />
38
39
logo sketches<br />
design phase<br />
40
41
logo interation<br />
The existing identity of the melt Collective was inconsistent and incomplete<br />
so steps to solidify the identity were taken<br />
design criteria<br />
• Hands on feel/ casual fun<br />
• Directed towards UBC community (students)<br />
• Must represent recycling<br />
42
Chosen Logo<br />
43
1 2 3 4 5<br />
6<br />
7<br />
8<br />
16 15<br />
14 13 12 11 10<br />
9<br />
18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26<br />
31<br />
30<br />
32<br />
29 28 27<br />
Second set of logo iteration<br />
44
Latest logo iteration<br />
Initial Logo design<br />
Eventhough numerous iterations of logo<br />
designs were done I have decided to<br />
stick to the original Logo design. Done<br />
by Mary-Clare Wilke<br />
45
“CAP-TRAP” Implementation<br />
3m education strategy<br />
As a way to promote proper waste sorting behavior the” CAP-TRAP”<br />
project was initiated by the Melt Collective. This essentially provides<br />
an additional infrastructure along with the multi-stream waste station,<br />
to recycling plastic bottle caps for the Melt Collective<br />
46
“CAP-TRAP” placement proposal sketches<br />
The pilot test was not as successful as hoped due to the placement<br />
and instructional information on the label. so it was edited based<br />
on recommendations from students and staff.<br />
47
COLLECTIVE<br />
#keepbcbeautiful<br />
#preciousplastic<br />
#bethechange<br />
#reducereuserecycle<br />
#zerowaste<br />
#meltcollective<br />
PLASTIC BOTTLE CAPS HERE<br />
CAMPUS RECYCLING PROJECT<br />
1<br />
2<br />
REMOVE PLASTIC<br />
BOTTLE CAP<br />
PLACE CAP<br />
IN CONTAINER<br />
48
COLLECTIVE<br />
#keepbcbeautiful<br />
#preciousplastic<br />
#bethechange<br />
#reducereuserecycle<br />
#zerowaste<br />
#meltcollective<br />
Redesigned “CAPTRAP template<br />
49
OPERATIONS<br />
2<br />
Removing of contaminants and<br />
debris which helps reduce<br />
machine clogging.<br />
1<br />
Gathering metrics about<br />
waste streams and separating<br />
different types of plastics<br />
into groups.<br />
WASH<br />
WASTE<br />
AUDIT SORT<br />
1 2<br />
3 4<br />
Propaganda and education<br />
masterminds, using your<br />
powers for good<br />
COMMUNICATIONS<br />
Create the raddest events that will<br />
challenge conventions and systems,<br />
and spark creativity<br />
EVENTS<br />
DIRTY<br />
PLASTIC<br />
1 Discarded plastic is retrieved<br />
and sorted from the<br />
recycling bins.<br />
CLEAN<br />
PLASTIC<br />
2 Stickers are removed and plastic is<br />
cleaned so no contaminants and<br />
debris will affect later processes.<br />
MATERIALS<br />
3<br />
Breaking down of plastics<br />
to smaller material for<br />
more efficient molding<br />
and melting.<br />
3 Plastic is broken down<br />
into small pellets to<br />
allow for easy and<br />
accurate manipulation<br />
of the plastics.<br />
PRODUCT DESIGN<br />
BUSINESS<br />
GROUND<br />
PLASTIC<br />
GRIND<br />
EXTRUSION<br />
Brainstorm and blueprint<br />
beautiful, long-lasting products<br />
make from recycled plastic waste.<br />
Examine how we can profit<br />
from waste plastic, while saving<br />
our oceans and creating jobs.<br />
Business text should match<br />
weight of other statements.<br />
FILAMENT<br />
INJECTION<br />
MOLDED<br />
INDUSTRIAL PARTS<br />
WASTENAUTS<br />
OPERATIONS<br />
A Extrusion machine<br />
creates spaghetti like<br />
material which is used as<br />
material for 3D printers.<br />
Build and design the machines<br />
that bring life to the workshop<br />
and enable recycling (Engineers)<br />
Work in the imaginarium: shred,<br />
melt, sort, wash and actively turn<br />
UBC's waste into beautiful objects<br />
Extrusion filament used<br />
for 3D printers<br />
MOLDED<br />
CREATIVE ITEMS<br />
COMPRESSION<br />
B Industrial parts. Injection<br />
molding is the most common<br />
modern method of manufacturing<br />
plastic parts; it is ideal for producing<br />
B Injection mold is used<br />
high volumes of the same object.<br />
for industrial molded<br />
(Surf Fins, Penny boards etc).<br />
parts or items.<br />
C Compression mold is<br />
used for molding more<br />
creative items.<br />
HEAT PROCESSES<br />
C Compression molding<br />
can be used for creative<br />
one time items.<br />
(Plant Pots.)<br />
4 PILLARS<br />
OCEANS EDUCATION RESEARCH CONSUMER AWARENESS<br />
Our oceans are littered with plastic waste. We see photos<br />
of sea birds, stomachs askew with a lifetime of ingested<br />
plastic. Surfing in Morocco, the beaches were littered<br />
with plastic waste. The first of these factories will be in<br />
Vancouver, then soon around the world. Waste will be<br />
transformed into useful goods, creating an economic<br />
imperative for the material. In turn the profits can be<br />
used to help clean our beloved oceans. For starters,<br />
regular Beach Cleanups (in partnership with Surfrider<br />
and Northwest Wildlife Preservation Society) with a twist:<br />
after cleanup, involve the volunteers in the recreation<br />
process, making new things directly from the waste<br />
Outreach to local environmental groups and especially<br />
elementary and high schools will begin in 2017, once our<br />
AMS club has established operations and is collecting,<br />
sorting and producing. The school and group tours will<br />
involve collecting plastic waste, touring the recycling<br />
workshop, live demonstrations of the machines and<br />
discussions about research and the future of recycling,<br />
including globally in developing nations as well as the<br />
large-scale ocean cleanup that must occur. Overall, the<br />
goal of these tours will be to present a transparent<br />
walkthrough of how recycling can work.<br />
In developing nations like India and Ghana, overrun by<br />
e-waste and plastic trash, people struggle to recycle it<br />
into new things. Without the tools and information to<br />
properly recycle, they often resort to burning the plastic<br />
for energy, or using the ‘burn-and-sniff’ sorting method,<br />
to guess at what material a plastic might be. As UBC is a<br />
leading research institution, the Plastic Workshop will<br />
support student research into novel sorting and<br />
processing methods, with the goal of creating affordable<br />
sorting technology that can be spread around the world<br />
to help improve the health of amateur recyclers. By<br />
preventing exposure to the dangerous fumes burning<br />
plastic expels, health risks can be mitigated.<br />
Plastic doesn’t come from the store and go to the<br />
recycling bin, but it sure seems so. We aim to reshape<br />
this narrative; creating long-lasting plastic products.<br />
More deeply, though, by developing a craft from<br />
recycling plastic, people will create objects that they<br />
value--like that ceramic mug or wooden chair you<br />
treasure, a plastic plant pot you create could be a<br />
beautiful, long term possession. Fostering a deeper<br />
connection with the objects we use, plastic can cease to<br />
be viewed as a disposable, and be appreciated for its<br />
unique properties and cherished, when shaped by hands,<br />
with love. While we create these products, we hope to<br />
foster a community of like-minded ‘melters’, intent on<br />
sharing knowledge about the new craft.<br />
A<br />
50
event signage<br />
UBC host frequent sustainability events for the community<br />
to engage in, as a way to create presence and<br />
provide information this 36 x 42 in banner.<br />
51
PROCESS<br />
FLOW<br />
DIAGRAM<br />
1<br />
Gathering metrics about<br />
waste streams and separating<br />
different types of plastics<br />
into groups.<br />
WASTE<br />
AUDIT<br />
SORT<br />
1 2<br />
2<br />
Removing of contaminants and<br />
debris which helps reduce<br />
machine clogging.<br />
3 4<br />
WASH<br />
3<br />
Breaking down of plastics<br />
to smaller material for<br />
more efficient molding<br />
and melting.<br />
GRIND<br />
EXTRUSION<br />
INJECTION<br />
A<br />
Extrusion machine<br />
creates spaghetti like<br />
material which is used as<br />
material for 3D printers.<br />
COMPRESSION<br />
B<br />
Injection mold is used<br />
for industrial molded<br />
parts or items.<br />
C<br />
Compression mold is<br />
used for molding more<br />
creative items.<br />
HEAT PROCESSES<br />
52
MATERIALS<br />
DIRTY<br />
PLASTIC<br />
1 Discarded plastic is retrieved<br />
and sorted from the<br />
recycling bins.<br />
2 Stickers are removed and plastic is<br />
cleaned so no contaminants and<br />
debris will affect later processes.<br />
CLEAN<br />
PLASTIC<br />
3 Plastic is broken down<br />
into small pellets to<br />
allow for easy and<br />
accurate manipulation<br />
of the plastics.<br />
GROUND<br />
PLASTIC<br />
FILAMENT<br />
MOLDED<br />
INDUSTRIAL PARTS<br />
A<br />
Extrusion filament used<br />
for 3D printers<br />
MOLDED<br />
CREATIVE ITEMS<br />
B<br />
Industrial parts. Injection<br />
molding is the most common<br />
modern method of manufacturing<br />
plastic parts; it is ideal for producing<br />
high volumes of the same object.<br />
(Surf Fins, Penny boards etc).<br />
PRODUCTS<br />
C<br />
Compression molding<br />
can be used for creative<br />
one time items.<br />
(Plant Pots.)<br />
informational posters<br />
These poster were created to provide quick information on<br />
how the Melt Collective service/ process is executed.<br />
53
pattern<br />
This pattern was made to compliment and augment the design<br />
direction and aesthetic of the identity.<br />
54
anner design<br />
facebook Banner showing ideal design aesthetic<br />
55
exhibition<br />
First Iteration of exhibit design<br />
56
Second Iteration of exhibit design<br />
57
58<br />
website
59
60
facebook event banner<br />
These are two banners for the same event, design and aesthetic<br />
directions were explored and decided.<br />
design elements<br />
Various shapes and colors similar to this aesthetic<br />
was decided to be ideal for the identity<br />
61
PANEL ON<br />
RESEARCH ETHICS<br />
Navigating the ethics of human research<br />
TCPS 2: CORE<br />
Certificate of Completion<br />
This document certifies that<br />
<strong>Jordan</strong> Tate<br />
has completed the Tri-Council Policy Statement:<br />
Ethical Conduct for Research Involving Humans<br />
Course on Research Ethics (TCPS 2: CORE)<br />
Date of Issue:<br />
27 September, 2015<br />
62
Multi-Stream Waste Bins<br />
63
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