Friday, July 25, 2008

Prototype: Sluice

Sluice:
The focus this time is on how to “up-cycle” the recycled wood and plastic decking material left over after building the uber-deck of your dreams.

Throwing away the odds ends and scraps of such an energy intensive product like plastic could easily undo any benefit in using recycled materials. Here is a way to protect the environment as we know it - but from a different vantage point.
Most wood / plastic composite decking materials can be welded together with epoxy and bent into curved shapes with the application of low levels of heat.
Quickly accessorize your deck with matching deck chairs. This zero waste solution makes sure that as little of our dwindling supply of oil is tossed into landfills.



Sinuously curvilinear loungers are bent into shape and snapped together - the same way the deck itself was constructed.
These chairs can be used indoors also, just drag it through your patio door and add an Azara drapery cushion - now you’ve got a comfortable lounge chair.


The individual decking strips can be taken apart for storage or rearrangement for added flexibility and the decking material comes in an assortment of colors and textures to match any deck.

Prototype: TANK

Tank
Azara Design Lab explores how mundane materials can be reconstituted into long lasting and useful items with elevated value. Our goal is to capture the embodied energy lost when raw goods are transformed into consumer products that are quickly rendered obsolete and then tossed into the garbage.











This furniture series takes post-consumer paper as a source material. Paper and cardboard waste is soaked in water until reduced to pulp. This is mixed with small amounts of Portland cement. The resultant slurry is then poured into various molds and left to dry. Upon removal, the hard yet tensile product has been dubbed “Paper-Crete”.










With the Tank prototype, we tried to exploit all properties of paper-crete. The light weight modular frames are triangulated for maximum structural efficacy with a minimal use of material. The various types frames (six in all) are designed to lock together with dowels and can be easily arranged into various seating configurations. When needs or desires change the frames can be pulled apart, rearranged or exchanged.
With variegated wood tones based on the balance of paper to cardboard, former trash is revealed to possess a unique and interesting finish (with the application of a water based semi-gloss sealer). The paper-crete mix for the small chair has been treated to a high concentration of fly-ash and takes on a patina similar to fiber cement board. Other finish options could involve laminated bamboo ply, recycled plastic, and an endless array of veneers, paints and lacquers.
Adaptability has always been a hallmark of our work. We feel that imbuing multiple levels of functionality into a single product is one of the most fail-safe ways to lengthen the longevity of our products while strengthening our commitment to our environment.
Seen here is a sofa utilizing five of the frame shapes with eighteen interconnected segments. A club seat of three shapes and ten segments and chair of three shapes and six pieces are also illustrated.
With Azara’s draped cushioning system, flexibility and comfort is assured.