‘Making’ the business case for upcycling
Hands-on entrepreneurs in Vancouver are crafting the business model for sustainability
By Hayley Woodin
What started out as a side project taking landfill-bound materials and turning them into furniture quickly became a business for Jesi Carson and Theunis Snyman.
The duo run Basic Design, a social enterprise housed in a studio at MakerLabs, a 26,000-square-foot Railtown workspace complete with laser cutters, 3D printers and other maker tools.
While the company produces unique pieces of furniture and products such as wallets and mobile phone cases out of second-hand materials, the business is really centred on redefining the value of waste.
“We just kind of began exploring with materials,” says Carson, who studied sustainability through Emily Carr University’s interaction design programme. In discarded textiles and used pieces of wood, Carson and Snyman saw potential for products that were beautiful, sellable and in line with their environmental ethics.
“We just started playing with them and kind of designed a product line together using these waste streams,” she says. “It led eventually to growing into a larger business.”
Turning waste into opportunity ■ According to the Vancouver Economic Commission, two-thirds of the 1.8 million tonnes of construction and demolition waste discarded in Metro Vancouver each year is recycled. The rest heads to the landfill.