Posts Tagged ‘Re-nest’

Final July Friday Favourites

Friday, July 29th, 2011 by Admin

Final Friday Favourites for July and my last as GM of SIFT. For all future enquiries for SIFT please email This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .

So here are the cool links that we have found in the past week:

Have a great waste free weekend.

Friday favourites

Friday, June 24th, 2011 by Admin
Eating Design from Marije Vogelzang as part of Go Slow Cafe - love the representation of food miles on the board. Source: BlackEiffel

Eating Design from Marije Vogelzang as part of Go Slow Cafe - love the representation of food miles on the board. Source: BlackEiffel

Another tiring week of earthquakes but lots of great stuff happening locally and around the world around sustainability to keep the spirits up. Here are a few goodies we found this week:

Have a great waste free weekend and hopefully an less shakey one for Cantabs.

Friday Favourites

Friday, May 13th, 2011 by Admin
Source: Re-Nest via Just a Girl

Source: Re-Nest via Just a Girl

Here are this week’s favourite links from around the world:

Have a great waste free weekend. Remember every little habitual change helps.

Friday Favourites

Friday, May 6th, 2011 by Admin
Source: Re-Nest

Source: Re-Nest

Here are some great links we have found over the past week on sustainability, waste and plastic:

Have a great waste free weekend.

Reverse Garbage

Thursday, March 31st, 2011 by Admin
Reverse Garbage Image via Re-Nest

Reverse Garbage Image via Re-Nest

Found out about Reverse Garbage (via Re-Nest) and it looks like a great idea that we could use here. It is available in only Brisbane and Sydney at the moment and is run by a non-profit that takes industrial “waste” destined for landfill and sells the items to local communities at discounted (really discounted) prices. There is a long list of the items that they have here and it shows just how many resources could be resused before ending up in landfill. The Super Shed, Waste Exchanges (by council) and Creative Junk are similar.

Watch Reverse Garbage Sydney Commercials.

Friday favourites

Friday, August 13th, 2010 by Admin

SIFT Vision Poster on the wall at our After 5 Drinks and Nibbles event on Tuesday

SIFT Vision Poster on the wall at our After 5 Drinks and Nibbles event on Tuesday

Welcome to the end of another working week. We met some potential new projects, had a bit of an After 5 drinks and nibbles event for few key people at our offices, met with current projects to get updates and generally continued to do what we do.

On the way we also found some interesting tid bits that you might be interested in perusing. Here are this week’s Friday Favourites:

  • A great article here from Nick Potter on his affair with the word “sustainability” – what will be the new words? You can see more of what Nick Potter does on his website Re-Be.
  • A dining room made from recycled plastic bottles that floats – a unique eating experience here.
  • Another great link from the team at Re-Nest who found an article in a recent Martha Stewart Living magazine about using real peanuts for packing (definitely better than styrofoam “peanuts”).
  • The latest Environmental Indicators Quarterly from the Ministry for the Environment here (pdf).
  • A great little tutorial on how to make reusable sandwich bags – (no velcro, glue, and only minimal sewing) – great idea here.
  • A move in the US to replace ornamental gardens with food producing gardens here.
  • More disrespect for and damage to the environment – will the fine work? More here.
  • The kitchen of the future – bringing the vege garden inside – more here.
  • The fridge that grows food not just stores it here.

Have a great waste free weekend.

Friday favourites

Friday, July 23rd, 2010 by Admin

IMG_9064

Furniture is being moved around today in the office including the massive board table we bought last year being moved upstairs. Thanks to one of our trustees Dixon McIvor and his band of strong lifters! Hope they go okay moving the massive bits of glass! And the really early daffodils bought earlier in the week are still letting off a very spring fragrance and provide great loveliness throughout our working day as well!

A few great links have come our way over the past week:

Have a wonderful waste free weekend.

Reducing waste to landfill at work

Monday, July 19th, 2010 by Admin
Martha Stewart Living Test Kitchen Waste Station

Martha Stewart Living Test Kitchen Waste Station

While catching up on some blog reading over the weekend I spied the above inspiring yet simple waste station in the test kitchen of Martha Stewart Living Omnidmedia in New York via Martha Stewart’s blog. You can just see that there are more bins on the other side as well. I love the Landfill sign “This is quit-zies no take backs” and that they have  a bin for the chickens!

What is great about this waste station is that it works within the function of that particular work space – the test kitchen; it includes a bin for organic waste (for the chickens) as well as the other types of waste recycling or recovery. Not only does the signage fit with the MSL brand but it is also super simple and easy to see what goes where.

When it comes to reducing the amount of waste that goes to landfill from businesses and organisations it is interesting to note two things: 1) Anecdotal research* suggests that household waste accounts for about 3.8% of all waste to landfill (the rest is commercial and industrial and construction and demolition) and 2) for some reason those who recycle at home may not necessarily recycle at work. This shows that our next step to reduce waste to landfill needs to come in the commercial and industrial and construction and demolition areas. And the first easy step is to set up easy and efficient waste management in your own business. For some this might mean they have access to council provided bins or bags for others this will mean hiring bins from independent waste management businesses. Know the types of waste you produce and what the best way is to 1) reduce it and 2) to recycle it.

Promote the benefits to reducing waste and installing an efficient waste management system to ensure buy in from all levels of the oraganisation. There will be benefits to the bottom line with cost savings for procurement (buying less paper) and waste managment (reducing to a smaller bin). Make it relevant to your staff, easy to use and understand and possibly a little fun with some good signage. Lots of internal communications on the hows and whys is important.

It is also good to consider all types of workers in your business and organisation and how they produce waste. If you have people that spend most of their time on the road install a couple of small bags in their vehicles to take the rubbish. Office bound workers can walk a short distance to a centralised waste station on each floor or house the waste station in the cafeteria or work kitchen. It is also important that those who empty the waste bins understand the importance of ensuring the right waste goes into the right bin that is collected by your council – don’t forget to talk to the cleaners too. You could even promote this to your customers, suppliers and visitors. Work with suppliers to reduce packaging, work with customers to move to less packaging for your own product or service and promote the waste management system to visitors so they know what to do with the waste they might bring with them (like lunch packaging!).

Recognition and awareness of the waste your business or organisation produces, reducing that waste and then moving to a long term efficient waste system will have benefits for the environment, for the bottom line and for your brand value.

Here are some other waste station ideas:

MSL recycling centre

MSL recycling centre

Recycling Frame from Matteria Shop via BLtd

Recycling Frame from Matteria Shop via BLtd

Re-Nest Recycling Station

Re-Nest Recycling Station

Recycle Bins from Lowes

Recycle Bins from Lowes

The SIFT Office Waste System - Organics, Landfill, Recycling

The SIFT Office Waste System - Organics, Landfill, Recycling

I have noticed that a lot of the links I have included are American based. There are some great New Zealand companies around that provide different bins for different uses for waste management and even just suping up some old cardboard boxes will do the trick. For Cantabrians try Agpac who stock Urba bins. You can get an organics bin like the one in the SIFT photo as well as great stackable bins for all your different waste streams.

We would love to see any creative or just plain practical office or business recycling. Send us your photos and we will post them here on the SIFT blog.

Images: MSL Recycling Centre, Matteria Shop Frame, Re-Nest Recycling Station, Lowes.

*From Richard Lloyd at Becon

SIFT’s Friday Favourites

Friday, July 16th, 2010 by Admin
Bicycles for Recycling at Resource Recycling (ChCh)

Bicycles for Recycling at Resource Recycling (ChCh)

These weeks are flying by – soon we will be talking about how to have a waste free Christmas and summer holiday and feeling the heat rather than the cold! But, in the meantime here are some cheery mid-Winter links for your Friday.

  • How to make your own magazine files – genius from Re-Nest.
  • A treehugger article by Fred Pearce on the growing problem of consumption not population here.
  • A possible solution to textiles waste from NYC here.
  • Ideas for recycling old linen here.
  • Green Investment Bank proposed for the UK reported by the Guardian here.
  • New Waste Facilities Survey from the MfE here.

Have a Waste Free Weekend.

Friday Favourites

Friday, July 2nd, 2010 by Admin
Source: Flickr promqu33n photostream

Source: Flickr promqu33n photostream

Phew! What a week! Project meetings, strategic planning, new enquiries…All go! But as always we still kept a look out for the waste and sustainability links that could be interesting for our blog readers. Here are this week’s Friday Favourites:

  • I watched the No Impact Man movie this week, finally and it was excellent. Inspired me to do a lot more no impact living especially when it comes to waste. You can read Colin Beavan (No Impact Man)’s blog here or get inspired and take action here and watch a clip from the movie here.
  • 21 Councils in New South Wales, Australia have formed an alliance to halve the amount of waste going to the Albury Waste Management Centre in Southern NSW as they are running out of room. More here.
  • Latest tonnage statistics from the MfE on waste to landfill here.
  • Have you heard of the Pacific Gyre and all of the plastic waste circulating around it – Beth from Fake Plastic Fish blogs about why we can’t clean it up here.
  • Celsius.co.nz posted a really informative video on what happens when BP spills….coffee!
  • Want to know what is happening in New Zealand’s energy sector for the past quarter (and the carbon emissions associated with that)? Check out the lastest NZ Energy Quarterly from the MED.
  • How to make a house out of an aeroplane here from Re-Nest.
  • Another great find from Re-Nest - Reclaimed and upcycled Apple Gadget chargers – love the typewriter.
  • National Geographic’s Human Footprint movie – a look at consuming from birth to death and how much we consume. Info here and short clip here.

And if you haven’t already checked it out visit Waveney Warth and Matthew Luxon’s new Rubbish Free website for some great tips and resources.

Have a lovely Waste Free Weekend (WFW)!