Customers exchange pee for soap at Nieuwe Instituut’s New Store pop-up
CategoriesInterior Design

Customers exchange pee for soap at Nieuwe Instituut’s New Store pop-up

Cultural centre Het Nieuwe Instituut is rethinking the archetypal museum shop with a pop-up at Dutch Design Week, designed to encourage more ethical, resource-conscious consumption.

Instead of offering a straightforward exchange of wares for money, New Store 1.0 gives patrons the opportunity to trade their urine for a piece of Piss Soap and encourages them to place their phones on specially designed fixtures to provide lighting for the venue once the sun goes down.

Het Nieuwe Instituut's New Store 1.0 pop-up at Dutch Design Week
Het Nieuwe Instituut has launched its debut pop-up shop at Dutch Design Week

Taking over Residency for the People – a hybrid restaurant and artist residency in Eindhoven – the pop-up also serves up two different versions of the same seabass dish, one made using wild locally caught fish and the other using fish that was industrially farmed and imported.

The pop-up is the first of two trial runs for the New Store, aimed at helping Rotterdam’s Nieuwe Instituut work out how to design its own museum shop to prioritise positive social and environmental impact over mere financial gain.

Bar of Piss Soap by Arthur Guilleminot at New Store pop-up
Arthur Guilleminot’s Piss Soap is among the projects on offer

In collaboration with the International Architecture Biennale Rotterdam (IABR) and research consultancy The Seeking State, the second trial will take place at next year’s Milan design week, with the aim to open the first dedicated shop in the museum’s Rotterdam location in 2025.

“It all started out with the idea that we don’t have a museum shop per se,” Nieuwe Instituut’s programme manager Nadia Troeman told Dezeen. “A museum shop, as we know, has books and trinkets and gadgets. And it’s not really doing well for the planet or the environment.”

“So we were like, how can we make the act of consuming better? How can we consume differently to help not just ourselves but the environment as well?”

Poster calling for people to donate their pee
Visitors are invited to donate their urine via a poster in the toilet. Photo by Jennifer Hahn

For the Dutch Design Week (DDW) pop-up, Nieuwe Instituut found the three featured projects by Dutch designers Arthur Guilleminot, Brogen Berwick and Arnout Meijer via an open call.

The aim was to help the designers trial their ideas for how the exchange of goods could be less extractive and transactional in a real-world scenario.

Jar of pee on a ledge at New Store pop-up
This can then be placed on a shelf outside the bathroom. Photo by Tracy Metz

“The project is part of a broader institutional agenda of ours to become more of a testing ground,” explained the museum’s director Aric Chen. “It’s part of rethinking the role of cultural institutions as being places that can do more than host debates, discussions and presentations.”

“So our aim is to take some of these projects that try to think about how we can do less damage, take them out of the graduation shows, take them out of the museum galleries, take them out of the biennales and put them into the real world, with real consumers, audiences and real people to see what we can learn from it,” he continued.

Guilleminot used the opportunity to expand his ongoing Piss Soap project, with a poster in the venue’s toilet inviting visitors to donate their pee by relieving themselves into designated cups and discreetly placing them on a newly added shelf outside the bathroom window.

This can then be exchanged for a piece of soap, made using urine donated by previous participants and other waste materials from human activities such as used cooking oil.

The soap takes three months to cure and is entirely odourless, helping to break up dirt and grease thanks to the urine’s high ammonia content.

Vacuum sealed fish
Those who are eating at the New Store can choose between two kinds of fish

The aim of the project is to find a new application for an underutilised waste material and engage people in a kind of circular urine economy.

“The idea was to revive the ancient tradition of using pee to make soap, which was done for many centuries, including in ancient Rome,” said Guilleminot.

“Could I make a modern product using this ingredient and, in the meantime, also change our feelings of disgust about our golden organic liquid?”

Black marble light by Arnout Meijer at New Store pop-up
The shop’s interactive lighting fixtures were designed by Arnout Meijer

Those having dinner at the New Store can choose between two iterations of the same fish dish.

The first uses wild seabass that was caught locally by fishers Jan and Barbara Geertsema-Rodenburg in Lauwersoog while the other was farmed in Turkey and imported by seafood market G&B Yerseke.

Devised by Berwick, who is a design researcher and “occasional fisherwoman”, the project challenges diners to ask themselves whether they are willing to pay the higher price associated with locally caught fish in exchange for its environmental benefits.

“With the fish, they get a receipt of transparency,” Troeman added. “And one is obviously longer than the other.”

Display at Het Nieuwe Instituut's New Store 1.0 pop-up at Dutch Design Week
The shop is open until 29 October

Diners were also asked to provide their own illumination as the sun goes down, in a bid to make them aware of our overconsumption of energy and the adverse effects our light pollution has on the natural rhythms of other animals.

For this purpose, Meijer designed two wall-mounted fixtures inside the New Store that have no internal light source and are simply composed of discarded glass shards topped with wooden shelves made from old beams.

If they require more light, guests have to place their phone on this ledge with the flashlight on, funnelling light onto the glass shard through a narrow slit in the wood.

Exterior of Residency for the people In Eindhoven
It takes over Eindhoven’s artists’ residency and restaurant Residency for the People

This reflects and refracts light around the space while revealing various crescent moon shapes engraved into the glass in a nod to the circadian rhythm.

“It’s really about our dependence on the constant supply of energy,” Troeman said. “Can we embrace the dark and hence be more environmentally friendly? It has benefits for everyone and everything.”

Exploring more circular forms of exchange was also on the agenda at last year’s Dutch Design Week, when designer Fides Lapidaire encouraged visitors to trade their own poo for “shit sandwiches” topped with vegetables that were fertilised with human waste.

The photography is by Jeph Francissen unless otherwise stated.

Dutch Design Week 2023 is taking over Eindhoven from 21 to 29 October. See Dezeen Events Guide for information about the many other exhibitions, installations and talks taking place throughout the week.



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Packioli is a biodegradable soap packaging made from artichoke and peas
CategoriesSustainable News

Packioli is a biodegradable soap packaging made from artichoke and peas

Industrial design student Alara Ertenü has developed a packaging solution for soap made from peapods and artichoke waste, which is currently on show as part of Dutch Design Week.

The packaging, which comes in a golden-brown colour, is designed to offer a less polluting alternative to commonly used plastic soap packaging. The project aims to address the pressing environmental issue of single-use plastic consumption while simultaneously reducing food waste.

Packioli packaging in water
Packioli by Alara Ertenü is a biodegradable soap packaging

“All of this curiosity started with a question: how can these local food wastes be circulated back into the economy,” Ertenü told Dezeen.

“The goal behind the zero-waste wraps is to eliminate plastic packaging and also meet the hygiene, logistics and endurance needs of soap brands.”

Two blocks of soap in the sea
The packaging is water resistant for up to 15 days

To make Packioli, artichoke leaves and stems are freezer-dried at minus 70 degrees Celsius alongside the peapods before being pulverized into a fine powder.

The powder is then mixed with water, vegetable glycerin and alginic acid – a natural acid derived from brown algae – to form a gummy-like substance.

A line of soap packaging on a stone surface
It is made from artichoke waste and peapods

This is then poured into a mould and left to dry for up to two days at room temperature. Once set, Ertenü uses heat to seal the edges of the little parcels. Finally, the packaging is dyed using beetroot and turmeric, giving it its golden hue.

The packaging’s name, Packioli, combines the words packaging and ravioli in reference to how the edges of ravioli pasta are sealed.

Bars of soap in brown Packioli packaging
The material can be used to wrap soaps of different shapes and sizes

Translucent and speckled in appearance, Packioli can be used to package soaps of different shapes and sizes and is designed to biodegrade completely within 15 days.

Users can keep Packioli in a dry place to preserve it for longer, or rest it on a soap dish and allow it to melt away in contact with water and with use.

“Packioli is resistant to humidity and water for up to one week, which ensures that it remains intact for 10 to 15 days if there isn’t any contact with human skin under water pressure,” she said.

Powders and pulses that make Packioli
The packaging is dyed with beetroot and turmeric

Ertenü, who is studying at the Izmir University of Economics in Turkey, sources the artichokes and pea pods for Packioli from a local market in Izmir, where according to the designer, around 80 per cent of every artichoke goes to waste.

“I regularly go to the local bazaar on the weekends to observe and talk with local people to investigate what is left out of the equation in the local food system,” Ertenü explained.

“By using artichoke leaf, it tackles the enormous artichoke waste – 80 per cent of each artichoke thrown out – especially in the west of Turkey.”

Ertenü references studies showing that every year, the cosmetics industry produces more than 120 billion pieces of packaging.

“According to Zero Waste Week, the global cosmetics industry produces over 120 billion units of packaging every year, most of which is non-recyclable and ends up in landfill, or worse yet, the ocean,” she said.

Vegetables and bars of brown soap
Ertenü wants Packioli to be used as an alternative to plastic packaging

In response, designers and brands are increasingly looking to create alternatives to plastic cosmetic packaging. Among them is sustainable packaging brand Notpla, which used seaweed leftover from its own production processes to create a kind of paper soap packaging.

Also on show at Dutch Design Week is a collection of stainless steel furniture and homeware by designer Paul Coenen that doesn’t require coatings, adhesives or fastenings, and a series of wireless solar-powered lighting systems by students from Lund University.

The photography is courtesy of Alara Ertenü.

Packioli is on show from 22 to 30 October as part of Dutch Design Week 2022. See Dezeen Events Guide for an up-to-date list of architecture and design events taking place around the world.



Reference

Create-your-own soap brand uses all organic ingredients and minimal packaging
CategoriesSustainable News

Create-your-own soap brand uses all organic ingredients and minimal packaging

Spotted: Created to reduce waste in the cosmetics industry, CustomiseMe soap uses all organic ingredients in its made-to-order production. The company reduces waste by producing orders individually by hand and by using recycled and recyclable materials in its shipping packaging. Soaps are made using the cold press technique which involves a four-week curing process.

Organic materials are sourced from responsible producers, and the brand provides a list of ingredients that customers can choose from on its website. The company claims that each ingredient has a benefit for the mind and body – from butters to essential oils.

CustomiseMe can include logos on each soap and uses organic dyes to provide a range of finished colours. For individuals and teams interested in learning more about the process of soap making, the company runs workshops for hands-on creation. Prices for a customer order begin around €34 for four bars of soap.

Springwise has spotted several innovations making bathroom products greener. These include refillable containers for bathroom products, a refillable toothpaste dispenser, and a soap company that salvages plastic dispenser bottles from other brands.

Written by: Keely Khoury

Email: info@customiseme.dk

Website: customiseme.dk

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