Cape Argus

Plastic junk gets new life as school desks

- Athina May

AXIOS School of Skills in Eerste River has received 20 new green desks made of recycled plastic wrapper.

The Polyolefin Recycling Company (Polyco) created 20 double desks that were made of 50kg of chocolate wrappers, sweet packets and waste collected from the Two Oceans Marathon last year. They are practicall­y indestruct­ible and will replace the steel tables and hall chairs that learners currently use.

School principal Llewellyn Kohler expressed his excitement about the partnershi­p with the non-profit organisati­on, and said the project tied in well with recycling initiative­s at the school.

“We have a paper and metal recycling programme, and we also rework pallets to build furniture. We began manufactur­ing desks in our workshops after I discovered that we had a shortage of desks.

“We are a recycling school. We also recycle learners who are lost in the mainstream schooling system. We bring them here,” Kohler quipped.

Polyco chief executive Mandy Naudé said the project was created while the company was trying to figure out a way to increase recycling in South Africa. It also hoped to educate the public about recycling and cleaning up the environmen­t.

“This was the perfect project, it met those requiremen­ts and the desk shortage at schools. Used packaging can be made into something new, it has a forever life.

“This is the first school, and there are another 13 nationally where we will give 20 double desks per school,” said Naudé.

 ?? PICTURE: BHEKI RADEBE/AFRICAN NEWS AGENCY (ANA) ?? INNOVATION: Axios School of Skills in Eerste River received 20 green desks manufactur­ed from non-organic waste collected during the Two Oceans Marathon.
PICTURE: BHEKI RADEBE/AFRICAN NEWS AGENCY (ANA) INNOVATION: Axios School of Skills in Eerste River received 20 green desks manufactur­ed from non-organic waste collected during the Two Oceans Marathon.

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