Azure

Can-do Attitude

TO.ORG AND NAGAMI APPLY 3D PRINTING TO THE PURPOSE OF ECO-FRIENDLY SANITATION

- WORDS _Laura May Todd

A new project from creative activists To.org is attempting to solve two of our planet’s most pressing issues at once: the unequal access to clean sanitation in underserve­d communitie­s and the accumulati­on of waste plastic in our oceans and landfills. “In our work in refugee settlement­s and urban slums, we witnessed first-hand the pressing need for safe and hygienic public and private toilets,” explains To.org co-founder Nachson Mimran. “From public health and disease prevention to the safety of vulnerable people, including women and children after sundown, they are critically needed.” The resulting project is The Throne, a 3D-printed portable composting toilet made from upcycled medical plastic.

In developing The Throne, Mimran collaborat­ed with Nagami, a Spanish company that specialize­s in 3D printing and computatio­nal design. The studio used its design know-how to create a 3.5-metretall shell — in the shape of a curving ovoid pod that terminates in a circular skylight — that could be easily transporte­d, assembled and cleaned. “Integratin­g every function of the toilet in a single print was very challengin­g, mostly due to mechanics,” says Nagami CEO and co-founder Manuel Jiménez García. “For example, creating a sliding door or building up layers that grow inwards to create a shelf for hand sanitizer or a toilet paper holder.” The Throne’s off-the-shelf separation toilet is incorporat­ed in a lower chamber, which also stores a wood pulp composting system that can produce chemical-free fertilizer for local crops in the underserve­d communitie­s where To.org plans to launch the project.

García and his team worked with Dutch firm Reflow to source the plastic, choosing medical-grade waste for its durability and availabili­ty in the sector. “The plastic that we use is PETG, which loses only one per cent of its properties when recycled. The project needed to be freestandi­ng and structural­ly stable, so we needed a high-quality plastic that guarantees its robustness,” García explains.

Late in the summer of 2021, the first prototype of The Throne was placed at a constructi­on site in the affluent alpine resort town of Gstaad, Switzerlan­d. “There is something appropriat­ely provocativ­e about testing a prototype in Gstaad,” Mimran says of the decision. “Historical­ly, we have seen the opposite, with the African continent being used as the test centre for things intended to benefit the Global North.” Once the prototypin­g phase is complete, Mimran hopes to expand the project into alternativ­e types of shelter, including sustainabl­e solutions for safe and secure housing and community centres. nagami.design, to.org

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 ?? ?? First deployed in Gstaad, Switzerlan­d (left), The Throne is a two-pronged solution: to provide safe sanitation and to divert plastic waste from the oceans. Inside, the 3D-printed pod has an integrated off-the-shelf separation toilet (above).
First deployed in Gstaad, Switzerlan­d (left), The Throne is a two-pronged solution: to provide safe sanitation and to divert plastic waste from the oceans. Inside, the 3D-printed pod has an integrated off-the-shelf separation toilet (above).
 ?? ?? RIGHT: To.org’s co-founders, brothers Nachson (left) and Arieh Mimran.
RIGHT: To.org’s co-founders, brothers Nachson (left) and Arieh Mimran.

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