Times Colonist

Designers aim for zero waste

Discarded materials can be used to produce higher-quality furniture

- LAURA PEARSON

Eco-friendly furniture-making has come a long way in recent years, with esthetics increasing­ly catching up to ethics.

No longer, it seems, do pieces created via sustainabl­e practices have to compromise on style. (So long, goofy bottle cap-topped coffee tables and armchairs made of wine corks.)

An example of such progress is the modern Zero Per Stool, which debuted in 2016 and features a one-of-a-kind seat created from a hybrid of wooden offcuts and resin.

It’s the work of Hattern, a South Korean design studio that’s all about “upcycling,” or using discarded materials to produce higher-quality products.

The designers, Jang Won, Min-a Kim and Kyungsun Hwang, take inspiratio­n from the likes of British heavyweigh­ts Tom Dixon and Thomas Heatherwic­k.

And while Hattern’s operation is much more modest than theirs are, its emphasis on sophistica­tion and practicali­ty is similar.

As the name suggests, the goal for the Zero Per Stool is to create almost no waste.

To achieve this, the legs are cut from white oak, and then the offcuts — random wood pieces left over — are set in resin to harden.

The resulting block of cured wood and translucen­t resin is then cut and sanded to form the stool.

This yields an unexpected­ly beautiful abstract pattern, elevating an otherwise ordinary piece of furniture to work-of-art status.

Even better: Hattern takes any small wood scraps that remain and repeats the process to make similar-looking coasters.

It’s furniture and home decor ideas like these — gorgeous rather than gimmicky — that give us hope for the future of eco-conscious design.

A Hattern online store is forthcomin­g.

 ??  ?? Wood-and-resin Zero Per Stool consists of white oak and left-over wood pieces set in resin.
Wood-and-resin Zero Per Stool consists of white oak and left-over wood pieces set in resin.

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