Hawke's Bay Today

Clear your hangars for fashion with altitude

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Recycled plane parts from retired Singapore Airlines planes are being used in products including clothes, bags and art that are now starting to hit the market.

The airline has scrapped aircraft during the pandemic, including several of its A380s, but parts and material are getting a new life under The Upcycling Project, an initiative run with education institutio­ns and retailers.

Fifteen Singapore-based retail brands will be among the first in the world to sell a wide range of unique products made from upcycled aircraft parts and materials.

Singapore Airline customers and aviation enthusiast­s can buy the unique products. These include furniture made from the airline’s business class seats, cabin windows and overhead compartmen­ts, as well as fashion apparel and accessorie­s made from life vests, linen sourced from aircraft cushion covers, bed sheets, blankets, and tableware redesigned from decommissi­oned service ware.

In 2020, Qantas sold fully stocked drinks carts from its Boeing 747s which were taken out of service earlier than planned.

In Singapore, fashion label Tocco Toscano began sales of pouches, wallets, and wristlet clutches made from life vests.

Supermama will begin workshops at its store at the National Museum of Singapore for customers to customise their own tableware, using Singapore Airlines and aviation-inspired decals.

Sales of their upcycled retail collection of tableware will start in January along with ANS.EIN, ipse ipsa ipsum and Photo Phactory. Other brands including Beyond The Vines, Blithe & Merry, Bynd Artisan, Charles & Keith, Commune, [in] trigue, Protesta, Reckless Ericka, Roger&Sons, and Ying The Label will progressiv­ely launch their product lines in the months after.

The collaborat­ion between the retail brands and the airline is supported by the Singapore Tourism Board and aims to encourage innovative cross-sector partnershi­ps and add vibrancy to the retail scene.

Discussion­s are continuing with more Singapore-based and internatio­nal brands, which are keen to work with airline on The Upcycling Project.

In the first quarter of 2022, the airline will also launch a Designed by Singapore Airlines collection that features an exclusive SIA range of unique upcycled products. This includes a collection of aviation tags made from retired aircraft fuselage, and bags made from life vests.

The airline is also working with SG Enable, a Singapore-based agency dedicated to supporting people with disabiliti­es. Under this initiative, SPD and Singapore Fashion Runway have created lifestyle products made from life vests and seat fabric.

The airline is donating aircraft parts and materials to educationa­l institutio­ns to be used as learning materials for their art or design courses.

With more aircraft meeting a premature end as a result of the pandemic there is renewed interest in recycling.

About 85 per cent to 90 per cent of the weight content of retired aircraft is re-used or recycled.

A paper for the Internatio­nal Civil Aviation Organisati­on found between 40 per cent and 50 per cent of the weight of all dismantled aircraft is returned to the parts distributi­on pipeline.

Most of the remaining unservicea­ble material is recycled and returned to the supply chain as raw materials, and in some cases, aircraft parts, or even entire aircraft have been repurposed for unconventi­onal uses, ranging from furniture and art work, to hotels.

 ?? ?? Fashion, retail items and art pieces have been created out of recycled Singapore Airlines planes for The Upcycling Project.
Fashion, retail items and art pieces have been created out of recycled Singapore Airlines planes for The Upcycling Project.

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