In cooperation with eBay we developed a concept for an upcycling store in 2019 in which eBay provides the necessary platform and VAUDE the necessary residual materials from textile production, which are auctioned off.
The proceeds are donated to Save the Children. In March 2020 the Ebay-Upcycling Store went online. Since then, all do-it-yourself fans have been able to bid on various residual materials and use them to make bags, wallets or other creative ideas.
The goal is to motivate as many companies as possible to also offer their remnants in order to protect valuable materials from the waste bin.
More info at our GRI News
Check out the eBay Upcycling Store here
From pilot project to Upcycling Workshop
Naturally, we also create residual materials. Pure polyethylene and polyamide are transferred to plastics processing for the production of high grade secondary raw materials. However, the majority of the production waste at our Manufaktur ends up in residual waste bins. These are mainly made up of textile off-cuts, scraps and general remnants. Other instances: waste also accrues in our product service department when items are returned that can’t be repaired. In addition, there are old product prototypes and recyclable waste from the kitchen and logistics. More about waste
So, we asked ourselves how we could reuse these residual materials without any loss of value.
In 2016 we implemented a project to make shopping bags using material remnants from our Manufaktur in six sewing workshops by groups of refugees. We sold the bags at a sale event in the VAUDE store in Ravensburg and in our Metzingen outlet. The proceeds were donated to a joint project with the refugee program, Asylnetzwerk Tettnang. A market check showed that the bags were well received by consumers so we set up an Upcycling Workshop at the end of 2017, creating with two new jobs for refugees to produce the bags.
The Deutsche Bundesstiftung Umwelt (German Federal Environmental Foundation) is supporting the project with €70,000. This is matched by VAUDE with a further €70,000.
The funding project expired at the end of January 2020. Nevertheless, the upcycling workshop and the project team will continue to exist and is working to implement additional cost-covering upcycling ideas.
After successfully setting up the Upcycling Workshop in 2018, we integrated it into our Made in Germany factory at the beginning of 2019 where we can carry out the upcycling production more efficiently and our Upcycling Workshop employees are integrated into the Manufaktur team.
“By implementing an upcycling production process coupled with the development of a new business model, VAUDE is opening up new opportunities for value creation while at the same time saving resources and reducing waste. The integration of affiliated companies and institutions will also create a platform for upcycling production. The project contributes significantly to the integration of refugees. They are offered in-depth insights into operational processes and given greater career prospects. I hope that the project will continue to develop successfully and inspire many to replicate it.”
Read more about our commitment to refugees here.
Leftover fabrics from our Manufaktur production facility are, of course, our most evident residual material. Since 1980, we have been producing backpacks, bike bags and lifestyle bags made of robust, durable materials directly at our company premises in our headquarters in Tettnang, southern Germany. More about it at – “Made in Germany”.
Instead of disposing of die-cut remnants and excess fabric that accumulates during production as we have in the past, we now sort and collect all pieces that are large enough to be used to sew new products. We bring these materials directly to the newly established Upcycling Workshop where they are handcrafted into one-of-a-kind pieces. Based on the shopping bags from our first sewing workshops, we have created two design templates – one larger and one smaller bag – which are now sewn in the Upcycling Workshop.
The bags have been available in the VAUDE Stores as well as in our factory outlet in Tettnang/Obereisenbach and the VAUDE Outlets since mid-March 2018, and since November 2018, they have also been available in other specialist shops.
Another upcycling product is a small bag that we produce for our cooperation partner iFixit. These bags are filled with practical sewing accessories such as needles, yarn, iron-on patches and tools, and will be sold as repair kits via the iFixit Shop.
In 2019, we produced ankle straps for cycling from small scraps of tarpaulin, which were used as part of a retail campaign.
As a Christmas present for our employees, we made a shoulder bag from remnant rope and materials from our Green Shape Core Collection. More about the collection here
The VAUDE stores are also active in upcycling. They send their old advertising banners to our upcycling workshop where they are used to create cool new bags that you haven been able to buy in the stores since March.
The new bags are the successor of our gym bags that had been produced from the advertising banners in a German sewing shop.
Find a list of our stores here
Since 2018 we have also been producing upcycled shopping bags and backpacks for the Deutsche Zeppelin-Reederei as part of a pilot project – using the outer shell of a decommissioned Zeppelin NT. Instead of disposing with this old shell, beautiful souvenirs are being created so that since the summer of 2018, fans of this famous airship have been able to buy these unique bags and packs from the Zeppelin shop in Friedrichshafen or online in the fan shop.
Together with our partner DAV we implemented upcycling products in 2019. The DAV provided us with old banner material which we turned into unique backpacks and shoulder bags in our Upcycling workshop. Edelrid also took part in the project and contributed rope remnants for the straps. The products were raffled off at various DAV events.
For 2020 we already implementing another order for the DAV.
After establishing our Upcycling Workshop, we took a second step in 2018 and created an external upcycling community and material exchange together with other companies, schools and creative artists. Our goal is to create a platform that companies can use to make valuable residual materials available for upcycling projects. "Upcyclers" can then use these materials for their products and launch their projects onto the market.
Find out more about the community here
Used tent fabrics from VAUDE tents that couldn't be repaired at our Repair Service get a new life as a pocket companion from Roterfaden.
These innovative products are 100 % handmade in Germany.
Find the pocket companion with used VAUDE tent fabrics here.
We have provided numerous art colleges with materials from a discontinued line of tent flies for their creative work.
For several years we have worked with students from the Technisches Gymnasium Ravensburg on the development of a sustainable business model within the framework of the project “Umweltprofis von morgen” (Environmental champions of tomorrow). In 2016 and 2017 students came up with ideas for upcycling VAUDE material remnants. Read more here
In 2016, four students used recycled advertising banners and returned products that couldn't be repaired by our service department, and turned them into new bags that could be used as pencil cases or for cosmetics.
In 2017 another group of students designed a headphone case using remnant materials from our Manufaktur.
A Belgian school made costumes for a dance performance from VAUDE material remnants.
Bags made from VAUDE material remnants by a Catholic relief organization in Kralup by Moldau, Czech Republic
Gaiters made from VAUDE material remnants by a Catholic relief organization in Kralup by Moldau, Czech Republic
Material remnants also accrue in the production facilities that we subcontract to. When we have large amounts of remnants, we can use them to produce special one-off product models. Our producers use smaller leftover quantities for the training of new employees or training purposes.
We also rely on upcycling from leftovers in the outfitting of our VAUDE Stores. For example, the curtains for the changing rooms are made out of leftover Packs 'n Bags materials. The clothes hanger labels for our sale items are also made from remnant materials.
Unfortunately, we still don't have a recycling option for smaller remnant amounts. This generally comes with significant effort and costs (such as those due to customs regulations) when processing them or bringing them to our headquarters. After we have built up our internal structure for upcycling and material exchange, we want to concentrate more intensively on this issue in 2020.
Currently about 82 % of waste in Germany is recycled*. Recycling waste means that the raw materials and energy are put back into the commercial cycle. The most common form of this recycling is the combustion of waste to produce energy. High quality waste is transformed into a lower quality product.** For this reason such processes are known as downcycling.
There are also more sustainable and more effective ways to re-use this waste than in elaborate downcycling processes. The idea is to create new products from waste that are equivalent or higher in value than the materials used. The transformation of “useless” waste into new items is known as upcycling.
**https://www.nachhaltigkeit.info/artikel/downcycling_2007.htm
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