How Does Eco-friendly leisure chair materials Work?

Author: Ruby

Aug. 19, 2024

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7 of the most sustainable materials used in office furniture ...

Office furniture manufacturers have become increasingly conscious of the environmental impact of the products they create. They are turning to raw materials that are readily available and naturally renewable, utilising recycled materials, and even coming up with innovative new materials.

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In this blog post, we look at some of the most sustainable materials office furniture manufacturers use today to create high-quality products that are built to last.

1. Wood

Wood has always been a popular material for office furniture, often used for workstations and chair bases. If sustainably sourced, wood is one of the most environmentally friendly materials available as it is infinitely renewable and acts as a carbon store, giving it an important role in reducing carbon emissions.

FSC (Forest Stewardship Council) and PEFC (Programme for the Endorsement of Forest Certification) labels exist to give customers confidence that the wood used originates from sustainably managed forests that are carefully handled and replenished to prevent damage to ecosystems.

Types of wood that may be used include:

  • Pine - It grows fast, is widely available, and regenerates and stores carbon quickly. 
  • Oak - As oak trees are brilliant absorbers of carbon dioxide, responsibly sourced oak is deemed carbon neutral. 
  • Beech - The volume of beech harvested is lower than new growth, which makes it more sustainable than woods with a decreasing population.

At the other end of the scale, 'fake' woods, such as particleboard, MDF and plywood, can emit harmful gases due to the adhesives used in manufacturing.

2. Bamboo

Technically speaking, bamboo is a tree-like grass rather than wood. And it can grow much faster than wood, making it one of the best sustainable resources for office furniture. Some species of bamboo can grow up to 36 inches every day. This means it can reach its full size between one to five years compared to most other trees that can take a decade or more to grow.

Bamboo also plays an important role in reducing carbon footprint as it absorbs carbon from the environment and releases high oxygen levels into the atmosphere.

Aside from its sustainability credentials, bamboo is a great choice for office furniture. It's lightweight, making it easy to move around as required, and is extremely durable. Plus, it looks fantastic and can boost the overall aesthetic of your office space.

Frovi's modular shelving range is created with pressed bamboo and recycled ocean plastic and felt.

3. Natural fabrics

Natural fabrics like wool, hemp and linen are not only sustainable but also have organic, textural interest, which provides a calming aesthetic for the office. It's even possible to repurpose existing chairs by reupholstering them in these fabrics, rather than buying new.

  • Wool has been used as a sustainable option for a long time. As well as being a renewable material, it is also naturally flame retardant and heat-regulating.
  • Hemp is another great choice as the plant is extremely versatile and relatively undemanding to cultivate. Like wool, it also has natural heat-regulating properties. As manufacturing from 100% hemp can be costly, it is often blended with other materials to create sustainable textiles and covers. A lot of the final fabric also consists of cotton or silk, which also makes it softer. 
  • Linen is another natural fabric that's becoming increasingly used in furniture. It's strong, versatile and fully biodegradable.

4. Steel

Steel is classed as a sustainable material for a number of reasons. It's strong, meaning you don't need a lot of it. It can be reused infinite times, making it endlessly recyclable. It takes very little energy to produce, and it's also not toxic to people or the environment. 

For all these reasons, it's a popular choice for chair bases. Many of Viccarbe's office chairs, including the Aleta chairs, have the option of a steel base. 

5. Aluminium

Like steel, aluminium can be infinitely recycled. Recycling aluminium also saves 95% of the energy used in its production from raw materials.

The Orangebox Eva chair is made from an aluminium base.

6. Recycled materials

Recycled materials are also sustainable as they don't rely on non-renewable resources. New materials require fresh raw materials to be sourced and created for the first time, rather than reusing materials that can be recycled again at the end of their lives. 

Office furniture manufacturers are embracing the new design possibilities that recycled materials offer to reduce the carbon emissions associated with producing furniture items.

For example, the base and back frame of the Steelcase Think chair is made from recycled glass fiber. Steelcase's 'Ocean to Office' initiative also sees them using plastics dumped in the sea to weave new, durable and aesthetically unique materials for use in acoustic screening.

The Kirn chair by Orangebox is made from 100% recycled polymer feedstock, a durable material that produces 97% less CO2 in its processing than virgin plastics of the same type.

Modus furniture also use recycled materials to create sustainable products. The Richard chair is made from 100% recycled pressed PET felt shell and powder coated steel tube legs. And the Michael stool is crafted from 100% recycled cork from the waste produced when manufacturing wine corks.

7. Innovative materials

As manufacturers look for more sustainable ways to produce office furniture, new material alternatives are being invented all the time.

Mushroom mycelium has been hailed as a sustainable material of the future. It has several valuable properties as a manufacturing material as it can grow into almost any shape and can vary in density. It acts as an insulator for sound and heat and is even fire resistant. Some of the first furniture products launched using mycelium included stools and tables created by Ecovative and bioMASON, two companies that specialise in making sustainable alternatives for consumer goods.

Meanwhile, the world's first carbon-negative chair was made with AirCarbon&#;, a revolutionary thermoplastic developed by Newlight Technologies.

And more recently, Steelcase launched the new Flex Perch Stool, made from post-consumer electronics production waste - which was once impossible to recycle into like-new raw material.

Summary

The environmental impact a piece of furniture will have depends on what happens at the beginning of its life cycle during the design process. Creating sustainable office furniture all starts with first choosing sustainable materials.

Choosing products made from renewable materials like wood, bamboo and wool or sustainable metals is an excellent place to start. But recycled materials are always going to be more sustainable than fresh materials. And as manufacturers and designers continue to put sustainability at the forefront of the design process, we can expect to see more innovative sustainable materials being used in the future.

Sustainable furniture: responsible chairs

If you're seeking sustainable furniture with timeless design, look no further: the design world has been channelling its efforts into material research, pushing towards a more circular way of producing furniture, and these chairs are the ready-to-use results of extensive experimentation. This next generation of sustainable chairs is modular, stackable, can be made with minimum waste and has durability at its core. Discover our pick of carefully considered furniture, including seats that are perfect for use everywhere in the home, as well as sustainable garden furniture for the warm season.

Sustainable furniture: chairs by the world&#;s leading designers

&#;RCP2&#; chair by Jane Atfield

(Image credit: Sean Davidson)

When the British designer Jane Atfield first created her now-iconic &#;RCP2&#; chair in , it was groundbreaking. Austere in form and made from recycled high-density polyethylene board derived from plastic bottles, the chair almost appears painted because of its speckled, multi-coloured surface. The board was made by pressing and heating plastic chips so that the fragments and shards were maintained in the material&#;s final state. Atfield made the board herself, gathering bottles of suntan lotion, washing up liquid and shampoo from community collection points. New York gallerist Emma Scully has commissioned new limited-edition colours of the chair to celebrate its 30th anniversary. Working with Atfield&#;s original plastic manufacturer, Yemm and Hart, whose recycled plastic board inspired Atfield&#;s later version, Scully&#;s new colourways include a multi-coloured confetti iteration of the original prototype, a blue version of the chair that&#;s in the permanent design collection of the Victoria & Albert Museum in London and a completely new black and white version. Writer: Pei-Ru Keh

emmascullygallery.com

&#;The Everyday Chair &#; by Yriö Kukkapuro for Spinnova


(Image credit: Anton Sucksdorff and 20/20)

Finnish designer Yrjö Kukkapuro teamed up with material innovation specialist Spinnova to create a responsible seat designed to merge the needs of remote working with the comfort of a lounge chair. &#;The Everyday Chair is based on the principles of minimalism and circularity,&#; says Kukkapuro. &#;I didn&#;t waste any virgin natural resources on it, but instead used components left over from my previous projects. Minimalism and practicality can also be seen in the product&#;s weight, which is only 8kg and makes the chair easy to move around.&#; The chair&#;s textile elements are made of Spinnova fibre, a fully recyclable natural fibre created without chemicals and boasting fresh-water and CO2 footprints significantly smaller than those of cotton. 

yrjokukkapuro.com

For more information, please visit JE Group.

Sustainable aluminium chairs

&#;Hydro&#; chair by Tom Dixon and Hydro

(Image credit: press)

Tom Dixon has created the &#;Hydro&#; chair using 100 per cent recycled aluminium in collaboration with Norwegian aluminium producer Hydro (whom Wallpaper* enlisted to create a trike in collaboration with Konstantin Grcic, Cake and Polestar for Re-Made in ). The chair forms an important innovation in manufacturing technology: to create its shape, it was blow-formed at high temperatures and then laser-cut by robots &#; a manufacturing method developed by the automotive industry, with the Hydro chair being manufactured in Canada by Tesla sub-suppliers.

The chair&#;s ballooned pattern helps to make it firmer while contributing to its pop, humorous aesthetic. The final result (somewhere between a sculpture and a functional piece of furniture) is a sustainable chair that is light and stackable, suitable for indoors and outdoors. The chair was launched as part of Tom Dixon&#;s &#;24 Hours in Milan' initiative, the Milanese stop in his ongoing series of virtual design events, paying tribute to the Italian design capital and its creative energy. 

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tomdixon.net

&#;Ultraleggera &#; chair by Oskar Zieta

(Image credit: press)

Polish designer Oskar Zieta was inspired by Gio Ponti's &#;Ultraleggera&#; chair for his eponymous aluminium creation. &#;The world&#;s lightest chair,&#; is named after Ponti's design and its own weight, just  grams. The monobloc design features a durable frame (perfect for indoor and outdoor) made with innovative FiDU technology, with a laser-cut perforated seat and backrest. Through this manufacturing method, air is used to expand and deform the metal, essentially designing with air through a technique that is both material and energy-saving.

zieta.pl

Contemporary sustainable chairs for the home

&#;N02 Recycle&#; by Nendo for Fritz Hansen

(Image credit: press)

Danish furniture brand Fritz Hansen&#;s &#;N02 Recycle&#; chair by Nendo is made from 100 per cent recycled plastic household waste (a material that can also be recycled again). Nendo&#;s simple creation is defined by the designer&#;s ability to instil wonder in everyday items. His design for the sustainable chair features a round surface embracing the body, with a backrest characterised by a fold supporting the lower back. Available in seven nature-inspired colours, the chair design was developed as part of a five-piece family, including a four-leg stackable variant, an option with armrests, a sled base, and a swivel chair. 

fritzhansen.com

&#;T07 Sling&#; lounge chair by Sam Hecht and Kim Colin for Takt

(Image credit: press)

One of the brands leading the way in sustainability (and a certified B-Corp), Takt has launched a new chair designed by Sam Hecht and Kim Colin. The &#;T07 Sling&#; lounge chair was designed as a response to how we live now: Hecht and Colin considered the way people sit and lounge in the home, and adjusted their design accordingly to create a comfortable lounge chair that can be picked up and moved around. The simple chair features a natural linen fabric seat, hung hammock-like between two solid oak sides. &#;Although it is minimal in the sense that every shape and part of the chair has a functional reason for being, it still comes across with its very own personality,&#; says Takt design director Nicolai de Gier. Like all of the brand&#;s products, &#;T07 Sling&#; is easy to assemble and is certified with the EU Ecolabel (guaranteeing high environmental standards): Takt calculated that the production of Sling (model without armrest) generates 17.1kg CO2-e &#; equivalent to just 50 lattes or 1.6 pieces of steak.

taktcph.com

&#;Evolve&#; chair by Tom Robinson

(Image credit: press)

Tom Robinson looked at discarded consumer electronics to source the 100 per cent recycled plastic for his &#;Evolve&#; chair. The final material is the result of crushing the discarded equipment, breaking it down into pellets and fusing it to make strong plastic sheets &#; a process that doesn&#;t produce any carbon emissions and that is perfect for sustainable furniture. The plastic sheets are machined into furniture components &#; in Robinson&#;s case, domino-like elements he joined together to create the minimal design. The chair can be assembled and disassembled using an Allen key, making it easy to transport or store. It is ergonomic and weatherproof, making it ideal for indoor and outdoor use. 

tomrobinson.cc

Sustainable garden furniture for an eco-friendly approach to your balcony

&#;Allez&#; chair by Simon Legald for Normann Copenhagen

(Image credit: press)

Normann Copenhagen presents the café chair of the future &#; with numerous uses and created with sustainability at its core. Designed by Simon Legald, the &#;Allez&#; chair is a versatile piece ideal for indoor and outdoor use. The chair is inspired by French bistro culture and Wiener chairs, updated with a contemporary design language. It is made in Italy by a specialist plastic foundry from a moulded polypropylene that can be recycled multiple times without losing its strength and durability. The manufacturing process is calculated to use only the exact material needed to make the chair without waste &#; it weighs in at only 3.6kg.

normann-copenhagen.com

&#;3D&#; chair by Komplot for Gubi

(Image credit: press)

Prep your balcony for the warm season with this collection of sustainable garden furniture. In , Komplot and Gubi collaborated on a chair that for the first time incorporated three-dimensional veneer technology into the Danish company&#;s manufacture. Nearly two decades later, Gubi has gone back to the project and is now reissuing the chair in a new environmentally friendly version made of recycled plastic (a material that also makes it a perfect outdoor chair). The chair&#;s new injection-moulded forms remain faithful to Komplot&#;s original stackable design, defined by a curved shell with an organic appearance. &#;The Gubi &#;3D&#; chair was designed with passion and a smile. The new recycled edition has an informal and welcoming aesthetic,&#; say its designers Boris Berlin and Poul Christiansen. The new model is made of post-industrial plastic, the company explains, a special compound giving a second life to discarded boxes, packaging and used technical components. The material is treated with a UV additive to protect it from sun damage, with a small percentage of virgin plastic added to the mix to ensure durability. The chair is designed to be disassembled and recycled at the end of its lifespan.

gubi.com

&#;Ocean&#; collection by Nanna Ditzel, reissued by Mater

(Image credit: press)

A historical design updated for modern living, Nanna Ditzel's set of garden chairs and table (originally made of wood veneer) was recreated by Danish company Mater in ocean-waste plastic. &#;I feel that manufacturers have a responsibility to look seriously into waste and upcycling &#; to take what has zero value, or what is, in fact, a problem for the planet, and mature it through nice designs from the past or present,&#; said Henrik Marstrand, Mater founder and CEO, when the collection first caught our eye and was awarded a  Wallpaper* Design Award. &#;If we can create a product that is attractive, functional and durable, while cleaning up after the side effects of our collective consumerism, it&#;s a win-win.&#; Nanna Ditzel's sustainable garden furniture merges a modern appeal with contemporary production methods, making it a perfect chair for today. Further projects by the Danish company include a series of furniture designs by Danish architect Eva Harlou, in a material created by Mater from low-value waste from Carlsberg&#;s beer production.

materdesign.dk

Home to home office: multifunctional recycled furniture

&#;Phoenix&#; chair by Luca Nichetto for Offecct

(Image credit: press)

Luca Nichetto&#;s &#;Phoenix&#; chair was created with Offecct&#;s &#;lifecycle philosophy&#; in mind: each detail was carefully conceived by the Italian designer to create a chair that has a long, sustainable and flexible life. The Y-shaped base of the chair is crafted from durable recycled aluminium, while the upholstered elements can be removed, recycled, and replaced to change the chair&#;s look or function over time. &#;The idea is based on the extremely strong and flexible structure,&#; says Nichetto, who was inspired by the frame of children&#;s swings. &#;To me, it&#;s a perfect example of what design is all about: working in collaboration with the industry.&#;

offecct.com

&#;Bell&#; chair by Konstantin Grcic for Magis

(Image credit: press)

Konstantin Grcic&#;s new monobloc chair for Magis is made from a specially developed, patented polypropylene, recycled from the automotive industry and from the company&#;s own furniture production. Weighing just 2.7kg (a good half-kilo lighter than similar plastic chairs on the market), the &#;Bell&#; chair is characterised by a shell-shaped seat that makes it infinitely stackable. Magis also developed a system of logistics to ensure minimum waste, including a special delivery pallet that saves space during shipping and doubles as retail display. &#;Our aim was to develop a high-quality chair with the bare minimum of material,&#; says Grcic. &#;We did ask ourselves whether the world needed such a chair in the first place. I was quite critical at first, but the more I got into it, the more I could see a great opportunity for our project. We saw interesting potential in creating a very economical, but well-designed, well-engineered chair.&#; The chair is a Wallpaper* Design Award winner in the Best Use of Material category.

magisdesign.com

&#;Tip Ton RE&#; by Barber Osgerby for Vitra

(Image credit: press)

British designers Edward Barber and Jay Osgerby revisit their &#;Tip Ton&#; chair for Vitra, updating it with a sustainable spin. Defined by a forward-tilt movement (replicating that of office chairs), the design is now available in a new material made of local upcycled household waste. Both models follow Vitra's commitment to creating furniture using as few components as possible; the chairs are manufactured from a single mould and without mechanical components, are durable and recyclable. Material research is an essential branch of Vitra's work, and the new &#;Tip Ton RE&#; is the first product to bear the result of these efforts. Says the brand&#;s chief design officer Christian Grosen Rasmussen: &#;We wanted to keep the material as clean as possible, so what you see is what you get. In the grey there are tiny speckles of other colours that will vary a little from chair to chair. But for me that adds interest, it pushes our perception of what plastic is. The slight variation in the recycled material adds depth and gives it a story, like the way the structure of a piece of wood tells you how the tree grew.&#;

vitra.com

For more Eco-friendly leisure chair materialsinformation, please contact us. We will provide professional answers.

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