Reykjavík Grapevine


Reykjavík Grapevine - 10.03.2017, Page 49

Reykjavík Grapevine - 10.03.2017, Page 49
DesignMarch From Threat Into Thread Behind the scenes of the the revolutionary Adidas x Parley footwear Words Ciarán Daly With plastic now polluting every corner of the globe, plastic pol- lution remains one of the great- est blights on the world’s oceans. From compostable coffee cups to biodegradable plastic bags, the is- sue is leading to rapid changes in the attitudes of designers towards their projects. One such product is the Adidas x Parley shoe—foot- wear partially manufactured from recycled ocean plastic. “There’s really been a huge real- isation in the last few years that we have to start working in a complete- ly different way and be conscious of creating real sustainable products and implementing real sustain- ability in production,” explains Alexander Taylor, the lead innova- tion and design consultant behind the Adidas x Parley collaboration. Alexander was first invited to work with Adidas in 2008 on a project for the 2012 Beijing Olym- pics: the Adidas PrimeKnit shoe. The project focused on proposing new ways of manufacturing foot- wear which sat outside the regular toolbox of the industry at the time, and Alexander’s experience in in- dustrial design proved to be more than innovative. “I’d never de- signed a shoe before—my proposal at that time involved knitting,” he says. “By taking technology from the furniture world and using knitting as a key technology, I pro- posed that we make some shoes.” A single process It was on the back of that project that Alexander was invited to do more work with Adidas, oriented towards proposing new sustain- able technologies, processes, and materials. “It was normal at that time to have fifteen to twenty in- dividual pieces going into each shoe—these would be cut out and sewn together to add support or functionality,” he explains. “My brief right then was to see if we could cut out all the pieces and try to make the upper part of the shoe out a single piece of material, us- ing a single process.” Since then, Alexander and the team have developed a number of different technologies, including a fibre placement technology that enabled the creation of the Par- ley shoe. The intersection of new technologies (such as 3D print- ing) and the urgency of sustain- ability has, Alexander argues, of- fered designers a new direction. “Rather than just focusing on the physical object itself, there’s an opportunity now for designers to have a conversation—and be part of changing the whole process of creating an object at every level. Every aspect of creating a new project becomes a whole system. That’s where designers have an opportunity to really make a dif- ference—more than ever before. We can work in ways where we can imagine engineering products in a way that is cleaner and smarter. We can also consider the afterlife of the product and where it’s man- ufactured so that we can move to- wards local sustainability.” The Parley shoe was a perfect example of this. “It relied on so many different factors coming to- gether at the same time—and it just clicked,” finishes Alexander. “The shoe had the visual of the waves, and spoke to the cause in that way—it came together intuitively. That’s another tool for designers. You don’t just see the process and the material but there’s a commu- nication within the product itself.” SHARE: gpv.is/gai03 49 The Reykjavík Grapevine Issue 03 — 2017

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