Source: treehugger.com

Published: April 6, 2016

DropBucket© http://www.dropbucket.dk/index.html

James Clasper

The award-winning DropBucket is a recycled cardboard trash can that can be reused and/or recycled.

For some product designers, necessity is the mother of invention. For others, ideas often appear to be plucked from the ether. For two young designers from Denmark, the potential closure of one of their favorite music festivals provided the light-bulb moment.

Four years ago, Heida Nolsøe and Marie Berggreen (pictured above) were on a product-design course at the Technical University of Denmark. The brief for their first-semester project was to devise a solution for waste management in Copenhagen.

“At the time, the Distortion festival was close to closing because they just couldn’t handle the crazy amount of trash,” explains Berggreen, who’s Danish. “So we thought, ‘How can we make a waste bin that you can easily put up so people can get rid of their trash and don’t have to walk long distances to find bins?’” It had to be lightweight, she adds. Festivals traditionally use large metal or plastic trash containers, which can be moved only by truck.

What they came up with was the DropBucket. “It’s a simple and sustainable trash can made of recycled cardboard,” says Nolsøe, who’s from the Faroe Islands. “It can be put up in less than a second and, after you’ve used it, you can just throw it out with the trash inside.”

DropBucket

© DropBucket

The DropBucket betrays its Scandinavian roots: as well as being water resistant, it has a low center of gravity, making it stable in windy conditions. The largest model holds 30 gallons (114 litres). It has since been used at over 200 events in Denmark, as well as by municipalities, schools, and offices.

Clients include architects’ firms, the Danish military – which has DropBuckets at some of its barracks – and the Danish financial newspaper Berlingske Media. Overseas clients include, amusingly, TetraPak in Sweden and DropBox in the Netherlands. “People just love the product,” Berggreen says. “It’s not just a trash can, it’s a product that people like.”

And the accolades have duly followed. In 2015 the pair won the prestigious Red Dot Design Award: Best of the Best, in a field that included Apple, Adidas, and Bosch. So far this year they’ve snapped up a Green Product Award for sustainable solutions.

Nolsøe and Berggreen have also attracted investors – allowing them to hire two employees, move into new digs in Copenhagen, and launch products for commercial and residential use. For example, smaller versions of the DropBucket can be used by restaurants with buffet bars.

Of course, the DropBucket goes from strength to strength at festivals. The designers took 400 to Denmark’s biggest music festival, Roskilde, in 2013. This year they’ll take 6,000. “We always say we like things that are simple and when you can make things out of less,” Nolsøe says. “The thing with DropBucket is that it’s only one material – but it solves a big problem.”