Maine students challenged to turn trash into treasure with Upcycle Challenge
PORTLAND — ecomaine has announced the 2022 launch of its school-based Upcycle Challenge, which will award $500 to a participating student’s school.
The Upcycle Challenge asks students in ecomaine’s communities to use items that ordinarily would have been disposed of, to make all-new, functional ones and submit them by Friday, March 18. From the submissions, ecomaine’s Outreach & Recycling Committee will select a group of finalists, based on the incorporation of post-consumer materials, the ingenuity and functionality of the new creation, inclusion of students in the process, as well as the approval from a teacher or advisor.
Following the determination of finalists, the designs will be voted on by the public through Earth Day.
In the past, the Upcycle Challenge has seen entries including:
- A working chandelier made from old plastic bottles
- A bike rack made from old bicycles
- Clothing fashioned from plastic, old fabric, and other materials
- Old clothing turned into hair scrunchies
- Furniture from old tires
- Movie projectors made from all kinds of would-be-junk materials
“We continue to be so impressed by the creativity of these students and their designs,” said Matt Grondin, ecomaine’s Communications Manager, in a news release. “We’re excited to see what this round of sustainably-themed designs has in store.”
Guidelines, rules, and the entry form can be found online at ecomaine.org.
About ecomaine
ecomaine is the Portland-based nonprofit, recycling and waste-to-energy operation that serves a third of the state’s population in nearly 70 member communities through single-sort recycling, organics/food waste programming, waste-to-energy, and an “ashfill” landfill. In its FY21, ecomaine reached more than 45,000 students and members of the public through grants, tours, presentations, and events to promote sustainability in waste management. www.ecomaine.org