Emeco's 111 Navy Chair
The tale of the Emeco's 111 Navy chair is that of a phoenix rising. In 1944, the Hanover, Pennsylvania-based company began producing the original 1006 Navy chair. But despite supplying these chairs—the first to be made from 80 percent recycled aluminum—for use in virtually every U.S. Navy application that required sitting, the company was on the brink of collapse by the late 1990's. While on his way to shutter Emeco, owner Gregg Buchbinder had a startling revelation upon reviewing records: Architects Frank Gehry and Norman Foster had long been ordering chairs directly from the factory. Inspired, Buchbinder revived Emeco with a series of striking new designs, including those from Gerhy and Foster.
Grind and Sort
The story of the 111 Navy Chair starts in the New United Resource Recovery Corporation (NURRC) recycling plant in Spartanburg, South Carolina, where eight to ten trailer truckloads of PET bales—each measuring 80 cubic feet and consisting of 20,000 bottles—arrive for processing every weekday.
Eight to ten trailer truckloads of PET bales—each measuring 80 cubic feet and consisting of 20,000 bottles—arrive for processing every weekday.
The bales, which have traveled from municipalities east of the Mississippi River, are loaded onto conveyor belts for sorting. Virtually everything involved in the PET reclamation process at NURRC—including the water used to wash the bottles—is recycled. Non-PET materials, such as polypropylene caps, are sold to other facilities. ; by-products are reused, such as ethylene glycol, then used in automobile antifreeze.
A worker operates the float-sink tank. Heavier, nonrecyclable materials sink to the bottom, leaving on the water's surface only rPET, which then becomes white rinse flake.
Barring any snafus in the sorting process—bowling balls and small engines have been spotted on the conveyor belt—the bottles are sorted, ground, sent through dry and wet washes (which transforms them into rinse flake), and then sorted by color.
The UnPET Process
The rinse flake undergoes NURRC's patented UnPET process, in which the surface of the PET material is removed (depolymerized) and the remaining compound is roasted to remove any volatile organic content.
In the Mold
Each Navy chair begins life as 13 pounds of rPET plastic pellets, which are melted down and injected into the chair mold, a multiton device that functions like a gigantic waffle iron.
After the rPET mixture is heated and transformed via injection molding into a chair, a robotic arm removes it from the specially designed mold.
Final Finishes
The worker smooths any imperfections before manually installing the H-brace (created on another mold) as well as the feet.
A worker smoothes any imperfections before manually installing the H-brace.
This final laying on of hands, labor intensive though it may be, is the hallmark of Emeco's Navy chair legacy. Watching the technician clean the rough points on each chair, one is struck by the hybrid nature of this project, in which 21st-century recycling technology is married to a handmade aesthetic, producing an object both old and new—in more ways than one.
One of the final steps is to install the H-Brace and feet, both fabricated on another mold.
The 111 Navy chairs are exact replicas of the aluminum originals, down to the faux weld points on the backside; Emeco knew that Navy-chair devtees would accept nothing less. "At the Milan Furniture Fair," says Daniel Fogelson, Emeco's vice president of sales and marketing, "the first thing our clients did was turn the chair around and look for those [weld] marks, just to make sure we hadn't screwed it up." And the company hasn't.
Each chair is stamped on the underside to read, "Help your bottle become something extraordinary again."
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A $450.00 recycled chair. Fantastic! Should be cheaper so that more and more bottles would be turned in this chair rather making it not very affordable for most. Recycled products should be cheap... Great chair though
@mason baird what if that is what it actually costs to make the thing? Remember, this chair is made by skilled factory workers in america to a fairly high standard of quality — not by whatever factory in china says they can make the thing for the lowest possible cost. It is also an object that should last a fairly long period of time, with little to no maintenance, that is part of the upfront cost as well. We've got a skewed idea of what things should cost in America now. And why, just because it is made from recycled material, should it be cheaper than other well crafted items?
Oh, and I believe it is $230 or something, not $450.
This is a great chair, and it's nice to see a fresh start to an American classic with resource conservation and recycling at the forefront. I have to agree to a point with both comments above; good design shouldn't ignore real world costs for manufacturing, and made in America does cost, but it should also not be priced out of reach of people that desire to have well crafted objects in their lives. Emeco's probably spent some time studying the costs of doing the right thing vs being financially viable which in today's economy can be just as important, balance is easy to discuss and sometimes hard to achieve. Great article!
still love the design, classic design, simple lines and red!
Had to have one of these when they first came out. Looks great, but most uncomfortable chair I have ever sat upon.
I have 4. I love them and actually find them to be quite comfortable. Good solid simple chairs that require you to sit properly at the table.
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