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Syntropia

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In reaction to the current environmental crisis, new bio- based materials are presented almost daily. These materials produced from renewable resources are often derived from industrial agricultural leftovers, but they are also specifically farmed. The monocultural, intensive, extractive farming practices used to produce these resources have major environmental impacts. They include loss of biodiversity, soil depletion and water pollution as well as generating fragile ecosystems in the face of changing climatic conditions.

How can we design systems of production that - directly influence the regeneration of soil, enhance biodiversity and-preserve water in order to create more withstanding ecosystems?
How can we create a product that is repairable and adaptable not only to different scales of production, but also to shifting availability of natural resources?

The research project Syntropia directly relates the production of raw materials to the production of materials and, in extension, products. It proposes a shoe made with bio-based materials which can grow on one polycultural field, in the mountain area of Andalucia in the South of Spain.
Syntropia creates a dialogue between the design and implementation of the polyculture and the design and production of the shoe. The ecosystemic necessities of the multicrop culture determine the design of the shoe and vice versa.

Filaments samples. Continuout cotton thread + flexible PLA, Cork dust + WillowFlex, WillowFlex, Hemp continuous thread + WillowFlex, Flexible PLA

Shoe made from industrially made hemp and nettle fabric, PLA and an outsole made of natural latex mixed with cochineal dyed sisal fibres. (Image: Elisabeth Handl; Illustrations: Anastasija Mass)

Shoe made from sisal fibres handwoven with hemp yarn and woven hemp fibres with hemp yarn, PLA and an outsole made from natural latex mixed with sisal fibres. (Image: Elisabeth Handl; Illustrations: Anastasija Mass)

Syntropia's polyculture.

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