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Situated in Florence, 'Deja-Brew: A Renaissance Coffee Lab' re-inhabits the modern Italian coffee bar through an untold female trajectory. The project details how ten women produce innovative building materials from recycled coffee grounds, a material currently contributing 166 million kg to Italian landfill sites annually. Questioning and celebrating their societal role within the domestic sphere, they construct a high-tech experimental coffee lab. The kitchen, a space that was once a woman’s creative realm, has been transformed into a radical construction site: a sustainable, utopian alternative. Using the kitchen as a construction site, various coffee-based materials such as caffeine bricks and coffee bio-leather were produced.
The project evolved through the making of models and detailed biro drawings. The drawings show female workers on a building site; the laborious process of making the drawings acts as a metaphor for female labour outside of the household. This interplay between reality and speculation of alternative environmentalism allowed engagement with societal and architectural issues in a poetic way.
A scene showing the constructors cooking the leather windows and materials needed for the floor above. The coffee-marble is lifted from the water channels whilst the baby sits watching her mother cook the bricks for the chimney.
The cooked leather sofa enters the first floor whilst the chimney is almost complete. New leather is dried over the summer months and will be used to furnish the floor above.
Waste coffee grounds are dropped off on-site and brought through the building via water channels. In each kitchen and lab, the waste products are mixed, cooked and dried creating new, sustainable building materials for Florence and beyond.
New recipes are created in the labs. The Arno River provides water to the pipes, which travel up four floors to the hydro-lab where coffee grounds are experimented with.
The Hydro-Kitchen is a lab where for experimentation and the creation of innovative building materials. Using fresh water channelled from the nearby Arno River, they can watch their children play whilst they cook, invent and innovate.