Southern Indiana Business May-June 2020 | Page 13

Shred. Extrude. Inject. Use. Repeat. I t’s a recycling process that New Albany entrepreneur and philanthropist David Gramlin hopes might someday change the world. The material is tossed-out plastic. The machines — a shredder, an extruder, an injector and a sheet press — are made by his hands. And the ultimate goal is to greatly reduce the amount of plastics in the world’s landfills and oceans. “I think one of the biggest misconceptions people have about plastic is that it’s one-time use, to be thrown away,” said Gram- lin. “A plastic bottle can be broken down, reformed and turn into something that’s more useful than the bottle itself.” Gramlin constructed his recycling machines using blueprints he downloaded for free from an open-source collective of recy- cling entrepreneurs called Precious Plastic. He uses The Root coworking space in New Albany as a collection point for his plastics, and LVL1 hackerspace in Louisville as his home base. “He’s just a jump-in-with-both-feet kind of guy, so it’s good to be around,” said Tiffany Haynie, secretary of the Board of Directors at LVL1 and fellow recycling enthusiast, who coinci- dentally was working on a shredder for Precious Plastic when she met Gramlin. “I asked him, ‘What are you working on? And he said, ‘I’m going to save the world!’” Gramlin described his plastic-recycling process much like working with Play-Doh. “You take a water bottle, and when you shred it down you now have little flakes,” he said. “When you put it through the extruder, you’re heating it up to its melting point. And by the time it comes out it’s almost the consistency of Play-Doh, if not softer.” That material is then injected into a mold where it forms an object once cooled. Gramlin is currently using his machines to help fight the coronavirus outbreak by rapid prototyping and testing parts for face masks and respirators — both essential for the country’s overtaxed healthcare workers. “I chose the respirators because many hospitals only had a limited supply to begin with,” he said. “When the COVID-19 started spreading exponentially they were not prepared for it. They needed a way to rapid-proto- type parts to find the most simple and easy way to mass produce parts for the respirator.” INSPIRATION FROM BOREDOM Innovator David Gramlin, taking a break at LVL1, a “hackerspace” in Louisville’s Butchertown neighborhood. Gramlin is using simple machines and recycled plastics to rapid prototype and test parts for N95 masks and respirators, doing his part to battle the coronavirus. Gramlin’s passion for recycling grew out of sheer boredom. His job as a controls engineer early in his career required exten- sive travel, where many days on job sites around the country meant many nights in hotels. During those hours, he started to brainstorm his path to a bigger purpose. And he landed on practical uses for recycling. “There are islands of trash in the oceans, trash all over the place. People don’t know what to do with it,” he said. “It got me wanting to do something more. It’s a cliche, but engineers are set to solve all the world’s problems.” His research led him all the way to Ghana, where the city of Agbobloshie is considered the most toxic on the planet. What he found there was an overwhelming struggle with trash — specifi- cally plastics — that led the city’s residents to throw out their junk however and wherever they wanted, creating huge piles that they would burn simply because they had no other way May / June 2020 13