Southern Indiana Business May-June 2020 | Page 14

Examples of the types of plastic bottles recycled and repurposed by entrepreneur David Gramlin. Photo by Bill Hanson to get rid of it. The toxic fumes were so bad, Gramlin said, that he had trouble breathing in the city center. But where many might see tragedy, he saw opportunity. He started building friendships with the city’s leaders, talking to them about his machines and how they could upcycle plas- tic into everyday, practical products. For example, recycled plastics can be used to make trinkets, like carabiners, clips, and other plastic souvenirs that can be sold in tourist shops. On a larger scale, their weather resistance makes them perfect roof tiles. Larger pieces can be used as replacements for 2x4s to build sheds, decking or table tops. “There are a plethora of things you can do with just these simple machines,” he said. His goal in Ghana — and hopefully, one day, other third-world countries — is to bring his machines to the area’s leaders, teach them how they work, and turn them loose to become entrepreneurs in their own right. “I’m not say- ing it will solve all their problems, but it can give them a jumpstart and perhaps a gateway to something new,” he said. The desire to help fight the coronavirus outbreak brought him home before he was 14 May / June 2020 able to share the actual machines. Once life returns to normal, he’ll head back, perhaps with machines that have been further refined in the interim. EVERYTHING HAPPENS FOR A REASON As with many entrepreneurs, the Mobile Recycling Initiative isn’t Gramlin’s only pur- suit. Along with a partner, he’s also co-founder of a company called Hearth, which manufac- tures heated outerwear like jackets and gloves. He got the idea while working for the Air Force on nuclear jets in North Dakota, where despite winter temperatures that got as low as minus-60 degrees, they still had to work out- side. The military-issue outerwear was warm but bulky, which meant if you had to work in tight spaces with your hands — the gloves had to come off. Much like he would later muse about the planet’s plastics problem, he knew there had to be a better way. “There has to be a way to make this less painful,” he thought. “What’s the most comfortable you’re going to be in those temps?” The motivation to solve that issue came to a