Made of an innovative material that utilizes sustainable harvested sea algae and kelp, this new, dissolvable face mask by Jarred Evans offers vital protection without the environmental damage
Cardiff, United Kingdom
Jarred Evans of PDR has designed the Umiko – Dissolvable Face Mask, solving the problem of mask waste and its environmental consequences with a dissolvable fibre that will completely dissolve in one week or within 5–6 hours when submerged.
For its sustainable and innovative design, the Umiko – Dissolvable Face Mask has recently been awarded a 2022 American Architecture Award by The Chicago Athenaeum: Museum of Architecture and Design and The European Centre for Architecture Art Design and Urban Studies.
Protection without environmental damageIt is based on an innovative material that utilizes sea algae and kelp harvested sustainably to produce a fiber that can be spun and woven with ease into flat sheets.
Disposable protective face masks are an integral part of many people's lives around the world and a fundamental first line of defense against the spread of respiratory transmitted diseases.
The Covid pandemic has increased their use exponentially and face masks are likely to remain a part of our everyday lives for many years to come.
A study from 2021 indicates that we use an astounding 12.9 billion face masks a month or roughly 3 million a minute.
The vast majority of face masks are discarded with an estimated 75% heading to landfill or littering our oceans, countryside, and urban areas.
Seeing discarded mask waste is now common in all locations around the world and its impact on the environment is significant.
Researchers from University College London estimate that if eligible, every person in the UK used just one single-use mask each day for a year it would generate 66,000 tonnes of plastic waste alone.
Current disposable face masks are made of polypropylene and metal and take up to 450 years to decompose, releasing over 170 million microfibres and particles in the process.
Protection without environmental damage is an essential goal if we are to combat future pandemics successfully without doing significant environmental damage in the process.
Umiko is a protective face mask designed for high-volume, low-cost production using an innovative, fully sustainable sea algae-based material that fully breaks down in water within 7 days of disposal with no residual impact.
It is based on an innovative material that utilizes sea algae and kelp harvested sustainably to produce a fiber that can be spun and woven with ease into flat sheets.
Critically, the material leaves no toxic residue, does no harm to marine or animal life nor emits any lasting micro particulates.
The material properties can be modified using levels of extracted polysaccharides to tailor the degree of material solubility in water.
This is designed to allow high humidity use without degradation for up to 48 hours but will completely dissolve in one week or within 5–6 hours when submerged.
It is critical that disposable masks are available to all and that the woven and spun flat sheet material can be produced at high volume with sufficient filtration properties to act as an effective safeguard.
Project: Umiko – Dissolvable Face MaskDesigners: PDRLead Designer: Jarred EvansManufacturer: PDR
Cardiff, United Kingdom