Kitchen Warehouse and Berlin are solving Australia’s 700m-high problem with pots & pans
Australian cookware retailer Kitchen Warehouse has teamed up with creative agency, Berlin, to launch a nation-first recycling campaign of epic proportions, designing a 700-metre-high artwork installed at Sydney’s Royal Botanic Gardens.
A staggering new study commissioned by Kitchen Warehouse has revealed that Australians are throwing almost 2.5 million pots and pans into landfill each year, an average of 7000 every day (or approximately 700m if stacked vertically).
To illustrate the scale of the problem, a bespoke industrial sculpture by artist Rhys Norton has been unveiled at Sydney’s Royal Botanic Gardens, aptly titled the ‘High Fryer’. To allow the public to visualise what the full-size tower would look like, a team of digital effects artists from production studio Siamese have added a virtual extension to the physical eight-metre base of the structure, which reaches sky-high through the roof of the Calyx, an enormous glass enclosure at the Gardens, and above the cityscape.
Berlin, Creative Executive Creative Director, Rich Berney, said: “I think beauty is so important when we’re talking about such a sad moment in human history with the amount of waste we’re producing and where our planet is at. It would be so easy to use fear to grab a hold of people… but when the message like this is presented with beauty it can inspire people to think about the good things that can be done. I hope High Fryer as a piece of art can create the space for people to think about a better way to be.”
The campaign isn’t only designed to raise awareness of the issue. It’s been devised to help launch The Great Pan Exchange, a new initiative from Kitchen Warehouse that encourages consumers to bring in their old pots and pans to in-store collection points to be recycled rather than rot in landfill. The initiative utilises new technology and sorting processes which allow the pots and pans to be stripped back, so that the base metals can be recycled along with non-stick coatings and plastic or wooden handles.
Kitchen Warehouse’s Chief Customer Officer, Simon Lamplough, said: “Whilst Aussies are facing household budget pressures due to the cost-of-living crisis, they are also increasingly conscious about the environment, so this exchange program gives them a way to access premium quality and more durable products while being able to dispose of their old cookware in a sustainable way.”
“We know price is a big factor which drives consumer choice when buying cookware. But if you need to replace that pot every few years it’s not only costing the customer more; it comes at a cost to the planet. We want to encourage households to bring in their old pots to our stores and in return we’ll reward them with a discount on new, longer lasting cookware.”
Berlin, Creative Managing Partner, John Linton, added: “There is so much bad news when it comes to our environmental situation. What I love most about this is that it’s a good news story. Although we currently have 700m of pots and pans going into Australian landfill a day – which is awful – we have a company who’ve put the effort in to create a solution.”
The Great Pan Exchange will provide collection bins at Kitchen Warehouse stores around Australia, with the High Fryer sculpture to be installed at their Artarmon store indefinitely.
Credits
Kitchen Warehouse
Chief Customer Officer – Simon Lamplough
Head of CRM & Loyalty – Justine Murphy
Marketing Assistant – Emma Foreman
Agency – Berlin Creative
Executive Creative Director – Richard Berney
Design Director – Will Miles
Managing Partner, Strategy – John Linton
PR Director – Shaun Devitt
Client Lead – Christina Zimmer
Producer – Matt Barber
Industrial Sculpture
Artist / Sculptor – Rhys Norton
Installation – Chris Davies & Joe Bruneteau
Digital Effects / CGI – Siamese Productions
Creative Director – Merlin Eden
Production Manager – Nicole Norelli
Houdini Artist – Leon Bronkhurst
Matte Painter – Craig Soulsby
Event Videography & Photography – Elliott Deem
14 Comments
So just this, but with pans instead of clothes?
https://www.instagram.com/padcskulls/p/CzOxlbVPb6s/?img_index=1
I actually love this idea. When done chaps.
Reheated Leftovers, you’re bang on.
Like Wildlings, we also visualised the height of the problem so that everyone could get a sense of the scale we’re facing. It’s a reasonably common way to help the public to understand a complex issue. War on Waste did this weekly on the ABC, Special Group also did this recently with an 8 tonne turd for ocean waste, which worked brilliantly.
For me, it’s more important that this stuff works, than isn’t building on (or inspired by) other ideas. Our planet is crying out for good ideas, so let’s turn that tap on.
Beautiful work. Would expect nothing less from two legends
The difference in execution is that Berlin did it for real, which is way cooler.
Great to see businesses taking responsibility for clearing up their own mess. Ahem…. looking at you, mining companies
Well I think it’s just great. Can’t imagine this not stopping people in their tracks to have a read – and hopefully a think.
Lovely. Beautifully brought to life.
What a bit of fun! 🍳
A great initiative for a real-world problem. The campaign is beautifully executed. Everyone involved should be proud.
Love it, super eye catching and such a great demo.
@reheated leftovers, that’s a reaaaaaal stretch. The idea of creating physical representations of societal problems isn’t new, it had been done many times before the example you gave. But both examples are still unique in their take on it and this is still impactful regardless.
Could Kitchen Warehouse and Berlin please solve the PADC ticket price problem?
Love your work
Love this!!