Every year, large amounts of fully usable furniture and building materials are thrown away in the education sector during renovation, rehabilitation, change in student numbers, closure or merging of schools. This happens despite the fact that schools are facing tighter budgets and municipalities and county authorities have increased requirements for sustainability. What does it take to create good logistics solutions that make circular economy a natural part of everyday life in schools and the education sector?
Read excerpts from the interview with Truls Hansen Folkestad (Climate and Environmental Advisor - Sunnfjord Municipality) and Anette Mjørlaug Spord (Group Leader Interior and Signage - University of Bergen /UiB) from our webinar "Circular Schools and Reuse in Educational Buildings". Truls and Anette share their insights and concrete practical solutions for how to facilitate systematic reuse in the education sector.
Truls (Sunnfjord municipality): Climate change plan 2019, circular economy and reuse priority area. Initiative from Vill Energi and Circular Norway 2021, pilot project on the potential in the municipality. R&D project at NORCE in 2021-2022. Decision in the municipal council on reuse in a specific construction project.
Anette (UiB): In 2018, the University Board adopted a number of measures to reduce UiB's greenhouse gas emissions. One of the sub-goals was that UiB would work systematically to reduce emissions from the purchase of goods and services. Among other things, a working group was set up to come up with proposals for short-term and long-term measures for the use and purchase of furniture at UIB. An overall goal here was to increase reuse and reduce the purchase of furniture. We have been working on this since then, and have taken step by step further in the right direction.
Truls (Sunnfjord municipality): The municipality began reusing materials in 2022 in connection with the renovation of Sande School. We have used Loopfront since then to survey and communicate to employees. We also have an internal channel on Teams for reusing materials, which concerns inventory. Reusing materials has also become a more important criterion in our purchasing work.
Anette (UiB): We have focused on surveying the furniture we have in the reuse storage rather than mapping the furniture we have in all of our nearly 100 buildings. The exception was when we completely rehabilitated our administration building in the period 2021–2023. Then a requirement came from the UiB management that we had to achieve as much reuse of furniture in this building as possible.
We managed to do a lot, and it actually turned out very well. It is a building of about 17,000 m², 9 floors, 400 workspaces, meeting room areas, a café. We achieved around 40% reused furniture of the total number of furniture items in the building, and have saved about NOK 7 million and around 125 tons of CO₂ equivalents in this project.
The number of furniture items going out per month increased by 20% from 2023 to 2024, and by 75% from 2024 to 2025. In collaboration with the Procurement Section, we have changed UiB’s procurement routines so that you must first be sure that you actually need the piece of furniture, then check whether the furniture you already have can be repaired, or whether someone nearby has one to spare. After that, you check in Loopfront, or post a request in a furniture-swap team we have in Teams. Finally, you contact a supplier to ask whether they have used furniture for sale, and only as a last step buy new furniture.
"By adopting Loopfront, we have opened up a new world for employees who need furniture. It is now much easier for them to find used furniture, and because we also arrange transport, the threshold for ordering furniture in Loopfront is low. We generally notice a changed culture around the reuse of furniture."
- Anette Mjørlaug Spord (Group Leader Interior and Signage - University of Bergen)