SOMANY Ceramics Continues to Build Upon Its Waste Tile Reuse Initiative on Global Recycling Day 2026
New Delhi [India], March 18: On the occasion of Global Recycling Day, SOMANY Ceramics is looking back on a sustainability-led initiative that brought together manufacturing realities and design thinking in a meaningful way. The company’s waste tile campaign, undertaken over the last year, has grown into a thoughtful collaboration with academic institutions, demonstrating how tile waste can [...]
New Delhi [India], March 18: On the occasion of Global Recycling Day, SOMANY Ceramics is looking back on a sustainability-led initiative that brought together manufacturing realities and design thinking in a meaningful way. The company’s waste tile campaign, undertaken over the last year, has grown into a thoughtful collaboration with academic institutions, demonstrating how tile waste can be reimagined through creative intervention.
The initiative began with a practical challenge. Broken and unused tiles generated across manufacturing units and retail touchpoints were accumulating over time. Instead of treating this as residual waste, SOMANY chose to redirect the material into an experimental design exercise by partnering with nearby architecture and design institutes, enabling the utilisation and recycling of tile waste available at local dealer and stock points.
Across campuses, the outcomes manifested in diverse forms. Over 3,000+ students across 40 institutes—such as Manipal University (Rajasthan), Amity University (Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh), KIIT School of Architecture and Planning (Odisha), Sushant University (Haryana), Indian Institute of Art and Design (Delhi), and the Institute of Indian Interior Designers (Hyderabad)—participated in the campaign, spanning North, South, East, and West India. The engagement was intentionally structured as a hands-on experience, enabling students to interact directly with discarded material and reimagine its potential beyond conventional applications. Students created murals, installations, and functional design interventions that became integral to their immediate environments. Many of these works continue to reside within campus spaces, subtly reinforcing a culture of reuse and embedding sustainability into everyday interactions.