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This Company Turns Plastic Garbage Into Construction Materials ByFusion has found a new way to reuse plastic that would never get recycled.

By Jason Feifer

entrepreneur daily

This story appears in the April 2022 issue of Entrepreneur. Subscribe »

Amy Lombard

"Plastic is not created equally," says Heidi Kujawa, CEO of ByFusion. "It's super complex, which is why this problem is really broken."

The very short version of the problem goes like this: Despite all those triangle-arrow recycling symbols on the bottom of your bottles, most plastic is not recyclable. And the stuff that is often isn't recycled anyway, because the process is dirty and cumbersome. Which means your recycling bin may be emptied into a landfill.

Kujawa wants to fix this. She had a successful career in entertainment and tech, but was looking to do something more meaningful. Around 2015, she heard about a company that had developed an interesting concept: It smushed old plastic into blocks, which could be used as construction material instead of concrete or bricks. "They had a prototype and it kind of worked, but not really," Kujawa says. The company had since closed, and the patent had lapsed. "I said, "I know I can make that better.'"

Related: How to Make Sustainability More Than a Buzzword

Now she has. Her company, ByFusion, builds machines that literally fuse up to 30 pounds of plastic — no matter the type or how dirty it is — into blocks that can be used to make walls, furniture, small structures, and more. Its work is starting to appear around the country: A park bench was installed in Boise in February, followed by projects in Tucson and Los Angeles.

Below, you can follow the process of building a block — as well as Kujawa's journey to reviving a once-failed idea, and putting old plastic to real use.

LAUNCHING A RADICAL IDEA

As Kujawa looked to fund her company, she knew she was in a bind: She'd innovated inside the waste management and construction industries, both of which are in need of new ideas — but "waste management and construction are two massive industries that VCs typically never invest in," Kujawa says. How can entrepreneurs get funding in an overlooked space? First, prove the idea: Following the sale of her last company, she bootstrapped the first few phases of ByFusion herself — establishing the market and tech before going to investors. Second, seize the moment: As the culture shifted, with the business community talking more about climate solutions, "VCs started to say, okay, I guess we have to start focusing on this," she says. She's raised a $1.5 million seed round.

Related: What You Can Learn From the Rise of Sustainability-Focused Entrepreneurship

BACK TO BASICS

"I grew up with a hammer in my hand, not necessarily a Barbie doll," Kujawa says. She always loved construction–"but I realized early on that it's probably not a good career path back in the '70s and '80s for a girl." That's why she went into tech and entertainment. "But I never dropped the hammer."

WHO'S THE CUSTOMER?

ByFusion's plan isn't just to sell blocks of plastic. It sells the machines that make the blocks, and has designed them modularly so that a broad range of clients, from waste management companies to municipalities, can utilize them to fit their needs and then produce the blocks themselves. Kujawa pitches it as a financial, logistical, and landfill diversion solution: Instead of transporting worthless plastic and dealing with associated compliance issues, cities and companies (and even universities) could create these blocks. ByFusion will buy back any surplus and sell to market on their behalf. "As we saw with the pandemic, there's been a shortage of building materials. So let's give them the ability to create their own material."

Image Credit: All Photographs by Amy Lombard

Related: The Business of Sustainability

Jason Feifer

Entrepreneur Staff

Editor in Chief

Jason Feifer is the editor in chief of Entrepreneur magazine and host of the podcast Problem Solvers. Outside of Entrepreneur, he is the author of the book Build For Tomorrow, which helps readers find new opportunities in times of change, and co-hosts the podcast Help Wanted, where he helps solve listeners' work problems. He also writes a newsletter called One Thing Better, which each week gives you one better way to build a career or company you love.

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