The Torii Bench began with a simple question asked every day at Placyle: what if plastic waste could be turned into something beautiful? The idea was to show the true value of plastic, not as garbage but as possibility. While walking beneath the red gates of Fushimi Inari in Kyoto, the designer was struck by the pure, elemental form of the torii gate—a threshold that invites movement yet offers moments of stillness. That feeling of entering a calmer space became the soul of the bench’s design.
Translating that emotion into outdoor furniture produced a minimal silhouette: two upright “pillars” and a floating “lintel,” abstracted into a light, architectural profile. The rhythm of the bench is defined by parallel recycled‑plastic lumbers that cast subtle shadows, have soft edges, and provide reassuring solidity under the hand. The result feels both familiar and new—ceremonial in line, everyday in use.
Designer: Aliasgar Aboojiwala
Every Torii Bench is made from 100 % recycled plastic recovered from post‑consumer and industrial waste streams. The material is UV‑stable, weatherproof, splinter‑free, and tactile, speckled with tiny hints of its past life that are preserved rather than hidden. Stainless‑steel fixtures add long‑term rigidity and remain rust‑free.
Designing for real life meant designing for logistics. The bench ships flat‑pack: legs fold inward with adjusted hole placements and hardware that makes assembly tool‑simple and intuitive. This reduces shipping volume and carbon cost, and makes installation painless for individuals and communities. For those seeking added comfort, the Torii Bench offers three expressions within the same design language: a pure architectural seat, a quietly cushioned version for longer pauses, and a lounge‑style option with a soft arm‑rest bolster for unhurried conversations. One core frame supports multiple expressions without re‑engineering.
The bench is available in calm neutrals, earthy naturals, and bold statement hues, each plank acting as a quiet archive of waste plastic given a second life. Field tests rate the bench at a 300 kg load capacity, with finishes designed to withstand sun, rain, and public use. Every unit carries a story that helps clients communicate sustainability in ways people can touch.
Placed along a pathway, in a residential courtyard, on a patio, or beside a museum path, the Torii Bench serves as a threshold between movement and pause—a piece of architecture scaled for the body and a small, everyday reminder that circular design can be beautiful, durable, and human. By turning discarded plastic into a functional work of art, the Torii Bench demonstrates how thoughtful design can transform waste into value, inviting users to sit, reflect, and appreciate the possibilities hidden in the materials we often overlook.
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