This 3D-Printed Modular Power Strip Is Made From Recycled Plastic

Carefully curated desks always have one ugly secret hiding underneath them. Power strips are black plastic bricks with tangled cables, even in the most beautifully designed workspaces. You need the outlets and USB ports, but nobody wants to look at the usual tangle of cords and generic housings. The bFRIENDS Power Module treats power access as something that deserves the same design attention as pen cups and storage trays.

The bFRIENDS Power Module is a family of 3D-printed desk power hubs designed by Pearson Lloyd for Bene. It’s part of the broader bFRIENDS collection, which uses recycled bioplastic and additive manufacturing to create desk accessories. That same language now extends into sockets and USB chargers, turning a power strip into a small, modular object that sits proudly on the desk instead of hiding on the floor or under a cable tray.

Designer: Pearson Lloyd for bene

The basic form is a low, rounded tray with one or two ribbed cylinders that dock into it. The cylinders hold either a mains socket or a USB charger, while the tray doubles as a shallow organizer. Module S offers a single power point in a compact footprint. Module M adds one cylinder plus a shelf for pens and small items. Module L fits two cylinders and a wider storage area for more devices and desk clutter.

The modules are designed to be modular beyond their size. The cylinders can be specified with different country sockets or USB chargers, and the threaded sub-assembly simplifies swapping them out. Colour is also part of the system. The tray, cylinder body, and top insert can be mixed from the full bFRIENDS palette, so you can match brand colours, interior schemes, or other accessories instead of defaulting to anonymous black plastic.

The Power Module uses the same recycled bioplastic as the rest of bFRIENDS, sourced from food packaging waste diverted from landfill. Pieces are 3D-printed locally on demand, which eliminates injection-mould tooling and reduces warehousing and transport. That agile manufacturing approach makes it easier to offer many colour combinations and evolve the range without the usual constraints of mass production and minimum order quantities.

The combinations and uses are practically endless. For example, a Module M or L can rest against a fabric privacy panel, with the tray holding a phone and stationery while the cylinder powers a monitor or laptop. By bringing sockets and USB up onto the desk, the module makes plugging in less of a reach and turns cable management into part of the overall desk composition rather than an afterthought you hide under a grommet.

The bFRIENDS Power Module shows what happens when designers look at the boring parts of the office. By combining power, storage, recycled materials, and colour in a single object, it makes the everyday act of plugging in feel a bit more considered. It’s not trying to reinvent electricity, just the way it shows up on your desk, turning something functional into something you might actually want visible in your workspace.

The post This 3D-Printed Modular Power Strip Is Made From Recycled Plastic first appeared on Yanko Design.

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