DOI : 10.17577/IJERTV14IS100134
- Open Access
- Authors : Haroun, Abdulqayum, Olugbesan, Adenike Abiodun
- Paper ID : IJERTV14IS100134
- Volume & Issue : Volume 14, Issue 10 (October 2025)
- Published (First Online): 29-10-2025
- ISSN (Online) : 2278-0181
- Publisher Name : IJERT
- License:
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
Blueprints from Plastic: A Novel Taxonomy for Sustainable Building Materials in Nigeria
Haroun, Abdulqayum, Olugbesan, Adenike Abiodun
Department of Architecture, Lead City University, Ibadan
Abstract
Nigeria faces a dual challenge of mounting plastic waste and a pressing need for sustainable construction materials. This Paper proposes a systematic classification framework for recycled plastics to support their effective use in the building sector. Drawing on an extensive literature review, material property analyses, and a comparative examination of relevant case studies, the research identifies key recycled plastic types such as PET, HDPE, PVC, and PP, and evaluates their mechanical, thermal, and aesthetic performance. The framework categorizes these materials based on parameters including tensile strength, durability, UV and moisture resistance, and processability, and then maps each category to optimal building components. For example, designating high- durability materials for load-bearing walls, and transparent or color-customizable plastics for windows and partitions. By aligning material properties with specific functional requirements and local environmental conditions, the study demonstrates how tailored selection of recycled plastics can yield cost-effective, energy- efficient, and culturally resonant building designs. This approach not only advances sustainable architecture in Nigeria but also reinforces circular economy principles by transforming waste into valuable assets. The insights presented offer architects, builders, policy-makers, and other industry stakeholders a replicable guide for incorporating recycled plastic materials into innovative design strategies for a greener built environment.
Keywords: Plastic, Recycling, Sustainability, Taxonomy.
-
INTRODUCTION
The rising tide of global plastic waste presents an urgent environmental dilemma and a creative design opportunity. In recent decades, the built environment has emerged as a crucial frontier for addressing sustainability, with architecture at the helm of material innovation. Among the many strategies developed to mitigate the adverse impacts of non-biodegradable waste, the reuse of recycled plastics in construction offers both functional utility and aesthetic versatility, (Iroegbu et al, 2021). Yet, despite growing interest, applications of recycled plastics in architectural design remain fragmented, particularly within the Nigerian context where material scarcity and waste management challenges intersect (Abdulfatah, 2023)
This paper investigates the incorporation of recycled plastics into architectural practices, with an emphasis on both functional and aesthetic dimensions. It responds to the pressing need for a structured understanding of how these materials are sourced, categorized, and applied across a range of building typologies. While past studies have explored eco-design and sustainable construction techniques, few have proposed a coherent taxonomy that captures the dual performance, (physical and visual) of recycled plastics.
Grounded in extensive literature review and validated through case study analysis, this study offers a taxonomy that classifies recycled plastics based on form, use, and spatial integration. The paper not only contributes to sustainable material discourse but also positions this taxonomy within a wider architectural context to support more conscious design decisions.
The structure of the paper is as follows: Section 2 reviews existing literature and global approaches to recycled plastics in design; Section 3 describes the methodology employed for data gathering and taxonomy development; Section 4 presents the findings and discussion on functional and aesthetic applications; and Section 5 concludes with insights and recommendations for design professionals, policymakers, and future researchers.
-
CONTEXT
As the global demand for sustainable construction intensifies, increasing attention has been directed toward the integration of recycled materials in architecture. Plastics, long regarded as environmental nuisances, are gaining recognition as a versatile resource with potential for structural and aesthetic innovation. However, literature on the architectural application of recycled plastics remains scattered across disciplines, with limited synthesis of their functional performance, aesthetic contributions, and context-specific adaptability (Ahmed and Aly, 2023).
Early research focused predominantly on the environmental implications of plastic reuse, addressing issues such as lifecycle impact, pollution mitigation, and carbon footprint reduction. While these studies highlighted the ecological benefits of recycling plastics, they often lacked detail on how such materials could be structurally or creatively utilized in buildings (Nielsen et al, 2020).
In more recent work, scholars have begun exploring functional applications of recycled plastics in construction, such as plastic bricks, insulation panels, and acoustic tiles, showcasing their affordability, water resistance, and durability. These innovations demonstrate the potential of plastics not just as a filler material but as a key component in resource-efficient construction systems. However, these uses are frequently documented in isolation, without a clear system for evaluating or categorizing them within a coherent framework (Kuttimarks et al, 2025).
On the other hand, literature addressing the aesthetic use of recycled plastics remains relatively sparse. Isolated studies and design case reports illustrate applications in façade treatments, furniture, and modular partitions, often praising their color variety, translucency, or expressive textures. Yet few sources attempt to articulate how these visual qualities can be systematically harnessed or integrated with functional goals.
Internationally, several classification systems exist for sustainable materials, primarily organized by origin, composition, or environmental performance. However, these schemes rarely accommodate the dual design (functional and aesthetic) value of recycled plastics. Moreover, they are largely developed in Western or high- income contexts, offering limited relevance to the material realities and climatic conditions of countries like Nigeria, where informal recycling dominates and material access varies widely.
This study responds to these gaps by proposing a design-centered taxonomy for recycled plastics, one that explicitly accounts for both performance and visual impact across architectural elements. It contributes to a growing movement in material innovation that seeks to bridge environmental consciousness with design creativity, particularly in the Global South, where such integration is often both a necessity and a challenge.
-
RESEARCH METHODS
This study employed a mixed qualitative methodology, combining a thematic literature review with case study analysis to develop a taxonomy for the architectural application of recycled plastics. The research unfolded in three phases: data gathering, taxonomy formulation, and validation through contextual analysis.
-
Literature Analysis
An extensive review of academic publications, industry reports, material specifications, and architectural case studies formed the basis of the taxonomy. Sources were selected for their relevance to plastic reuse, material performance, and aesthetic innovation in construction. Thematic coding was used to identify recurring patterns in how recycled plastics are classified and applied globally, highlighting gaps in existing frameworks, particularly in the integration of functional and aesthetic attributes.
-
Taxonomy Development
Drawing from the coded themes, an initial framework was proposed, organizing recycled plastic applications into categories based on:
-
Form (e.g., pelletized, sheeted, modular)
-
Functionality (e.g., insulation, cladding, partitioning)
-
Aesthetic contribution (e.g., color, transparency, surface finish)
-
Spatial integration (interior, exterior, furniture, envelope)
This taxonomy was refined through iterative comparison with real-world design examples and aligned with architectural language to ensure usability by practitioners.
-
-
Case Study Selection
To evaluate the applicability of the taxonomy, six representative architectural case studies were selected. Selection criteria included:
-
Use of recycled plastics as a significant material component
-
Availability of documented design intent or performance data
-
Regional and typological diversity
Each case was analyzed to map the materials used onto the proposed taxonomy, noting both functional and aesthetic outcomes.
-
-
Validation Approach
The cross comparison of coded literature insights and empirical case results served to validate the taxonomys utility. By identifying how consistently real-world examples aligned with the proposed categories, the study tested the clarity, flexibility, and comprehensiveness of the classification system.
-
-
DISCUSSION
-
Case study Integration
The taxonomy presented in Section 4.2 was built on insights drawn from eleven architectural projects, six global and five regional, that repurpose recycled plastics in both structural and decorative roles. By examining each projects material choices, processing methods, and design intentions, recurring attributes (plastic type, source, form, function, aesthetics, spatial use) were identified, and became the backbone of the classification system.
Below is a summary of those case studies and how each one contributed to the taxonomys six key attributes.
Table 4.1.1 Summary of Recycled-Plastic Case Studies
Case Study
Location
Plastic Type(s)
Application
Functional Role
Aesthetic Role
Taxonomy Insight
The Plastic House
London, UK
PET, PVC,
Composites
Cladding, flooring, furnishings
Thermal insulation, weatherproofing
Vivid color variations, texture mimicry
Showed multi- material mixes and interior uses
The Eco Ark
Taipei, Taiwan
PET bottles
Modular façade blocks, structural
Load-bearing shell, daylight modulation
Translucent, repetitive modules
Validated large- scale plastic block construction
Ocean Plastic Waste Pavilion
Dubai, UAE
Ocean- collected PET
Exhibition panels, flooring
Moisture barrier, rapid assembly
Graphic storytelling, mixed-media textures
Highlighted narrative- driven, mixed- source plastics
The Green School
Bali, Indonesia
PET bottles, PC sheets
Wall infill, insulation, roofing
Energy efficiency, buoyant roofing
Educational patterns,
visible bottle cores
Illustrated cultural and educational integration
The Plastic Road
The Netherlands
HDPE, PP
Road modules
Durable pavement, low maintenance
Modular grid aesthetic
Demonstrated infrastructure
use of recycled plastics
Plastic Bottle Houses
Mexico & USA
PET bottles (sand-filled)
Load-bearing walls, insulation
Thermal mass, structural enclosure
Random brick pattern, playful
translucency
Defined bottle- brick as a distinct category
The EcoHouse Project
South Africa
PET bottles, HDPE, PP
Affordable housing walls, panels
Cost-effective load-bearing, passive cooling
Earthen hues from sorted plastics
Showed local adaptation for low-cost housing
Plastic Road Initiatives
South Africa & Kenya
HDPE, PP
Road modules
Weather-resistant infrastructure
Interlocking module pattern
Confirmed regional viability of structural modules
Waste-to- Construction Projects
Kenya
HDPE, PP, PET
Plastic bricks for housing, parks
Load-bearing infill, acoustic damping
Brick-like textures
Linked brick form to multiple plastic streams
Plastic Bottle Brick Homes
Nigeria
PET bottles
Wall construction
Thermal insulation, structural stability
Patterned façade, visible cores
Validated bottle- brick approach in Nigerian context
Urban Green Spaces & Public Furniture
Ghana
HDPE, PP
Benches, fencing, paving
Moisture-proof
seating, durable pavement
Bright colors, smooth curves
Extended taxonomy into
furniture and landscape elements
-
Taxonomy
The table below presents a taxonomy that classifies recycled plastics according to six key attributes: Plastic Type, Common Sources, Forms After Processing, Functions, Aesthetic Contribution, and Spatial Application. This structure is intended to guide architects and designers in selecting recycled plastics based on both performance and visual potential.
Table 4.2.1 Showing taxonomy of recycled plastics in architecture
Plastic Type
Common Sources
Forms After
Processing
Functions
Aesthetic Contribution
Spatial Application
PET (Polyethylene Terephthalate)
Water/soda
bottles, food containers
Sheets,
fibers, tiles
Acoustic panels, insulation
Translucency, light diffusion
Ceilings, partitions, skylights
HDPE (High- Density
Polyethylene)
Detergent
bottles, milk jugs
Bricks, lumber, panels
Load- bearing blocks,
flooring
Matte texture, color variation
Walls, flooring, outdoor decking
LDPE (Low-
Density
Polyethylene)
Plastic bags, film wraps
Compressed sheets, membranes
Moisture barriers, roofing
Smooth finish, flexibility
Roof linings, waterproof
layers
PP
(Polypropylene)
Bottle caps, food tubs
Molded
panels, tiles
Furniture, joinery, cladding
Bold colors, high gloss
Furniture, interior cadding
PS (Polystyrene)
Disposable cutlery, foam packaging
Foam boards, insulation
blocks
Thermal insulation, lightweight panels
Neutral tones, soft texture
Wall cavities, ceilings,
partitions
Mixed/Composite Plastics
Municipal waste, unsorted recyclables
Modular blocks,
hybrid panels
Structural infill, temporary shelters
Random
patterns, rugged texture
Loadbearing walls, façades
This taxonomy emphasizes design usability by linking material properties to architectural outcomes. It also reflects the realities of material sourcing in Nigeria, where informal recycling streams often yield mixed or hybrid plastic forms.
-
-
CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
This study explored the architectural potential of recycled plastics through the development and application of a design-centric taxonomy that addresses both functional and aesthetic dimensions. By organizing materials along six key attributes, plastic type, source, form, function, visual character, and spatial use, the taxonomy offers a flexible tool that bridges material performance with creative intent. The accompanying case studies validated its practical relevance across varied contexts, showcasing recycled plastics as more than substitutes they are enablers of expressive, sustainable design.
While the results affirm the viability of plastic reuse in architecture, they also expose challenges: limited formalization of recycling systems and public skepticism. Still, the emergence of adaptive, low-cost solutions using these materials suggests strong potential for localized innovation and environmental impact.
Key Contributions:
-
Provided a structured, designer-friendly classification of recycled plastics
-
Demonstrated the duality of recycled plastics in function and form
-
Grounded the taxonomy in real-world architectural projects with regional relevance
RECOMMENDATIONS:
-
For Architects & Designers: Adopt the taxonomy during early design phases to evaluate recycled plastic options based on both performance and aesthetic goals. Prioritize context-specific materials that align with climate, availability, and cultural acceptance.
-
For Educators & Researchers: Incorporate design-focused material taxonomies into sustainability curricula and explore their adaptation across new typologies, such as infrastructure or adaptive reuse.
-
For Policymakers & Industry: Develop material certification standards and public awareness campaigns to elevate the perception of recycled plastics beyond mere "waste solutions."
-
For Future Research: Extend this taxonomy by integrating quantitative performance data, exploring life- cycle assessments, and testing its application in parametric or digital fabrication workflows.
By reframing recycled plastics as creative, credible building resources, this paper contributes not only a classification system but also a mindset shift. Within the urgency of environmental change lies an opportunity to reshape architecture from the ground up, colorfully, resilient, and responsibly.
-
-
REFERENCES
Abdulfatah, A.K., 2023. Exploring municipal solid waste management in Nigeria: Challenges, opportunities, and roadmap for sustainable development.
Ahmed, H.T. and Aly, A.M., 2023. Recycled waste materials in landscape design for sustainable development (Al-Ahsa as a model). Sustainability, 15(15), p.11705.
Haroun, A. (2025) Functional and aesthetic integration of recycled plastics: proposed Lead City exposition center, MSc Thesis, Department of Architecture, Faculty of Environmental Design and Management, Lead City University, Ibadan, Oyo State, Nigeria.
https://www.researchgate.net/search accessed on 29th June 2025
Iroegbu, A.O.C., Ray, S.S., Mbarane, V., Bordado, J.C. and Sardinha, J.P., 2021. Plastic pollution: a perspective on matters arising: challenges and opportunities. ACS omega, 6(30), pp.19343-19355.
Kuttimarks, M.S., Singh, V., Venkatamuni, T., Sharma, R., Pandey, R.K. and Sudhakar, M., 2025. Building a Sustainable Future Through Innovations in Green Construction and Recycling Waste Materials. In Innovations in Energy Efficient Construction Through Sustainable Materials (pp. 33-64). IGI Global.
Nielsen, T.D., Hasselbalch, J., Holmberg, K. and Stripple, J., 2020. Politics and the plastic crisis: A review throughout the plastic life cycle. Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Energy and Environment, 9(1), p.e360.
