Compost Urbain, compost silo
The compost silo also comes in a revolutionary design.
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Compost Urbain

Kitchen composting

This year’s Gardena garden award went to Compost Urbain. It is no accident that the young designer Malcolm Hammer developed his idea in the densely populated city of Paris
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It is not entirely an accident that Malcolm Hammer won over the jury of the Gardena garden award with his brainchild. The Franco-Swiss originator with the English first name is a trained radio journalist living in Paris.
Of course, the product concept of Compost Urbain played a key role in jury's verdict. It offers a solution to the problem faced by many households in densely populated cities that want or need to reduce the volume of waste they generate: where do they dispose of the organic waste from the kitchen?
Hammer's answer is to keep it in the kitchen, to be more precise in a silo that he offers in two versions under the name Compost Urbain. Version one with its cover made from furnishing fabric blends into the home, while version two consists of upcycled PVC and is suitable for the balcony or patio.
"The basic idea," explains Malcolm Hammer, "is that for composting, the largest possible surface is required for exchanging air, rather than maximum volume." The material he uses is insect-proof but breathable, and that is the secret.
This is why the size is also important: 50 cm high, with a diameter of 25 cm. As on the forest floor, where the fungi responsible for decomposing organic material lie no deeper than 25 cm, the kitchen waste is aerated in the silo.
This is also the reason why the compost doesn't smell: "The more the material is aerated, the more closely it resembles the structure of the forest floor, on which the organic material largely dries out," explains Malcolm Hammer. It is similar to a sponge: "That is the key." Composting is stimulated by wood chips and mushroom straw; earthworms can also be used if preferred.
The young inventor began to take an interest in this topic six years ago. In his shared apartment, he not only became familiar with the constraints of living in Paris; the imperative of converting the harassed inhabitants of the city, who were not necessarily committed to environmental conservation, to greater ecological awareness also became clear to him.
The Gardena garden award now offers Hammer the opportunity to discuss his ideas with experts and address questions regarding production and marketing, not least with a view to the European Waste Framework Directive. This is because it was laid down in…
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