Building a Better Box
Andrew Stramentov, CEO and Founder of ROKBOX
Friday 7th February 2020 National Army Museum
The traditional wooden packing crate is a source of a
huge amount of waste in exhibition-making, with most cases being disposed of
after use. ROKBOX has been developed as a reusable alternative for transporting
two-dimensional artworks, and the company’s founder Andrew Stramentov talked us
though its evolution.
As well as a desire to make art transport more
environmentally sustainable, Andrew drew on his previous experience in the sector
of when things go wrong with conventional crates – from a painting becoming
loose and sustaining irrevocable damage due to the wrong screws being used, to water
getting in through a crack during a rainstorm – to look for opportunities to
improve them. He also pointed out, rather amusingly, that wood isn’t a go-to
protective material in other areas; we don’t wear wooden helmets, lock our
valuables in wooden safes, or strap children into wooden car seats. He obtained
funding to found his business around five years ago, describing the environment
for startups in the UK as supportive.
Andrew and his team began by collecting information to
further inform the development of ROKBOX. They spoke to insurers to gather data
on accidents involving standard crates, reviewed relevant literature, and
consulted with museum and gallery professionals on why things sometimes go
wrong, and what could be done better. Their findings were used to create a
prototype, working with industrial designers Glenelg who brought an objective,
non-art perspective to the project.
The new product was then tested to measure how well it
performed against other crates in a specialist testing facility, and independently
validated by an engineering academic from the University of Leicester. The case
was subjected to dropping, vibrations, water immersion, forklift impact and temperature
and relative humidity variations, amongst other things – an expensive and
lengthy process. In terms of its environmentally friendly objectives, Andrew
explained that, as well as being reusable, the lightweight design translates to
a lower carbon footprint because of the reduced energy required to transport
it.
Hearing about the journey to create ROKBOX was fascinating,
and it’s encouraging to see people working on practical solutions to reduce the
impact of art transportation on the environment, as well as potentially reducing
risk to works. ROKBOX cases have been sold to a number of galleries and
transport agents, and the product range is currently being expanded. It will be
very interesting to follow how ROKBOX works in practice as it is rolled out, in
terms of considerations such as cost, institutional and lender expectations,
and flexibility.
Denise Courcoux, Assistant Exhibitions Registrar, Tate
Liverpool
No comments:
Post a Comment