Skip to main content

Lund University Publications

LUND UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

Motives, drivers and barriers to urban upcycling : Insights from furniture upcycling in the Netherlands

van Hees, Marco ; Oskam, Inge and Bocken, Nancy LU (2025) In Journal of Cleaner Production 486.
Abstract

With growing environmental concerns, upcycling has become an important theme in literature and practice. Upcycling can help slow and close resource cycles through product life-extension. Cities offer opportunities for upcycling initiatives and seek to tackle challenges in urban solid waste management by encouraging entrepreneurs to create value from local waste streams in urban resource centres and circular crafts centres. However, little is known about what drives urban upcycling and which barriers and drivers occur. This study explores urban upcycling in the context of the Dutch furniture industry, since The Netherlands positions itself as a ‘circular economy hotspot’ and furniture offers promising opportunities and best practices for... (More)

With growing environmental concerns, upcycling has become an important theme in literature and practice. Upcycling can help slow and close resource cycles through product life-extension. Cities offer opportunities for upcycling initiatives and seek to tackle challenges in urban solid waste management by encouraging entrepreneurs to create value from local waste streams in urban resource centres and circular crafts centres. However, little is known about what drives urban upcycling and which barriers and drivers occur. This study explores urban upcycling in the context of the Dutch furniture industry, since The Netherlands positions itself as a ‘circular economy hotspot’ and furniture offers promising opportunities and best practices for upcycling. The analysis of 29 semi-structured interviews with experts engaged in urban upcycling reveals personal motives, drivers and barriers. Personal motives include (1) a personal purpose to ‘do good’, (2) an urge to challenge the status quo and (3) learning and inspiring by doing. Key drivers entail opportunities to (1) engage in collaborative experimentation, (2) participate in cross-sectoral local networks, (3) develop resource-based adaptive competences, (4) respond to increasing demand for upcycled products and (5) make social business activities financially viable. Key barriers perceived by upcycling experts include (1) limitations in resource availability, (2) increasing capacity requirements, (3) negative public quality perception, (4) limited marketing competences and (5) an unequal playing field. This study contributes with a comprehensive definition of urban upcycling and a structured overview of key factors that drive and constrain urban upcycling.

(Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Circular business models, Circular cities, Furniture, Social entrepreneurship, Sustainable production, Upcycling, Waste management
in
Journal of Cleaner Production
volume
486
article number
144485
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • scopus:85212589931
ISSN
0959-6526
DOI
10.1016/j.jclepro.2024.144485
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
b92cad7d-27af-4d79-81da-73576b208e75
date added to LUP
2025-03-04 11:14:55
date last changed
2025-04-04 14:49:38
@article{b92cad7d-27af-4d79-81da-73576b208e75,
  abstract     = {{<p>With growing environmental concerns, upcycling has become an important theme in literature and practice. Upcycling can help slow and close resource cycles through product life-extension. Cities offer opportunities for upcycling initiatives and seek to tackle challenges in urban solid waste management by encouraging entrepreneurs to create value from local waste streams in urban resource centres and circular crafts centres. However, little is known about what drives urban upcycling and which barriers and drivers occur. This study explores urban upcycling in the context of the Dutch furniture industry, since The Netherlands positions itself as a ‘circular economy hotspot’ and furniture offers promising opportunities and best practices for upcycling. The analysis of 29 semi-structured interviews with experts engaged in urban upcycling reveals personal motives, drivers and barriers. Personal motives include (1) a personal purpose to ‘do good’, (2) an urge to challenge the status quo and (3) learning and inspiring by doing. Key drivers entail opportunities to (1) engage in collaborative experimentation, (2) participate in cross-sectoral local networks, (3) develop resource-based adaptive competences, (4) respond to increasing demand for upcycled products and (5) make social business activities financially viable. Key barriers perceived by upcycling experts include (1) limitations in resource availability, (2) increasing capacity requirements, (3) negative public quality perception, (4) limited marketing competences and (5) an unequal playing field. This study contributes with a comprehensive definition of urban upcycling and a structured overview of key factors that drive and constrain urban upcycling.</p>}},
  author       = {{van Hees, Marco and Oskam, Inge and Bocken, Nancy}},
  issn         = {{0959-6526}},
  keywords     = {{Circular business models; Circular cities; Furniture; Social entrepreneurship; Sustainable production; Upcycling; Waste management}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  series       = {{Journal of Cleaner Production}},
  title        = {{Motives, drivers and barriers to urban upcycling : Insights from furniture upcycling in the Netherlands}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jclepro.2024.144485}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.jclepro.2024.144485}},
  volume       = {{486}},
  year         = {{2025}},
}