Our Planet

This Swedish shopping mall makes it easy for consumers to buy second-hand

ReTuna is a large surface area selling only second-hand and upcycled goods

Updated 2 years ago · Published on 21 Feb 2022 12:00PM

This Swedish shopping mall makes it easy for consumers to buy second-hand
ReTuna, a temple of recycling and upcycling. – ETX Daily Up pic, February 21, 2022

YOU may want or need something new in your home or life but does it really need to be brand new or just new to you?

This retail space in Sweden looks like a regular shopping mall with stores dedicated to clothing, electronics, home goods but there's one big difference: absolutely everything is second-hand. And the recycling takes place on-site.

A large surface area selling only second-hand and upcycled goods. Welcome to ReTuna, the first sustainable shopping mall to break away from unrestrained consumption and planned obsolescence.

The depletion of resources

The improvement in our productivity levels has brought us an abundance of new products and with it, our societies have seen a rise in shopping malls. Hundreds of millions of tonnes of new products are sold here each year.

Ultimately, some of them prove to be useless, others end up as rubbish after travelling thousands of kilometres. Our consumption practices are doubtless the primary factor up for review if our future generations stand a chance of a viable life.

The shopping mall for recycled and upcycled goods

Around a hundred kilometres to the west of Stockholm, the town of Eskilstuna has had a revolutionary idea. It has created the world's first shopping mall for recycled and upcycled products.

ReTuna is a shopping mall dedicated to recycling, upcycling and zero waste. Crucially, it is adjacent to the city's recycling centre so a team sorts through any goods brought in and ReTuna's shopkeepers and volunteers work to give them a new life.

The new consumers are not necessarily looking for new products, rather they are after more functional goods. In this way, upcycling could well be the future of shopping malls. Everyone harbours forgotten treasures at home and through upcycling they can begin a whole new life here. – ETX Daily Up, February 21, 2022

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