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Innovation Zero 2024 Main Stage

02 Jun 2025

World’s First Material Passport for a Flexible Workspace

Madaster
World’s First Material Passport for a Flexible Workspace
How Koba and Cast embedded circularity into 100 Barbirolli Square

Challenge: Overcoming the construction industry’s entrenched throwaway culture 

Koba set out to challenge the status quo of the construction industry’s deeply ingrained throwaway culture—particularly within office fit-outs, where high churn rates generate excessive embodied carbon and waste. But for Koba, this wasn’t just about minimising impact—it was about proving what’s possible. Their mission? To create workspaces that are beautiful, functional, and genuinely sustainable—without greenwash. Their first project at 100 Barbirolli Square in Manchester marked the launchpad for this ambition.

 

Solution: Focus on circularity and transparency 

Driven by a circular economy mindset, Koba aimed to design-out waste and design-in reuse from the outset, using verified material passports to provide clear evidence of environmental performance. This approach not only supports healthier supply chains and interiors but also empowers teams to work flexibly, connect with community purpose, and thrive in spaces that support both people and planet.

In their quest for a solution, Koba discovered the Madaster platform, an online register for materials and products in the built environment. Madaster’s ability to provide insights into material composition, circularity, detachability, environmental impact, and material value made it the ideal choice. Paul Nellist, Managing Director at Koba, stated, ‘Madaster enables us to store and visualise circularity data, and having the ability to display that within our sites will be a big part of our brand proposition.’ development at 100 Barbirolli Square, Manchester.

How material analysis can help create a circular construction project. Read here.  

 

Results: Exemplar circular interventions and a material passport 

The project incorporated a wide range of circular interventions, from repurposing a former car park floor into a high quality office space, adapting standard partition systems to make they easier to remove – enhancing the flexibility of the space, to sourcing reclaimed raised access flooring, worktops made from furniture by-products, refurbished chairs and flooring with take-back schemes.

By partnering with Cast, Koba utilised Madaster to create the first publicly published material passport in the UK for a flexible workspace. Cast used their bill of materials covering the internal partitions, flooring, surface finishes and furniture to record the quantities of materials used, their circularity attributes and upfront embodied carbon. Appliances were documented, but not fully passported due to data availability.

Read the full case study here: https://madaster.co.uk/inspiration/worlds-first-material-passport-for-a-flexible-workspace/

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