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Having worked for 20 years as a hairdresser, Ronald Thompson decided to put down his scissors and seek artistic fulfilment by returning to study.
While on a placement on the set of the Batman Begins movie in 2005 – an integral part of his degree in environmental design at London South Bank University (LSBU) – inspiration struck.
“During my course I decided that I wanted to take waste and turn it into a commodity. I had visited landfill sites and toyed with ideas using plastic bottles, but when I worked on the Batman movie it clicked – I could replace fibreglass with human hair.”
A year later and with a prototype chair made from resin and hair as his final-year project (he later sold it for £8,000), Thompson earned a first-class honours degree and the LSBU’s Enterprise Associate Scholarship Commercialisation Award, a masters course with a bursary and funding for the development of his idea.
The environmental advantages of using human hair over energy-laden fibreglass were obvious, but as Thompson investigated the properties of his new material, additional benefits became apparent. The hair-based product is 20 per cent stronger, weighs one fifth of the equivalent amount of glass, crumples rather than shears on impact and the resultant exposed edges do not present a cutting hazard like those of fibreglass.
Having produced a material with such a diverse range of applications, generating interest from industries that consume fibreglass was not a problem.
Due to complete his masters later this year, Thompson launched his company, Pilius X Design (from the Latin for hair), has sourced the required human hair at zero cost through a deal with y-waste, a business waste exchange organisation, and has struck a deal with a retail fittings company even before production begins in earnest next year.
With a staff of five and a fully biodegradable rapeseed resin to replace the present polyester one in development, Thompson is on the verge of a rapid take-off.
On November 4 the north east regional winner was announced following a prestigious event at the National Railway Museum, York, with the other regional winners to be declared at subsequent events across the country and culminating with the announcement of the 2008 Entrepreneur Challenge national winner on December 3.
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