A team of Rutland Senior Secondary students successfully pitched their idea to the big leagues.
Ashley Ciardullo was one of the students who appeared in CBC鈥檚 Dragons鈥 Den. She and her teammates presented their project, Operation Take Two in the spring and the episode premiered Nov. 7.
鈥淥peration Take Two is a youth-led social enterprise revolutionizing the global issue of by empowering communities to turn their trash into treasure,鈥 Ciardullo said.
But how does it work?
鈥淲e do this with our plastic recycling workspace, which is in a repurposed shipping container and we take all of the plastic recycling from the school. We put it all into these two machines, shred it down, melt it down and turn it into new objects.鈥
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For now, the machines make multi-purpose containers out of the plastic products. The workspace is operated out of the school鈥檚 courtyard and is manned by student volunteers.
The Operation Take Two team first entered the Sustainable Development Challenge in Kelowna, which they won. Ciardullo said that was the first push they needed to really develop the idea and bring it to Dragons鈥 Den.
The team went into the Dragons鈥 Den seeking $30,000. They ended up partnering with Lane Merrifield and Jim Treviling and receiving the deal. They also received another $30,000 from GoodSpark Desjardins.
WATCH: Dragon鈥檚 Den auditions hosted in Kelowna
Sharing the idea on the show has helped them gain more traction and support, according to Ciardullo.
She added they have big plans for the project, including expanding the initiative within the community as well as establishing other workspaces.
Gurnoor Chawla is the marketing manager for the project and she said they鈥檙e also planning on expanding the range of products their machines are producing.
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鈥淎t the moment we have three products coming up. There鈥檚 a hexagonal bowl container, a pendant that is made entirely out of Solo cups and a Christmas ornament, which is coming up for the holidays,鈥 Chawla said.
She added they will be selling the products at the Christmas markets in town.
Chawla said they will also be releasing a survey to find out what other products people would like to see from them.
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