Selling repurposed furniture

An exploratory study into consumer perception

Authors

  • Deborah Xaviera Sumter Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences, the Netherlands https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7950-8023
  • Bente Snäll Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences, The Netherlands
  • Inge F. Oskam Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences, The Netherlands

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.54337/plate2025-10441

Keywords:

Urban Upcycling, Circular Design, Furniture, Aesthetic, Consumer Perception

Abstract

Repurpose is becoming more popular as a circularity strategy. This circularity strategy is specifically promising in the case of furniture. One of the challenges of upscaling repurpose is the negative consumer perception of repurposed products. Studies up to date pertain to consumer perception of refurbished products and products using recycled content. In this study we investigate (1) to which extent the motives mentioned within literature play a role when it comes to consumers’ perception of repurposed furniture and (2) to what extent the visibility of past identity of repurposed furniture and storytelling play a role in consumer perception. The result indicate that aesthetic and functional quality are highly valued. Storytelling seems to be a secondary motive for customers to consider a repurposed product. We further identified three categories of repurposed furniture (i.e., visibly repurposed, non-visibly repurposed and unique look) that appeal to different consumer segments. While further research can be done into the demographic profiles, these categories can be used by designers/makers to make repurposed products that better appeal to their envisioned customer base.    

Author Biography

Deborah Xaviera Sumter, Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences, the Netherlands

Deborah Sumter, PhD has been working on sustainability project for over 10 years. She is currently works as a researcher in the Circular Design and Business research group at the Amsterdam University of Applied Science. Here she is manages a project on sustainable packaging systems and is a work package lead on a project about urban upcycling. In this last project she researches how consumer perception of upcycled products can be enhanced through design.   In 2021 she defended her PhD in Circular Economy Competencies for Design at the Delft University of Technology. Her doctoral thesis concluded with a set of 9 key circular economy competencies for design.

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Published

24-06-2025

How to Cite

Sumter, D. X., Snäll, B., & Oskam, I. F. (2025). Selling repurposed furniture: An exploratory study into consumer perception. Proceedings of the 6th Product Lifetimes and the Environment Conference (PLATE2025), (6). https://doi.org/10.54337/plate2025-10441