PaperLab dry-process office papermaking system receives Good Design Gold Award
Seiko Epson Corporation is proud to announce that its PaperLab A-8000 dry-process office papermaking system1 has been awarded the Good Design Gold Award (METI Minister Award). This award is presented to the design judged by the Good Design Award Judging Committee to be particularly outstanding among the Good Design Best 100, which are selected from all 2017 Good Design Award recipients (4,495 entries). The winner is selected based on a comprehensive evaluation of criteria including the design’s potential as a solution for social issues, future applicability, and level of completion.
Kazuhiro Ichikawa, executive officer and deputy general administrative manager, Corporate Research & Development Division, involved in the development of the PaperLab A-8000 says, “It is a great honour to receive such a highly regarded award. I think this is recognition of the PaperLab A-8000’s concept to 'change the future of paper'. As a communications tool, paper has universal value in that it is easily comprehensible, easily visible, and easily portable. At the same time, paper creates an environmental and confidentiality management burden, meaning that some concerns come with its use. By applying dry fibre technology, Epson is proposing the A-8000 as the world’s first2 office papermaking system that enables the processing and creation of paper locally, in the amount you need and when you need it. Epson is committed to promoting a zero-waste society.”
“This is the first time our company has received the Good Design Gold Award. This is affirmation that Epson’s promotion of a zero-waste society has great value and also recognition of all our work planning and designing the PaperLab as a product to provide that value. The PaperLab represents our commitment to pioneering new markets and I am committed to growing this product into a major business segment,” says Masahiko Kobayashi, design director for the PaperLab A-8000, in Epson’s Manufacturing Process Technology Development Department.
Good Design Awards
The Good Design Award is a comprehensive design-promotion system that picks good design out of a variety of unfolding phenomena. It is hosted by the Japan Institute for Design Promotion, a public interest incorporated foundation. It's precursor, the Good Design Selection System (or G Mark System), was founded in 1957 by the Ministry of International Trade and Industry (the current Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry), and has been engaged in this work for about 60 years.
Recipients of a Good Design Award are granted use of the G Mark symbol, which has been an emblem of good design for over half a century.
Author profile
Charlie de la Haye
PR and social media manager, Epson UK
About Epson
Epson is a global technology leader dedicated to co-creating sustainability and enriching communities by leveraging its efficient, compact, and precision technologies and digital technologies to connect people, things, and information. The company is focused on solving societal issues through innovations in home and office printing, commercial and industrial printing, manufacturing, visual and lifestyle. Epson will become carbon negative and eliminate use of exhaustible underground resources such as oil and metal by 2050.
Led by the Japan-based Seiko Epson Corporation, the worldwide Epson Group generates annual sales of around JPY 1 trillion.