The 6Rs are a hierarchy of sustainability strategies that guide designers, manufacturers, and consumers toward more ethical and environmentally responsible practices. Each R represents a different level of intervention, generally ordered from most to least preferable.
1. Rethink
Challenge the need for a product or its current form entirely. Ask: does this product need to exist? Can its function be achieved differently? This is the most powerful level — redesigning systems rather than optimising existing ones.
- Example: Rethinking a single-use coffee cup by designing a returnable reusable cup program
2. Refuse
Decline to use materials, components, or processes that are harmful or unsustainable, even if they are cheaper or easier.
- Example: Refusing to use PVC (releases toxic dioxins when incinerated) in favour of polypropylene
- Example: Refusing to source timber from non-certified forests
3. Reduce
Minimise material use, energy consumption, waste, and packaging without compromising function or safety.
- Example: Lightweighting a product by using hollow sections or thinner gauge material where structurally appropriate
- Example: Reducing packaging volume through flat-pack design
4. Reuse
Design products or components so they can be used again — either by the same user or a new one — without reprocessing.
- Example: Refillable containers; modular electronics with swappable batteries
- Example: Second-hand markets; product-as-a-service models
5. Recycle
Ensure materials can be recovered and reprocessed into new products at end-of-life. This requires:
- Use of mono-materials or easily separable materials
- Avoiding mixed-material laminates or glued composites that are difficult to separate
- Labelling materials clearly for consumer sorting
- Example: Designing a product from a single polymer type rather than mixed plastics
6. Repair
Extend product life through maintenance, servicing, and repair. Design for repairability: accessible fasteners, available spare parts, modular components.
- Example: Smartphones designed with replaceable batteries (vs. glued-in batteries)
- Example: Furniture with replaceable upholstery or hardware
The 6Rs are arranged from highest to lowest environmental impact prevention:
$$\text{Rethink} > \text{Refuse} > \text{Reduce} > \text{Reuse} > \text{Repair} > \text{Recycle}$$
Recycling, while important, still requires energy and resources. The 6Rs encourage addressing sustainability at the design stage, not just at end-of-life.
| 6R | Designer Action |
|---|---|
| Rethink | Challenge the product brief; propose alternative solutions |
| Refuse | Specify ethical material lists; exclude toxic substances |
| Reduce | Optimise material use; minimise packaging |
| Reuse | Design for disassembly; modular components |
| Repair | Use standard fasteners; provide repair guides |
| Recycle | Mono-material construction; material labelling |
KEY TAKEAWAY: The 6Rs move from prevention (Rethink, Refuse) to mitigation (Recycle). The earlier in the hierarchy a designer acts, the greater the sustainability benefit.
EXAM TIP: When asked to apply the 6Rs to a product, address multiple Rs and explain the specific design or production decision that corresponds to each — not just one R in isolation.
COMMON MISTAKE: Many students only discuss Recycle. Examiners reward responses that engage with Rethink, Refuse, and Reduce, which have greater impact.