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Nike Grind



 

Nike Grind is part of Nike's Reuse-A-Shoe program that was started in 1993. The purpose of the program is to eliminate waste and close the loop on Nike's product lifecycle by collecting post-consumer, non-metal-containing athletic shoes of any brand, including Nike shoes that are returned due to material or workmanship defects.

Once collected, the sneakers are ground up and separated into three distinct types of material: rubber from the outsole, foam from the midsole and fabric from the shoe's upper. Nike and its partners (FieldTurf, Connor Sports Flooring, Rebound Ace and Atlas Track) take the granulated rubber and create soccer, football, baseball fields, weight room flooring and 400m running tracks. They use the granulated foam for synthetic basketball courts, tennis courts and playground surfacing tiles. The granulated fabric from the shoe uppers becomes the padding under hardwood basketball floors.

These programs are located in Australia, Canada, Japan, United Kingdom, and United States.

 
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Nike_Grind". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia.
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