It’s flooring—and then some. Made for More.
At Interface, sustainability is at the core of who we are, so we carefully consider the materials we use in our products. We live in an industrial system where most materials are still made in ways that negatively impact our planet and our health. We do not accept that running a profitable company has to have these impacts. Instead, we are committed to showing the world a better way to do business.
We are often asked why we continue to use PVC plastic in our modular flooring since the potential negative impacts of this material’s life cycle have been widely publicized.
The answer boils down to a few key things:
Innovation in product design and use of recycled materials has allowed Interface to dramatically reduce the amount of virgin plastic in our products, including a more than 60% reduction in the use of PVC in our carpet tile and the introduction of non-vinyl, bio-based alternatives like our CQuest™Bio backing. With a long-standing screening process in place – in addition to a lack of exposure pathways – the way we manage our recycled PVC is preferable to virgin plastics.
In an era where the vast majority of flooring ends up in a landfill or an incinerator, Interface has built a true closed loop system for vinyl flooring.
Our post-consumer carpet tile backing can be recycled through ReEntry™ to feed our 3rd party verified closed loop production system and make CQuest™GB backing. This system allows us to safely make new carpet tile backing from old.
We adopted GreenStar PVC Best Practice guidelines developed in Australia because PVC use continues to grow despite efforts like Red Lists, making it vitally important that specifiers have a way to ask for better PVC. This standard eliminates the traditional concerns about the manufacture of PVC, harmful additives like heavy metal stabilizers and phthalate plasticizers, and end of life.
While some products claim to be “PVC Free,” as if that alone makes a product healthy and sustainable, our system assesses and optimizes all materials (including PVC plastic) for their contribution to green chemistry, the circular economy, and the creation of a climate fit for life.
Standard Interface LVT meets the Green Star Best Practice Guidelines.
No material is without its trade-offs, however. Meeting the Green Star guidelines does not mean PVC is 100% sustainable. We took the unusual step of assessing our global supply chain to an Australian standard because it is the only independent, comprehensive standard for best practice PVC that exists in the world today, and we encourage others to do the same.
As we continue the push toward using only recycled or bio-based inputs, we always strive to ensure that today’s materials and practices are held to the highest standards available.
Through our commitment to achieving Climate Take Back™, we strive to: