Renovation
fromBig Think
36 minutes agoWhy fixing your gadgets often costs more than replacing them
Modern products are increasingly designed for replacement rather than repair, making fixing them feel optional and replacement inevitable.
Growing up outside Manchester, I learned early that there's a stark difference between having money and knowing how to make things last. My dad worked factory shifts while my mum juggled retail hours, and our house ran on an unspoken rule: if something still worked, you didn't replace it. Last month, I visited a friend in Belgravia who was renovating his kitchen. As we chatted over coffee, workers hauled out perfectly functional appliances that looked barely used.
He grew up between the French capital and Bab el Oued, a suburb of Algiers in Algeria, and his Algerian-French identity and the culture and history of Europe and North Africa-the global north and south-have profoundly informed his subject matter and materials. His work across three decades in photography, collage, sculpture, installation and sound, is concerned with a central concept: repair. By association, the notion of repair is inevitably connected with violence and injury.