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Manufacturing

Sustainable textiles factory to open in Hull as recycling firm outlines near-£1m investment

30 new jobs to be created by MyGroup as it adds to construction materials operation in the city

Katie Robinson, textiles manager at MyGroup, is a drivign force behind the significant expansion. (Image: Katie Pugh)

The º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s first sustainable textiles factory is set to open in Hull.

Waste management firm MyGroup is making a £900,000 investment at its city site, in a move that will create up to 30 new jobs. It will see waste textiles remanufactured into new products, promoting circularity in the fashion industry and leading the charge in reducing environmental impact.

The addition to the company’s existing construction materials production - from hard-to-recycle plastics - will bring new skills to the area. It is already working with major brands to deliver solutions, with Harrods and Calpol the most recent additions in fast moving goods markets.

Read more: Hull construction firm Hobson and Porter weathers rampant inflation

Steve Carrie, director at MyGroup, said: "We are proud to launch this pioneering venture that showcases the company and the city of Hull’s commitment to sustainability and innovation. We’re ahead of the curve and building a factory of the future – our end-to-end recycling process combined with remanufacturing capabilities will revolutionise the way our industry thinks about textiles waste."

The two-storey, 1,300 sq m factory space is being developed within a derelict former laboratory and offices on MyGroup’s Morley Street recycling campus. It will house a complete, state-of-the-art process for waste textiles, that will range from clothing to accessories and home furnishings.

The ReFactory will feature an industrial-grade machine production floor and a state-of-the-art pattern-cutting and design studio. Entering the site at a sorting and grading room, textiles will be put through a commercial cleaning cycle and a deconstruction process, where hardware such as zippers and buttons will be removed, while multi-materials are separated. They will then be transformed into new garments, accessories and other products, with a multi-disciplinary team to be assembled - with designers, pattern cutters and sewing machinists joined by sales and administrative support staff.

The company has already made some in-roads into the sector, working with Siemens Gamesa to produce work bags from protective wind turbine blade sheeting, and on other small runs.