By Paul Norman

Published: Tuesday, 14 June 2022 at 12:00 am


What happens to your cycling helmet when you replace it? With a mix of materials bonded together, cycling helmets are usually impossible to recycle, so the chances are it will usually end up in landfill.

The new POC Myelin commuting helmet is designed to avoid that. It’s built so that it can be easily disassembled into its individual components at the end of its life and its constituent parts can then be recycled.

Even from its inception, the POC Myelin helmet is made from 50 per cent recycled materials. It incorporates a shell made from woven recycled fabric and is assembled without using adhesives. POC says strategically placed fasteners ensure the helmet’s integrity and avoid the use of adhesives or lamination.

The fasteners can be cut apart at end of the helmet’s life and the component parts can then be separated. POC says that’s something that anyone can do using tools available at home, so the owner can then recycle the parts without needing a specialist recycling facility.

Despite its novel construction, the Myelin passes the relevant helmet safety standards across all jurisdictions.

Better for the planet

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The helmet can be broken down into its constituent parts and recycled at the end of its life.
POC

POC says its big idea with the Myelin is “to use our planet’s resources respectfully, to take inspiration from a circular economy approach and to lead from the front with new ideas and innovations”.

It’s an example of what POC calls its “whole helmet concept”, where the brand has designed each part of the helmet to enhance the whole.

Apart from the shell, other recycled parts used in the POC Myelin include a cap and pads made of recycled polyester and a bottom ring of recycled nylon. The straps are made of recycled polyester, include a snap and incorporate elastic sections.

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No adhesives or bonding are used in the helmet to ensure it can be broken down at the end of its life.
POC

Protection is provided by an EPS foam liner, as with a conventional helmet, and an array of small ventilation holes are built into the top of the helmet. POC has avoided the usual printing on the Myelin helmet by embossing its logo into the helmet shell.

“We wanted to question the idea that safety and sustainability could not obviously co-exist in a helmet… so we wanted to challenge the conventional way of creating a helmet, in particular by starting with recycled materials, how it is manufactured and how it can be deconstructed so as to allow for all the materials to be used again,” says Claes Nellestam, senior designer at POC.

POC sees the Myelin as an important step forward in its helmet design. However, it says it’s just a starting point, and it will be looking to transfer its experience in designing and testing the helmet into more products.

The POC Myelin is available immediately online at POC’s website and in retail stores in three sizes, priced at £100 / $100 / €100. The woven shell itself is grey, but accents are provided by the bottom rim, which is available in five different colour options.

POC Myelin helmet specifications

  • Sizes: S, M, L
  • Colours: Granite Grey, Lead Blue, Sapphire Purple, Epidote Green, Uranium Black
  • Weight: 340g (size M)
  • Certification: EN 1078, CPSC 12.03, AS/NZS 2063
  • Price: £100 / $100 / €100