At MIT, a team of designers has created FOODres.AI, a 3D printer that transforms everyday food scraps into useful household objects.

Banana peels, coffee grounds, and vegetable trimmings are no longer destined for the compost bin alone.

Instead, the system uses AI to identify your scraps, generate printable “recipes,” and turn them into a bioplastic paste.

Heated, mixed, and pushed through a three-axis extruder, the waste is reshaped into coasters, bowls, or other small functional pieces.

While the scale is modest and questions of durability remain, the concept reframes waste as possibility. We love the idea of trash becoming long-lasting treasures.

Could this be used in future commercial kitchen applications? On future missions to Mars?

In the hands of this small printer, yesterday’s kitchen leftovers become tomorrow’s design objects.

Student designers Biru Cao and Yiqing Wang have designed the system to guide users to what ingredients will create the best output.

Learn more about the project on Dezeen.

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