clothing collection

We want to make extending the life of clothes transparent and easy.

TAKEBACK AND GIVE BACK

Redress is working to provide practical, easy and accessible solutions to Hong Kongers to extend the life of their unwanted clothes. Through our year-round Takeback Programme, Redress partners with some of the world’s leading fashion brands to place collection boxes in their retail stores where consumers can give back any brand of clothes for re-use, resale and recycling/downcycling by Redress, making it easier for the public to play their part in the circular fashion economy.

Transparency around how we sort and redistribute clothes collected through our Takeback programmes is very important to us. Our processes aim to maximise the value of each item and keep good quality clothing in circulation for as long as possible, while minimising the possibility of clothes ending up in landfill whether in Hong Kong or abroad. See our infographic and FAQs below for more details.

WHAT WE COLLECT

All menswear
All womenswear
All baby and childrens clothing
Quality accessories including handbags and scarves

Shoes
Home textiles (e.g. cushions, towels, curtains) (except Zara Home locations)
Mouldy items
Broken or damaged bags/accessories
Uniforms

We ask that you wash all clothing before putting it in one of our boxes! Thank you.

 

Hong Kong Island

Tommy Hilfiger

Shop 519–520, 5/F, Times Square, Causeway Bay, Hong Kong

Tommy Hilfiger

Shop 293, 2/F, Cityplaza, Taikoo Shing, Hong Kong

ZARA

G/F-4/F, Crawford House, No. 70. Queen's Road Central, Hong Kong

ZARA

Shop 1065-1075, IFC Mall, 8 Finance Street, Central, Hong Kong

ZARA

Shop 121, The Mall, Pacific Place, 88 Queensway, Admiralty, Hong Kong

ZARA

Shop 414-16 & 418-21, Times Square, 1 Matheson St, Causeway Bay, Hong Kong

ZARA

Store 100 & 217 Cityplaza, Level 1 & 2, Cityplaza South, Taikoo Shing, Hong Kong Island, Hong Kong

Pacific Place

Near Concierge Desk on L1, Pacific Place, 88 Queensway, Admiralty

Kowloon

Redress

78 Ap Liu Street, Sham Shui Po, Kowloon, Hong Kong

Tommy Hilfiger

Shop 2416 & 2513, Level 2, Gateway Arcade, Harbour City, Tsim Sha Tsui, Kowloon , Hong Kong

Tommy Hilfiger

Unit LG1-09, Festival Walk, 80 Tat Chee Avenue, Kowloon, Hong Kong

ZARA

Shop 2328, Level 2, Gateway Arcade, Harbour City, Tsim Sha Tsui, Kowloon, Hong Kong

ZARA

Shop 1051-54, 1056-57, Elements, 1 Austin Road West, Tsim Sha Tsui, Kowloon, Hong Kong

ZARA

Shop Unit G1, Telford Plaza, Phase 1, Kowloon Bay, Kowloon, Hong Kong

ZARA Home

G26, Festival Walk, 80 Tat Chee Ave, Kowloon Tong, Kowloon, Hong Kong

New Territories

Bershka

Shop 132-138, L1 & Shop B119, B1, Tsuen Wan Plaza, Tsuen Wan, N.T., Hong Kong

Tommy Hilfiger

Shop 248, 248A, 367 & 367A, Level 2 & 3, New Town Plaza Phase 1, Shatin, N.T., Hong Kong

ZARA

Shop 1049-1053, Level 1, Metro City II, 8 Yan King Road, Tseung Kwan O, N.T., Hong Kong

ZARA

Shop 335, Level 3, Phase 1, New Town Plaza, Shatin, N.T., Hong Kong

ZARA

Shops 1060-1065 & 1101-1103, 8 Long Yat Road, Yuen Long, N.T., Hong Kong

What happens to your clothes once collected?

Learn about what happens to your clothes after we collect them, and what you as a consumer can do to help address the challenge of textile waste. We are grateful for the support of The Purpose Business and Eat Creative who helped us develop this infographic.

FAQ

 Why give back your unwanted clothes?

In Hong Kong we send 388 tonnes of textiles to our overflowing landfills every day1 (of which 50% is estimated to be clothing), equivalent in weight to approximately 1.35 million T-shirts. Although our changing tastes and sizes might mean we don’t want them any more, many of these clothes are still in good, wearable condition.

Sending clothes to landfills wastes not only the clothes themselves but all the precious natural resources - and human labour - that went into making them including land, trees, water and oil.

Redress puts wearable clothing back into circulation so that it can be re-used by other people. Expanding the lifespan of clothing through re-use means that we get more mileage out of the resources that went into making clothes already in existence; we reduce the need for the production of new clothing; and we reduce the amount of clothing ending up in landfills.

1Source: Environmental Protection Department, HKSAR. 2023. Monitoring of Solid Waste in Hong Kong: Waste Statistics for 2022.

 How are we different from other clothing collection programmes in Hong Kong?

  1. Environmental Focus: Our environmental mission and status as an environmental charity forms the backbone of all of the decisions we make including how we collect, sort and redistribute clothing resources (for example, our commitment not to resell clothing in overseas markets where we have no visibility over how the clothing is used or where it ends up).

  2. Sustainable Operations: We are committed to sustainability in our operations, for example reusing collection boxes, recycling plastic and paper waste, exploring and utilising sustainable logistics alternatives such as paper packing tape.

  3. Attention to Detail: We employ a careful sorting process focused on capturing the greatest economic and environmental value from each item of clothing, minimising environmental impact, minimising waste entering Hong Kong’s landfills, and providing targeted and meaningful support for our charity partners.

  4. Finding Solutions: We are committed to finding a solution for the ‘bottom layer’ of unusable clothing (e.g. clothing that is stained or broken and therefore not suitable for reuse) and minimise clothing sent to landfill, by researching and trialling new solutions for recycling/downcycling within Asia.

  5. Trusted Partner: We are committed to transparency in our collection, sorting, redistribution and reporting processes, and regarding the partners we work with. If you have any questions about our processes, please Contact Us.

  6. Education Everywhere: We see education as an essential part of the clothing waste solution, and our relationships with a large number of retailers, companies, clubs and schools which provide a pipeline to engage with Hong Kong consumers of all ages and from diverse backgrounds.

  7. Collaboration: We have long-standing relationships with a large number of local charity partners serving a diverse range of social causes, with whom we provide carefully sorted good quality clothing.

 What types of clothing can I give?

Any clothing and fashion accessories for men, women and children , in any condition. The only exception are uniforms, whether from schools or companies as there’s currently no solution to reuse these. We do not accept:

- any badly worn or broken fashion accessories (as we currently have no avenues to recycle these items)

- shoes

- any home textiles (e.g. cushion covers, curtains, towels, bedding), except at our Zara Home locations, as while we are constantly looking for ways to deal with a broader range of textile waste, Redress’ primary focus is on clothing waste

- any mouldy items (as these items can contaminate other good condition items)

Please remember to always wash the clothes first!

 How do you sort the clothes received?

All clothing dropped in our collection boxes is processed, sorted and redistributed by Redress with the invaluable help of volunteers from the Hong Kong community and our logistics partners CN Logistics.

Every piece of clothing is checked manually for damage. Our careful sorting process maximises the value of each item, better supports our charity partners by matching clothing with their specific needs, and reduces wastage.

 Where do the clothes go?

Our number one priority is increasing utilisation and limiting the amount of clothing that ends up in landfills. Our top-level sorting categories are: reuse by local charity partners ( 50-60%); resale at Redress’ secondhand charity stores (10-15%), downcycling/recycling (approx. 20-30%) and landfill (approx. 1-4%). Within these main categories we sort into up to 20 sub-categories based on each garment’s type and condition, our charity beneficiaries’ specific needs, and current recycling/downcycling capabilities. Once the clothes are sorted, boxed and labelled, Redress transports and redistributes them to numerous charity partners and other resale or reuse channels as described below. orms such as The HULA and Retykle, to promote the accessibility of secondhand shopping in Hong Kong and raise funds for our work.

The majority of wearable items are redistributed to our network of 20+ local charity partners for reuse by their beneficiaries including Crossroads, Refugee Union, YWCA, ImpactHK, Christian Action and many more. We work with our charity partners to understand how the clothing will be used, and to the best of our knowledge, none of the clothing that Redress donates to partner charities is sold as commercial exports to developing countries.

A small percentage of the most fashionable and best condition wearable clothes are resold at our very own secondhand store - The Redress Closet, our pop-up shops, or through our selected resellers in Hong Kong such as Retykle and Green Ladies, to promote the accessibility of secondhand shopping in Hong Kong.

 What about clothes that cannot be re-used?

Clothes that have reached the end of their ‘wearable’ life (e.g. used personal items like underwear, socks, sleepwear and swimwear, or really worn out/stained/damaged items), or clothes that our charity partners don’t want (e.g. company/school uniforms), are very difficult for us to deal with.

Globally, including in Hong Kong, there is a lack of viable recycling technologies to deal with these ‘bottom layer’ clothes at scale. While some local recycling options do exist (e.g. The Billie System fibre-to-fibre recycling facility and the HKRITA G2G facility), these local facilities are not currently able to process mixed clothing of the type and volume collected by Redress.

Despite this, Redress believes that downcycling is preferable to landfill and so we are constantly researching and trialling new solutions fordowncycling within the wider Asia region. At the moment, Redress is working with a partner in Hong-Kong who shreds all the materials and reproduces them into quilts and rags. Metal pieces (zipper, buttons) are removed at the shredding process to be recycled separately.

 Do you send any items of clothes collected to landfill?

For a very small percentage (1-4%) of items we have no choice but to send them to landfill. This includes anything mouldy where there is risk of contaminating other items, any broken or very poor condition shoes, bags and fashion accessories as well as broken or very poor condition fake or real leather clothing as they are made from materials that cannot be recycled. It also includes actual rubbish or random items that are dropped in our boxes (e.g. , plastic bags, used cosmetics, broken stationery, etc.).

 What else can I do to help?

Choose well, repair, reuse and ask questions. Find out more about how you can reduce your impact as an individual here.

Make a monetary donation to support our work here.

Volunteer your time to help sort clothing here.