Tradeshow Design(1)

Acquiring and Using Sustainable Materials in Trade Show Design

Most trade show builds aren’t built to last. Single-use materials, oversized crates, energy-hungry setups, and a dumpster waiting in the parking lot when it’s all done. It’s the industry default, and it’s getting harder to defend with a straight face.

The good news: sustainable trade show design has caught up. The materials look as good as the conventional ones, install as cleanly, and ship lighter. Here’s how to source and use them without compromising on what the booth actually needs to do.

What “sustainable material” actually means

Sustainable materials are renewable, recyclable, biodegradable, or made from recycled content. When you’re evaluating options for a trade show build, the useful questions are:

  • Recyclability and reusability. Can this material live another life after the event, or is it heading straight to landfill?
  • Biodegradability. If it does end up in waste, does it decompose, or is it still around when your grandkids are explaining what trade shows were?
  • Sustainable sourcing. Where did it come from, and can the supplier prove it?
  • Energy efficiency. What’s the embodied energy in production, and what’s the energy load during the booth’s run?

Sourcing the right materials

Sourcing sustainably isn’t about slapping an “eco” sticker on whatever you were going to use anyway and calling it a day. Three things to look for.

1. Work with vendors who can back up the claim

Some vendors are genuinely sustainable. Others have a marketing department and a green colour palette. The difference shows up in their certifications. Look for:

  • FSC (Forest Stewardship Council) for wood and paper products from responsibly managed forests.
  • Cradle to Cradle for materials designed to be reclaimed and reused at end-of-life.
  • GREENGUARD for low chemical emissions, especially relevant for indoor environments.

2. Recycled and upcycled materials

Recycled aluminum, reclaimed wood, and upcycled fabrics deliver the same finish as new materials with a fraction of the environmental cost. For booth fixtures and structural elements, recycled aluminum extrusions are the workhorse: strong, light, and infinitely recyclable, which is more than you can say for most things on a trade show floor.

3. Modular and lightweight systems

Modular displays built from aluminum frame systems and tensioned fabric (SEG) pack down efficiently, ship light, and reconfigure for different shows. Lower shipping emissions, lower freight bills, less waste at end-of-program. FABRiK Frames are a useful example: the aluminum frames are reusable across years, and the fabric graphics swap out cleanly when the messaging changes.

Designing for longevity, not just one show

A booth designed for a single use is the most expensive booth you can build, environmentally and financially. The smarter approach is to design for reconfiguration from the start.

1. Build for multiple activations

Modular systems that scale up and down, swap out graphics, and reconfigure for different footprints earn back their investment across two or three shows. Aluminum extrusion plus tensioned fabric is the most flexible system for this, and it’s why the same backwall can quietly do five years of duty under three different campaign skins.

2. Use energy-efficient lighting

LED lighting has become the default for backlit displays and accent lighting, and for good reason: dramatically lower energy use than fluorescents or halogens, longer lifespan, less heat. Most iMPAKT lightboxes use LED strips that draw a fraction of the power of older lit displays. The booth doesn’t double as a space heater, which event planners and HVAC systems both appreciate.

3. Reduce waste with smart logistics

  • Stackable, compact designs. Fewer trucks, less fuel, less freight cost.
  • Return and reuse programs. Components that get a second life instead of a dumpster.
  • Local sourcing where possible. Shorter supply chains, lower shipping emissions, easier reorders.

4. Talk about it

If you’ve made sustainable choices, tell the visitors who care. A small panel on the booth, a QR code linking to a sourcing breakdown, or a line in the booth signage costs almost nothing and adds real credibility for the audience that’s looking for it. Just resist the urge to put “eco-friendly” on a vinyl banner.

The business case, briefly

Sustainable trade show design isn’t just good for the planet. It’s good for the build budget over time, it shortens freight bills, it future-proofs the program against tightening regulations, and it gives the brand something honest to talk about on the booth floor.

At shōmi!, we’d rather build a display once and use it for three years than build it three times in a row. If you’re planning a trade show program and want to think through what a longer-life, lower-waste build could look like, we’re happy to take a look.