Costco's packaging makeover revealed

The company’s revamped club store packaging yields cosmetics with an environmentally friendly bent—with more iterations on the way.

MATERIALS AYED. Costco's private label line of upscale cosmetics replaces vinyl clamshells with paperboard and RPET blisters th
MATERIALS AYED. Costco's private label line of upscale cosmetics replaces vinyl clamshells with paperboard and RPET blisters th

Economically functional packaging has long been the foundation of club store packaging. Earlier this year, Costco added environmentally friendly into its club store packaging mix.

The club store chain, which operates nearly 350 warehouse stores in the United States, is replacing plastic clamshell packs with paperboard-blister hybrid packages. This new packaging comprises printed paperboard and RPET (recycled polyester) thermoforms.

First to receive the eco-friendly packaging makeover starting in February 2006 is a co-branded line of 22 Kirkland Signature by Borghese cosmetic products.

“The idea was to convert our vinyl clamshell packaging into something that would minimize the amount of plastic used,” explains Scott Carnie, general manager of Costco Wholesale Industries’ eastern packaging facility in Monroe, NJ. The products are thermoformed and packaged at two plants, one in Monroe (see sidebar below) and at a sister plant in National City, CA.

The packaging comprises front and back 24-pt SBS cards printed by Card Pak (www.cardpak.com) and blisters that Costco thermoforms from 15-ga RPET (recycled polyester) sheet.

Card Pak offset-prints the SBS in six colors plus a heat-resistant coating. There’s also other aspects to the paperboard that Costco considers crucial. “Card Pak is currently our sole source for the SBS,” says Carnie. “It has been extremely professional and service oriented.”

Costco had been transitioning out of PVC into PET, a step that Carnie felt was in the right direction, but not a solution.

“We had no way to reclaim those packages, so we weren’t getting anywhere environmentally speaking,” he says. “And with consumer complaints related to the sharp edges after cutting open plastic clamshells, we looked at ways to display our products in a packaging format similar in size to what we had been using, but changing from all plastic packaging to as little plastic as possible.”

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