Free Repair Café Helps Redlands Residents Save Money While Reducing Waste by Brooke Langley - City News Group, Inc.
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Free Repair Café Helps Redlands Residents Save Money While Reducing Waste

By Brooke Langley, Community Writer
July 15, 2026 at 12:29pm. Views: 87

In a world where replacing broken household items has often become easier than repairing them, the City of Redlands is encouraging residents to rediscover the value of fixing what they already own. Later this month, the City will host a free Repair Café, an event that combines sustainability, education, and community service by bringing together volunteer repair experts and residents looking to give new life to damaged household items.

Scheduled for Saturday, July 25, the Repair Café invites community members to bring broken or worn items that might otherwise end up in the trash. Volunteers with experience in electronics, sewing, jewelry repair, bicycle maintenance, small appliances, and general household repairs will work alongside residents to diagnose problems and, when possible, repair the items at no cost. Rather than simply repairing an object and handing it back, volunteers explain the repair process, allowing participants to learn new skills while gaining a better understanding of how everyday items work.

Its mission is simple: reduce waste by repairing usable items, conserve natural resources, and strengthen community connections by sharing knowledge between generations. Communities throughout California have embraced the idea as landfill space becomes increasingly limited and environmental awareness continues to grow.

For Redlands, the event aligns with ongoing efforts to encourage sustainability and responsible resource management. Every repaired toaster, lamp, bicycle, backpack, or piece of clothing represents one less item entering the waste stream. While a single repair may seem insignificant, organizers note that the collective impact of dozens or even hundreds of successful repairs can substantially reduce landfill waste while conserving the energy and raw materials required to manufacture replacement products.

The financial benefits are equally meaningful. Household appliances, electronics, bicycles, and clothing can be expensive to replace, particularly for families already managing rising living expenses. A simple repair performed by an experienced volunteer can extend the life of an item by several years, helping residents save money while avoiding unnecessary purchases. In many cases, participants leave not only with a repaired item but also with the confidence to perform similar repairs themselves in the future.

The event also reflects an older tradition that many communities are working to revive. Previous generations often repaired clothing, sharpened tools, rebuilt bicycles, and maintained household equipment rather than replacing them. As products have become more disposable, many of those practical skills have gradually faded. Repair Cafés help reconnect people with those traditions while demonstrating that repairing everyday items can still be practical, economical, and environmentally responsible.

 

As Redlands continues promoting environmental responsibility, events such as the Repair Café demonstrate that sustainability is not limited to large-scale infrastructure projects or government initiatives. It often begins with simple choices made in homes, garages, and neighborhoods. Choosing to repair instead of replace can save money, reduce waste, preserve valuable resources, and build stronger community connections at the same time.

 

By opening its doors to residents later this month, the Repair Café offers more than free repairs. It provides an opportunity to learn, volunteer, and rethink how everyday objects are valued. In a community known for preserving its history and investing in its future, the event serves as another reminder that sometimes the best way to move forward is by taking better care of what we already have.

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