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Cardboard gingerbread house wins top prize at MUN recycling contest

Students at Memorial University in St. John's were challenged to find creative ways to reuse common waste and turn it into Christmas decorations on Friday.

$1,000 in cash prizes were on the line for the best decoration

MUN PhD students Sam Lehman and Cherise Ragoonath, members of the graduate English student society, won Friday's event with their gingerbread house design. (Zach Goudie/CBC)

Students at Memorial University in St. John's were challenged to find creative ways to reuse common waste and turn it into Christmas decorations on Friday.

McDonald's cups, newspapers, cardboard boxes and other every day items were creatively concocted into decorations which will be used around the campus in the coming weeks. 

Students competed for $1,000 in cash prizes with MUN PhD students Sam Lehman and Cherise Ragoonath, members of the graduate English student society, coming out on top.

Sam Lehman and Cherise Ragoonath were the big winners on Friday. (Zach Goudie/CBC)

"We're having a conference in February from the 8th to the 9th on eco-criticism and environmental studies. So we thought what better way to raise awareness than to participate in other areas of sustainability on campus," Lehman said.

"Plus we need a break from PhD work."

They won with a detailed cardboard gingerbread house design, complete with a miniature Christmas tree and books. 

Loujein Mouammer and teammate Marilena Geng pulled cups from garbage cans around campus to demonstrate just how many single-use cups are used each day at MUN. (Zach Goudie/CBC)

Another team pulled coffee cups from campus garbage cans to create a Christmas tree design. 

"We're raising awareness and we're hoping to change people's habits and start using reusable mugs for example," Loujein Mouammer, a process engineering masters student with a focus on renewable energy, told CBC News on Friday. 

"The stage we are now, we really need to think about our waste and our perception and come up with creative ways to reduce our carbon footprint."

While only drawing a small turnout to the first event of its kind on campus, organizers say there will be another to follow next year.

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador

With files from Zach Goudie