Tag Archives: Shreyas Gorre

Staples Students Offer Light To The Homeless

As our nation’s housing crisis worsens, Americans want to help.

We donate funds, clothes and toiletries to organizations that work with unhoused people. We hope this lightens their burdens.

Two Staples High School students have given them light — literally.

Last summer, rising senior Shreyas Gorre and sophomore Rohan Sareen were looking for a way to use their engineering skills to help the community.

The teens designed a solar-powered lantern. Incorporating lights, wires, batteries and solar panels, they provide safety and comfort for people living many hours a day in darkness.

But how could 2 teenagers produce solar-powered lanterns?

With a 3D printer, naturally.

Rohan Sareen (left) and Shreyas Gorre, with solar-powered lanterns.

In November, Shreyas and Rohan invited residents to the Westport Library. There, they taught attendees — some of whom had no experience with the MakerSpace — how to assemble the lanterns. In addition to 3D printing, the project included soldering and circuitry.

Shreyas and Rohan know the MakerSpace well. They serve as senior coordinator and technology coordinator, respectively.

In late December — thanks to the Library Makerspace’s Ultimaker S5 and brand-new Bambu P1S 3D printer — the devices were finished.

Eight solar-powered lanterns were distributed to Open Doors, the Norwalk-based nonprofit that provides services to unhoused people.

The volunteers “loved seeing their printed parts turn into something that can truly improve lives,” Rohan says.

“It is incredible to see the work you have done have a real impact on the community,” Shreyas adds.

The 2 friends hope to run this program again this winter, with an updated lantern design and more volunteers. Anyone — of any age — interested in joining the program should email rohanjsareen@gmail.com or shreyasgorre@gmail.com.

Contributions to cover the costs for materials of these lanterns, and help fund similar projects at MakerSpace, are always welcome.  Click here to donate.

MORE LIGHT: This is not Shreyas Gorre’s first community-minded venture. Last spring, “06880” profiled his work with Serve2Sustain.

The non-profit workd with local tennis clubs to collect used balls. They’re sent to a facility where machinery separates materials for reuse. They then go to RecycleBalls and Laykold, which supplies tennis courts for events like the US Open. Click here for that story.

Shreyas Gorre Serves To Sustain

“Tennis” and “sustainability” don’t often go together.

But in the US alone, 125 million tennis balls are tossed into landfills each year. That’s about 20,000 metric tons of rubber waste.

Serve2Sustain is a national student-led non-profit aimed at making tennis an eco-friendly sport.

And it’s led by teenagers, right here in Westport.

Serve2Sustain chapters work with local tennis clubs to collect used balls. They’re sent to a facility where machinery separates materials for reuse. They then go to RecycleBalls and Laykold, which supplies tennis courts for events like the US Open.

The companies grind the rubber into crumbs used to construct courts.

Student chapters raise money to cover the cost of shipping balls to recycling centers, and collects balls from local tennis clubs.

Serve2Sustain was founded by Staples High School junior Shreyas Gorre and Ari Fayne, a sophomore in Chicago. Both avid tennis player, they met through the Wharton Global Youth Program at the University of Pennsylvania, where they studied entrepreneurship.

Shreyas’ Staples friends (and Wrecker tennis teammates) Lucas Ceballos-Cala and Noah Wolff, are national vice presidents of operations and outreach, respectively.

Shreyas Gorre drops off used tennis balls, at the UPS Store.

The Staples chapter has partnered with Intensity Racquet Club and Westchester Tennis Center in Port Chester.

Every month, members pick up used tennis balls, and ship them off.

Looking ahead, they hope to add more clubs (and players) to help. To help, or ask questions, email serve2sustain@gmail.com. To donate, click here. To learn more about Serve2Sustain’s national operations, click here.

(“06880” is where Westport — and the environment, sports, and more — all meet. If you enjoy this hyper-local blog, please click here to support our work. Thank you!)