Heap allocation in java is something trivial happens constantly. People typically do funky stuff with memory allocation because they have to, because the GC is causing pauses.
People avoid system allocators in C++ too, they just don't have to do it because of uncontrollable pauses.
This same dev did things like putting what he deemed as being large objects (icons) into weak references to save memory. When the references were collected, invariably they had to be reloaded.
That was not the source of memory pressure issues in the app.
I've developed a mistrust for a lot of devs "doing it because we have to" when it comes to performance tweaks. It's not a never thing that a buffer is the right thing to do, but it's not been something I had to reach for to solve GC pressure issues. Often times, far more simple solutions like pulling an allocation out of the middle of a loop, or switching from boxed types to primatives, was all that was needed to relieve memory pressure.
The closest I've come to it is replacing code which would do an expensive and allocation heavy calculation with a field that caches the result of that calculation on the first call.