| This essay originally appeared in Sustainable Planet (Beacon Press,
2001).
If the landscape reveals one certainty, it is that the
extravagant gesture is the very stuff of creation. After
the one extravagant gesture of creation in the first place,
the universe has continued to deal exclusively in extravagances,
flinging intricacies and colossi down aeons of emptiness,
heaping profusions on profligacies with ever-fresh vigor.
The whole show has been on fire from the word go.
-Annie Dillard
Nature is nothing if not extravagant. Four billion years
of natural design, forged in the cradle of evolution, has
yielded such a profusion of forms we can barely grasp the
vigor and diversity of life on Earth. Responding to unique
local conditions, ants have evolved into nearly 10,000 species,
several hundred of which can be found in the crown of a
single Amazonian tree. Fruit trees produce thousands of
blossoms-an astonishing abundance of blossoms-so that another
tree might germinate, take root and grow. Birds, too, seem
to have a taste for the extravagant: Who could say the wood
duck's plumage is restrained?
For most of our history, the human response to the living
earth, to particular places, has expressed the same flowering
of diversity. Bearing the unique human ability to imagine
and create, we entered the show and developed our own extravagant
gestures. We built not just shelter, but beautiful, elegant
responses to locale; the breathing, shade-providing Bedouin
tent along with the ornate, aspiring temples of cool, coastal
Japan. We designed not just wraps against the wind but tailored
garments for ritual, celebration, and our own delight. We
spoke and moved not just for utilitarian ends but to make
drama and poetry, Balinese dance and Shakespearean verse-human
creations stoking the fire.
Though human industry in the past 150 years has resorted
to brute force rather than elegant design, commerce, too,
could become a wellspring of creativity, productivity, and
pleasure. Think of the thriving marketplaces that have enlivened
the world's great cities, the cherished objects and materials
that transform shelter into soulful dwelling. These need
not be sacrificed to protect our forests, rivers, soil and
air. Indeed, human industry and habitations can be designed
to celebrate interdependence with other living systems,
transforming the making and consumption of things into a
regenerative force. Design can perform and preserve the
extravagant gesture-in the marketplace, in the human community,
and in the natural world.
An Age of Limits?
For many advocates of sustainable development the notion
that the production and consumption of goods can be a regenerative
force is not only alarming, it's downright heretical. Our
age is widely perceived as an age of limits. The conventional
wisdom holds that the rate of consumption of natural resources
by the world's developed nations is damaging the Earth's
ecosystems and consigning the Third World to poverty. While
some industrialists still use brute force to gain short-term
profits, many business leaders have come to realize that
a system that takes, makes, and wastes is not sustainable
in the long-term.
In response, we all try to limit our impact. We "reduce,
reuse, and recycle" at home and in the workplace. Business
leaders plan for reductions in resource consumption and
energy use. They strive to "produce more with less,"
"minimize waste" and release fewer toxic chemicals
into the air, water, and soil. These industrial reforms,
which have come to be known as eco-efficiency, are an admirable
attempt to come to terms with the conflict between nature
and commerce-they may well help resolve it. But they don't
really get to the root of the problem. Working within the
same system without examining the manifest flaws in its
design, eco-efficient reforms slow industry down without
reshaping the way products are made and used. In effect,
industry is simply using brute force more efficiently to
overcome the rules of the natural world.
Using fewer resources, people may feel a bit "less
bad," but no one can quite slip the trap of being merely
a "consumer" in a world of poorly designed, toxic
products. Every choice seems to contribute to the erosion
of human and environmental health: the carpet makes your
children sick; the car burns fossil fuels; the TV is loaded
with toxic materials. When anything you buy does damage
to the world, consumption remains freighted with anxiety
and divorced from any notion of sustaining vision that celebrates
pleasure, abundance and delight.
Industry, meanwhile, slogs ahead under regulations that
merely dilute pollution rather than examine the cause of
the problem; too often these rules are in fact signals of
design failure and, ultimately, licenses to harm. And efficiency
is proving to fall short of its goals. A new report from
the World Resources Institute, for example, announced that
pollution and waste in Austria, Germany, Japan, the Netherlands,
and the United States have increased by as much as 28 percent
in the last 25 years despite increasingly efficient use
of resources. Though Europe in the past 10 years has achieved
significant reductions in waste, it is merely reaching for
sustainability, which is after all only a minimum condition
for survival-hardly a delicious prospect.
In this atmosphere, the World Business Council for Sustainable
Development, a leading advocate of eco-efficiency, found
"sustainable consumption" such a burdened, contested
term it dropped the word from the title of its four-year
study on, well, sustainable consumption. As Ken Alston,
a former WBCSD project member said, the group's leadership-executives
from major multinational corporations-"struggled to
develop eco-efficiency arguments supporting sustainable
production and consumption strategies that were robust enough
to withstand a critique from environmentalists."
Yet a vision for healthy, sustaining commerce does exist.
The idea that the natural world is inevitably destroyed
by human industry, or that excessive demand for goods and
services causes environmental ills, is a simplification.
Nature-highly industrious, astonishingly productive, extravagant
even-is not efficient but effective. Design based on nature's
effectiveness, what we call eco-effective design, can solve
rather than alleviate the problems industry creates, allowing
both business and nature to be fecund and productive.
Nature's Abundance
How is it possible for industry and nature to fruitfully
co-exist? Well, consider the cherry tree. Each spring it
produces thousands of blossoms, only a few of which germinate,
take root and grow. Who would see cherry blossoms piling
up on the ground and think, "How inefficient and wasteful"?
The tree's abundance is useful and safe. After falling to
the ground, the blossoms return to the soil and become nutrients
for the surrounding environment. Every last particle contributes
in some way to the health of a thriving ecosystem. Waste
that stays waste does not exist. Instead, waste nourishes;
waste equals food.
As a cherry tree grows, it enriches far more than the soil.
Through photosynthesis it makes food from the sun, providing
nourishment for animals, birds and microorganisms. It sequesters
carbon, produces oxygen and filters water. The tree's limbs
and leaves harbor a great diversity of microbes and insects,
all of which play a role within a local system of natural
cycles. Even in death the tree provides nourishment as it
decomposes and releases minerals that fuel new life. From
blossom to sapling to magnificent old age, the cherry tree's
growth is regenerative. We could say its life cycle is cradle-to-cradle-after
each useful life it provides nourishment for something new.
In a cradle-to-cradle world-a world of natural cycles powered
by the sun-growth is good, waste nutritious, and nature's
diverse responses to place are the source of intelligent
design.
Industrial life cycles, on the other hand, tend to be cradle-to-grave.
Typically, the production and consumption of goods follows
a one-way, linear path from the factory to the household
to the landfill or incinerator. Wasted materials and harmful
emissions trail products from the cradle of the industrial
plant to the grave of the local dump, where products themselves
are thrown "away" or burned for energy. Recycling
and regulation are often employed to minimize the negative
impacts of industry and they do help ease the conflict between
nature and commerce. But why not set out, right from the
start, to create products and industrial systems that have
only positive, regenerative impacts on the world? Why fine-tune
a damaging system when we can create a world of commerce
that we can celebrate and unabashedly applaud?
Commerce worth applauding applies nature's cycles to the
making of things. It generates safe, ecologically intelligent
products that, like the cherry tree, provide nourishment
for something new after each useful life. From a design
perspective, this means creating products that work within
cradle-to-cradle life cycles rather than cradle-to-grave
ones. It means rather than designing products to be used
and thrown away, we begin to imitate nature's highly effective
systems and design every product as a nutrient.
What is a nutritious product? It's not simply an all-natural
product; it's not a recycled product, either. Instead, it's
a product designed to provide nutrients to what we have
conceived as the Earth's two discrete metabolisms, the biosphere-the
cycles of nature-and the technosphere-the cycles of industry.
Lightweight food packaging, for example, can be designed
to be a nutritious part of the biological metabolism; if
it is made of organic compounds it can be safely returned
to the soil to be consumed by microorganisms. Synthetic
materials, chemicals, metals and durable goods are part
of the technical metabolism; they can be designed to circulate
within closed-loop industrial cycles, in effect, providing
"food" for the technosphere.
Cars, computer cases, washing machines, televisions-in
fact, all industrial products-can be designed to retain
value as they flow between producer and consumer. Instead
of being recycled, or downcycled, into lower-quality materials,
products created and used within closed technical cycles-what
we call products of service-can continually circulate as
high-quality products. Customers will soon be able to buy
the service of such goods, and manufacturers will take them
back at the customers' request, using their complex materials
in the product's next high-value iteration.
When products from either the biosphere or the technosphere
take a one-way trip to the landfill a great wealth of nutrients
is squandered. Trapped in a plastic-lined dump, organic
waste cannot renew the soil and valuable technical materials
are lost forever. Worse, the two discrete metabolisms are
mixed, contaminating both spheres: Nature, by design, cannot
safely absorb the materials of industry and the technosphere
has little or no use for organic nutrients. But if the things
people make are channeled into one or the other of these
metabolisms, then products can be safely manufactured and
consumed without straining the environment. They can be
considered either biological nutrients or technical nutrients,
both of which provide nourishment within their respective
spheres of nature and industry.
Our strategy is quite different from the strategy of dematerialization.
Proponents of dematerialization aim to reduce the amount
of a resource used to create a product. They want to make
thinner paper, lighter packaging, a better aluminum can-in
this world, less is more. While those innovations may lead
to a more efficient use of materials, they do not comprehensively
examine the chemistry of materials, the impacts of industrial
processes, nor the local circumstances surrounding their
use-which may well be quite harmful to both people and nature.
We are proposing something different. We'd like to see
a true transformation of commerce in which design goes beyond
using nature efficiently and instead creates value and opportunity
with products that nourish rather than deplete the world.
This is not to gainsay efficiency. We'd simply like to put
efficiency to work in the service of an effective, life-centered
vision. As the business genius Peter Drucker has said, being
efficient-doing things right-is the crucial role of the
manager. It's the leader's job to be effective, to see that
the "right things get done." Efficiently managing
a toxic system is not the "right thing." Efficient
innovations within a life-affirming design protocol, however,
suggest a dynamic path to a cradle-to-cradle world.
From Maintenance to Renewal to Inherent
Creativity
The conceptual, and actual, shift to cradle-to-cradle products
transforms the impact of industry. When all manufactured
products and materials are designed as nutrients, the production
and consumption of goods enriches the natural world. And
when those nutrients flow within coherent cycles, human
industry and human desires can become the cherry tree, writ
large.
Fanciful? Not at all. Many notable leaders of companies
all over the world have begun to move from the maintenance
of the old industrial system to a renewal of commerce. They
have decided to recognize the far-reaching influence of
their creative acts and celebrate their impact on the world
rather than disguise it. They have launched the Next Industrial
Revolution.
In fact, it's already well underway. As early as 1993,
the textile industry, led by the Swiss firm Rohner and the
textile design company DesignTex, had already developed
examples of a textile that is a biological nutrient-a product
so safe you could literally eat it. The carpet industry,
meanwhile, has adopted the product of service idea and is
focusing its business on the concept that carpet can be
a technical nutrient retrieved again and again from loyal
customers. Both are working to keep their respective materials
in coherent, truly cyclical flows.
Companies such as Milliken, Collins & Aikman, and Interface-major
commercial carpet companies-are all putting forward their
products as materials designed for reclamation. They are
telling their customers they want to replace used carpets
with new ones and retrieve their technical nutrients. In
effect, the companies continue to own the carpet material
but lease and maintain it while a customer uses the carpet
in their building. Eventually the carpet will wear out like
any other, and the manufacturer will reuse its materials
in new carpets.
It's important to note, however, that many carpets on the
market contain such questionable, potentially toxic materials
such as PVC and heavy metals, which cannot be truly "recycled,"
and are instead shredded and blended into what we call a
downcycled material of lower quality-a nylon reinforced
PVC mush, for example. Our strategy would imply a redesign
of the industry so that carpet materials would maintain
their high quality over many useful lives in the technical
metabolism.
The chemical company BASF, for example, has recently announced
a new fiber called Savant©, which is made from an infinitely
recyclable nylon 6 fiber. Savant© is inherently stain
resistant, inherently colorfast-no need for Scotchgard-and
designed to be taken back to its constituent resins to become
new material for new products. In fact, BASF can retrieve
old nylon 6 and transform it into an improved fiber, upcycling,
rather than downcycling an industrial material. The nylon
is rematerialized, not dematerialized-a true cradle-to-cradle
product. On the heels of BASF, manufacturers of everything
from running shoes to automobiles are designing and implementing
new ways to retrieve and circulate valuable materials.
DesignTex, on the other hand, has created an upholstery
fabric that flows in the biological metabolism. The company
set out to create a product that was beautiful, durable,
and ecologically intelligent. After an assiduous design
process with the Swiss textile mill Rohner they decided
on a wool-ramie blend that could be removed from the frame
of a chair after its useful life and tossed onto the ground
to naturally decompose. To ensure that the fabric would
safely biodegrade, the design team considered more than
8,000 chemicals used in the textile industry to finish and
dye natural fabrics. Most contained some form of mutagen,
carcinogen, heavy metal, endocrine disruptor, or bio-accumulative
substance, but 38 were found to be suitable for a material
destined to be food for the soil.
It was a pleasing outcome: a gorgeous, affordable fabric
that would one day be mulch for the local garden club. But
the design process also yielded another very positive, if
unintended, effect. When regulators tested the effluent
from the Swiss mill that produced the DesignTex fabric,
they thought their instruments were broken. They tested
the influent to check their equipment and found that it
was working fine-the water coming out of the factory was
as clean as the water going in. The manufacturing process
itself was filtering the water.
The Creation of Community Wealth
A textile mill that purifies water begins to suggest the
profound impact intelligent design can have on communities.
Just as a product designed as a biological nutrient nourishes
a community of microorganisms in the soil, a factory and
its manufacturing processes can be designed to address a
broad range of local concerns, from the desire for a convivial,
productive workplace to the health of the environment to
the creation of community wealth.
Design creates an environment for a community. A factory
designed to nourish a community of workers, for example,
can build stronger ties between colleagues by creating pleasant,
healthy places for them to work, meet and enjoy each other's
company. That's a laudable intention for workplace design.
But it cannot be the only intention. The work community
extends beyond the workplace and includes all species that
inhabit the locale-not just the human community, but all
species. When designers are mindful of all species, their
goals change dramatically. Suddenly, the availability of
sunlight, shade and water; the subtleties of climate and
terrain; the health of local birds, flowers and grasses
all become fundamental to design. Buildings become responsive
to place.
Herman
Miller, the furniture manufacturer, took that principle
to heart when it commissioned the design of a 295,000 square
foot factory and office near its headquarters in western
Michigan. The company's goals for the new plant were to
foster a spirit of collaboration between office and factory
workers, and create a workplace with a restorative impact
on the local environment. Working with a design team that
paid close attention to local conditions, Herman Miller
built a plant that serves the needs of all its factory workers
and administrative employees by celebrating an array of
natural and cultural delights.
The low-lying, curved building follows the natural contours
of the Michigan grassland. Stormwater spilling off the building
moves off the site through an extended series of wetlands
that purify the water while providing habitat for hundreds
of species of birds, plants and insects. Plantings of native
grasses and trees provided additional habitat for local
creatures and further enhance the beauty of the site. Inside
the building, offices face the manufacturing plant across
a sun-lit, urbane promenade where workers meet and lunch
and drink coffee among whimsical sculptures and thriving
plants. The entire building-the gyms, the bathrooms, the
factory floor-is so pleasantly bright and airy, it is now
known as "the greenhouse."
Does this enhance the well-being of workers? Create productivity
and wealth? Well, yes. When Herman Miller moved into the
building the company was producing $250 million worth of
furniture each year. Within a single year it increased production
by nearly $50 million with the same number of employees,
a gain of 24 percent. At the same time, both office and
manufacturing staff reported a significantly higher degree
of job satisfaction than they had at their previous workplace.
Herman Miller credits these positive changes to three things:
The customized design of the factory, which suited their
administrative and manufacturing needs; their innovative
management strategy designed to enhance relationships with
customers and employees; and the simple fact that the building
is such a bright, pleasant place to work.
While it's impossible to measure the influence of delight,
its easy to imagine the pleasure of working in a place where
you can always see the beauty of the surrounding landscape,
where copious fresh air and light actually blur the boundary
between indoors and out. Workers in such a place feel as
if they have spent the entire day outdoors. They see the
comings and goings of birds and the passing of the seasons.
They come to know the place where they live during their
days at work.
Such pleasures have an enormous impact on the spirit. After
Herman Miller moved into the new plant, sixteen young employees
left for jobs with higher wages. But they soon returned.
When the president of the company asked, "Why are you
back?" they said, "We want our jobs back because
we had never worked in another factory before. We couldn't
work in the dark."
When a company decides to create a workplace where employees
can develop an appreciation for local natural beauty, it
has given itself the opportunity to re-think everything
under the sun; it is making a decision that will ripple
through all its endeavors and through the life of the community
it inhabits. It is, in effect, making a profound declaration:
we are native to this place. For Herman Miller that meant
building a workplace that embodied a new way of thinking
about its role in the world. For other companies, for the
giants of the Industrial Age, it means staying put, re-inventing
themselves and restoring the sites where they have done
business for years.
One of those icons of industry, The
Ford Motor Company, has launched one of the most sweeping
acts of industrial restoration ever. Led by Henry Ford's
great grandson, William Clay Ford, Jr., the company has
embarked on a 20-year, $2 billion dollar restoration of
its gigantic Rouge
River plant in Dearborn, Michigan. Built between 1917
and 1925, the manufacturing complex remains one of the world's
largest. At its peak it employed 100,000 workers and churned
out millions of cars (boats and airplane engines, too).
It was the pride of Ford and the envy of industrialists
from Tokyo to Berlin.
Yet, it became a place where workers and management alike
worked in the dark: Many of the laborers toiled without
seeing the light of day, and management designed and operated
products and manufacturing systems with little regard for
the natural world. By the beginning of the 21st century,
the Rouge River plant was a brownfield, a sprawling wasteland
of dilapidated buildings, leaky pipes and old equipment.
The land was contaminated, bare of all but the most persistent
vegetation, and the river was badly polluted.
Ford Motor could have decided to fence-off the site and
build a new factory where land and labor are cheap. Instead,
it declared itself native to Dearborn, Michigan. Rather
than walk away from a worn-out industrial landscape and
a community that had supported it for nearly a century,
Ford chose to transform the Rouge River site into a healthy,
productive, life-supporting place. Indeed, Ford's leaders
are now asking a revolutionary question: When will we be
able to let our own children play in the soils and waters
of the Rouge?
That critical question leads to a wide spectrum of inquiry.
How do we design a manufacturing facility that is a prosperous,
supportive work environment? What specific innovations will
make the site a place that invites the return of native
species? How can the presence of the factory be beneficial
to the Rouge River? On the grounds of the site what is the
optimum depth of topsoil, number of worms per cubic foot
and insect and bird diversity? What are the optimum aquatic
populations of the river?
These may sound like surprising questions for a car company
to ask, but Ford is asking them-and answering them, too.
Construction began in November 2000 on a new automotive
assembly plant that will feature skylights for daylighting
the factory floor and a roof covered with growing plants.
The 450,000 square foot "living roof" will provide
habitat for birds, insects and microorganisms. In concert
with a series of wetlands and swales, the roof will also
control and filter stormwater run-off. With these natural,
built-in measures replacing the expensive technical controls
called for by new regulations, Ford stands to save between
$8-35 million on stormwater remediation alone.
Over the course of twenty years-over the course of generations,
really-Ford will restore their Rouge River site. In addition
to the living roof and the ponds and swales, grasses and
other plants will be used to rid the soil of contaminants.
Porous paving will filter water through retention beds to
further control stormwater run-off. Thousands of trees will
be planted to provide habitat for songbirds and, one hopes,
beautiful, shady places for the children of Dearborn, Michigan
to play.
These are the kinds of innovations that a manager devoted
to efficiency might reject out of hand-too extravagant,
too costly. Yet Henry Ford himself, who revolutionized industry
with ever increasing levels of efficiency, would probably
have found this an exciting prospect. A plan that invited
the return of native species while saving $35 million over
conventional engineering, with a delightful landscape thrown
in for free, is exactly the kind of cost-effectiveness he
would have looked for and insisted on.
As his great grandson William Clay Ford says, "this
is not environmental philanthropy; it is sound business
"
And he's right of course. Businesses that fail to bring
ecological and social concerns to commerce put shareholder
value in danger and are not contributing to the larger prosperity.
That's why, along with restoring the Rouge River site, Ford
is re-thinking everything from the materials used in the
production of cars to the design of its manufacturing systems.
Indeed, one could re-imagine some of the very tenets on
which the auto industry has done business for the past 100
years. Bill Ford himself says that the company is no longer
simply in the business of building and selling cars and
trucks. Instead, they might be in what we call "the
personal mobility business." To us this means the auto
industry is preparing to design cars as products of service
rather than sell them to individual owners. Customers would
effectively buy the use of a car for their personal mobility
needs for an hour, a day, or a year while the mobility company
would provide maintenance and other services. The company
would be responsible for their cars forever and would benefit
from their valuable materials. A car, in this context, becomes
a truly long-term material asset rather than a relatively
short-term material liability, and the need to mine the
world for raw materials becomes an archaic expression of
the industrial age.
That's what separates this from typical leasing: our consulting
firm is working with auto manufacturers who are beginning
to imagine building cars that can be completely disassembled
and reused. They want to develop everything from new polyesters
and paints that retain quality through reclamation to compostable
upholstery fabrics that will feed and restore the soil.
In the terms of the next industrial revolution the companies
are building a coherent system of closed-loop cycles flowing
with technical and biological nutrients.
This is revolutionary. And this lengthy discussion of Ford
Motor has simply been to illustrate that the transformation
of commerce is already well underway: When an industrial
giant with more than $80 billion in purchase orders sends
signals such as these to its competitors, its customers,
and perhaps most significantly, into the supply chain, one
can begin to imagine a wide range of rippling, far reaching
effects; one realizes that the world is changing.
A New Global Perspective
The fact that a global company can achieve positive local
effects is a very critical issue for us. In our minds, all
sustainability is local. On one level, that suggests a rich
engagement with one's place, an attitude toward design that
draws information and inspiration from the nearby living
world. But it can also mean that one develops an appreciation
for the distant effects of local actions, and the local
effects of distant actions.
When the leader of a large corporation, for example, examines
her company's role in the world, she might do so from the
narrow perspective of her office. Or she might see that
when her decisions initiate labor and create products well
beyond her region, they have an impact on a distant place
that can only be understood in its local context; what is
sustainable in LA may not be sustainable in Kerala-or even
in New York. An executive might do nothing with this knowledge,
or if she aspires to a sustaining vision, she might begin
to take many places into account in her decisions and, in
fact, even seek to enrich many places.
Former World Bank economist Herman Daly has approached
this idea from a global economic perspective. He makes a
distinction between globalization, a system of uniform rules
for the entire world, and internationalization, the increasing
importance of relations and trade between nations. While
internationalization preserves the identities of nations
as it embraces international commerce and communications,
in a globalizing economy, says Daly, "what was many
becomes one."
From a design perspective, a set of uniform rules for the
entire world suggests an erosion of cultural diversity.
Applying one-size-fits all design solutions to architecture,
for example, yields bland, uniform buildings isolated from
the particularities of place-from local culture and nature,
from energy and material flows. Such buildings, quite common
today in cities and office parks all over the world, reflect
little if any of a region's distinctness or style, its unique,
often extravagant expressions of humanity.
Consider French cheese. Charles DeGaulle is said to have
remarked that it was difficult to rule a country that produced
2000 different kinds of cheese. But should political efficiency
overrun diversity? What if the many cheeses of France were
to become one? Perhaps that's why the French farm activist
Jose Bove used his tractor to dismantle the McDonald's in
his village: for some reason, the thought of such a France
seems to have been just too much to bear.
But there's a flip side to the global economy-international
trade allows us to experience and celebrate the fullness
and diversity of life on Earth. Isn't it to be expected
that one might go to a place like New York to sample the
delicacies of Italy and China and Istanbul, all of which
are the result of intensely local events? Who would choose
to live without Parma's cheeses and hams?
Not the members of Slow Food, an Italian movement working
to preserve regional culture with the tools of the global
economy. Employing what the movement's founder Carlo Petrini
calls "virtuous globalization" -a savvy use of
global communications to identify international markets
for local food producers-Slow Food, writes author Alexander
Stille, "has taken up the defense of the purple asparagus
of Albegna, the black celery of Trevi, the Vesuvian apricot,
the long-tailed sheep of Laticauda
and a host of endangered
handmade cheeses and salamis known now only to a handful
of old farmers."
With the help of Slow Food's commercial ventures-a guide
to local wine and restaurants, a biennial food show-Italian
farmers, beekeepers, millers and vintners are staying in
business. A once struggling miller in the small town of
Bra, for example, now has all he can do to keep up with
orders for his flour and may soon be grinding grain for
the food retailer Williams-Sonoma. That's the beauty of
Slow Food: a global network that produces local wealth through
a celebration of the pleasures of fine food.
Corporations could also practice virtuous globalization.
They might begin by designing products, manufacturing systems
and workplaces that fit locale. Imagine a global company
creating value by applying a high international standard
of scientific inquiry-a common tool of corporate research-at
the local level, addressing basic needs like nutrition,
soil chemistry or clean water. A prototypical product of
consumption such as soap might allow them to do so.
Currently, soap is mass produced and shipped all over the
world in a one-size-fits-all solution to a common need.
Detergents are designed to lather up, remove dirt and kill
germs anywhere from Brooklyn to Bangkok. Rather than respond
to the different washing methods and water chemistries that
occur from place to place, manufacturers simply add more
chemical force to override local conditions.
That's hardly a benign choice. Though detergent makers
proudly announce that their products are "phosphate
free," they are not free of other harmful chemicals.
The industrial strength required to make a soap work against
any contingency makes even a small dose of detergent a potent
pollutant. In combination with other effluents in the waste
stream, detergents flow into the watershed, diluted but
far from safe. The health of rivers and streams, the lives
of fish and aquatic plants, the quality of drinking water
all take a beating.
There is another way to satisfy the need for clean water
and clean clothes. Rather than impose a universal product
on markets all over the world, a soap manufacturer might
apply sophisticated technology and expertise in chemistry
to the development of detergents that are not only safe
everywhere, but designed to address the specific needs of
ecosystems and deliver nutritious effects to a variety of
locales. Soaps for hard water, soaps for soft water, soaps
for washing clothes on riverside rocks-even nutritious soaps.
Detergents could also be locally produced, providing meaningful
local employment, and sold in biodegradable packaging designed
to be food for the soil, or in cookie-sized discs, eliminating
packaging altogether.
With these innovations, growing organically out of years
of research and development, the global company would have
developed a product suitable to locale, designed out dangerous
chemicals, built an effective delivery system, eliminated
waste, protected local waters from pollution and provided
food for local soils. Not bad for laundry detergent.
Many products of consumption are ripe for innovations that
will have positive impacts on communities all over the world.
A packaging manufacturer could design a biodegradable food
container for markets in China, where the disposal of Styrofoam
has become a national problem. In India, where waste is
often burned for fuel, plastic beverage bottles could be
produced with new polymers that would replace dangerous
toxins-such as the heavy metal antimony-that are commonly
released when incinerated. In fact, polymers produced without
antimony have already been designed and offer promising
new alternatives in the global marketplace.
In Praise of Dirty Clothes: Design and
the Renewal of Everyday Life
If we look at things as simple as soap and water in the
context of the daily life of a community, we can begin to
see some of the delightful, far-reaching effects of a cradle-to-cradle
world.
Imagine for a moment a community that wants to re-invent
itself. After an arduous but exciting round of public meetings,
the town's citizens have decided that they want to renew
the community's connection to the natural world while restoring
the best qualities of a healthy small town. Along with planning
to preserve a vibrant commercial district, mixed-use neighborhoods,
walkable streets and lots of parks and playgrounds, the
town has also identified the need for a variety of new social
venues. Many of these new venues, it is hoped, will bring
the generations together in places that provide a pleasing
experience of nature during the daily round of errands and
chores. In effect, the community wants to take down the
fence between commerce, local culture and the natural world.
One of the new venues is a community service center operated
as a viable business by retired people. The center is comprised
of a laundromat, a day care, a health clinic and a mobility
service. It is right on Main Street in the old railway station
which now incorporates new technology to create energy systems
powered by the sun, earth and wind. In fact, high-tech glass,
daylighting, photovoltaic panels, and a remote wind turbine
in a wind farm off-shore allow the house to operate without
a drop of fossil fuel. In a series of indoor botanical gardens
and outdoor ponds, wastewater and stormwater treatment is
also managed on-site.
Along with the energy and water treatment systems, the
old station has received another new addition: a two-story
meeting place lit by the sun, a kind of greenhouse commons
where elders and infants, parents and teenagers gather at
the hub of the neighborhood center. While mothers sit and
talk over coffee, enjoying the view of the big, old streetside
oaks, a pair of older men relax in the warm sun while waiting
for their appointments at the clinic. Others wait to catch
the elevator to an underground garage, where a small fleet
of community cars is parked.
The community cars are products of service built from reclaimed
materials and powered by fuel cells. They are operated by
elderly people, who drive around town dropping children
at the middle school athletic field, picking up groceries
or laundry, and ferrying people to and from their appointments
at the health clinic. The fleet allows most people to keep
their cars off the road while giving the community car drivers
opportunities to be involved in community life.
Back at the laundromat, business is brisk and profitable.
Most people in the community have chosen not to wash, dry
and iron their own clothes; they have decided its cheaper,
takes up less of their time and is perhaps more ecologically
intelligent and socially useful to have their laundry picked
up, washed and delivered each week. So the washing machines
are humming-humming with energy provided by the sun and
cleaning clothes with detergent that is not simply phosphate-free
but completely harmless to the natural world. After each
wash, wastewater spills into the indoor botanical gardens-creating
heat-and then flows outdoors through a constructed wetland,
in each case providing food for local flowers and plants.
By design, the community center has become a fecund habitat.
Like a tree it makes oxygen, sequesters carbon, fixes nitrogen,
purifies water, makes complex sugars and food, and creates
a restoring environment where the generations meet.
From the folding tables in the laundromat, the views are
gorgeous. An elderly gentleman gazes out over the hilly
town and after folding a pile of clothes, carries a stack
across the commons to the day care center, where he pauses
to watch his grandson play outdoors with the other neighborhood
children. He is aware, in the midst of a simple chore, that
he lives in a place blessed with an abundance of community
wealth and that he contributes daily to its growth.
This is just one example of the many ways in which eco-effective
design can transform the experience of everyday life. It
suggests how seemingly extravagant gestures-a beautiful
social venue for the eldest and the youngest, botanical
gardens for purifying water-can add up to a deep sense of
community wealth.
Set in the world most of us live in today, such a scenario
is shot through with things we might lament, from the impact
of fossil fuel burning automobiles to the pollution of our
rivers and streams to the clear sense that today's industrial
strategies will never deliver a high standard of living
to all the world's people. We might also ask, given the
promise of ecological design, new technologies, and the
sensible solutions they enable, why these strategies of
change have not been more quickly adopted. Obviously, transformations
of the scale we are proposing are not simple. The development
and wide adoption of new products, markets, and material
flow systems does not happen overnight, nor without the
commitment and energy of leaders from every sector of society.
We could imagine this as a long, arduous process. Or we
can see that changes of this magnitude, sparked by human
need and ingenuity, are a theme of history. As Sheik Yamani,
Saudi Arabia's OPEC minister pointed out during the first
so-called energy crisis, the Stone Age didn't end because
we ran out of stones. Human ingenuity responds to the historical
moment, and the age of ecologically intelligent design will
emerge long before we run out of oil. We believe that it
will fully emerge in a cultural shift driven by the engine
of commerce, as the values embodied in intelligent design
become embedded in the activities of our daily lives. We
need only observe the computer revolution to see how quickly
technology and economics can make the impossible commonplace.
And the shift toward ecological values is already underway.
When it becomes widely known, for example, that one of the
world's major corporations has chosen to purify stormwater
with wetlands and a living roof, and in the process saved
$35 million, both business leaders and the culture at large
will begin to see the economic viability of ecological design.
Once the regulatory infrastructure catches up with designs
such as these-designs so inherently productive and safe
they don't require regulation-the regulatory agencies will
start to use them as benchmarks, presenting them within
the culture as strategies that are hugely attractive from
the perspective of both the carrot and the stick.
Perhaps just as important, the changes we are proposing
allow all of our children a story of hope. Seeking a hopeful
future, the tragedies we see will spur many of us to imagine
solutions. At first, we may simply try to be free of something
we know is harmful, such as chlorine or lead. As we begin
to know more about the products we buy, we might make choices
about the kind of carpet or mobility system we use based
on as much scientific knowledge or personal experience as
we can muster. Designers engaged in this transformation
would begin analyzing the materials in products and replacing
harmful chemicals with more benign ingredients. Other products
would be designed only from materials fully defined as safe
biological or technical nutrients. And at the highest level,
designers would begin to develop systems to assemble products
in ways that allowed for their coherent, cradle-to-cradle
flow within the technical and biological metabolisms.
These changes are within our grasp. Indeed, they have already
begun. Innovations in architecture and community design
are being employed all over the world. The revolution in
product design is well underway. And as we begin to realize
the fruits of our efforts today's laments will become celebrations
of a world in which people and nature thrive together-abundantly,
delightfully, extravagantly
.hopefully.
ENDNOTES
A Report from the World Resources Institute: Emily
Matthews, The Weight of Nations: Material Outflows from
Industrial Economies (Washington, D.C.: World Resources
Institute, 2000).
Doing Things Right: Peter Drucker, The Effective
Executive (New York: Harper Business, 1986).
A Significantly Higher Degree of Job Satisfaction:
Judith Heerwagen, "Do Green Buildings Enhance the Well
Being of Workers? Yes." Environmental Design and Construction,
July-August 2000.
"What Was Many Becomes One": Herman Daly,
"Globalization Versus Internationalization: Some Implications"
(Talk delivered in Buenos Aires, November 1998)
Not the Members of Slow Food: Alexander Stille,
"Slow Food," The Nation, August 20, 2001.
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