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Adapted from
an article published in Perspective, Spring 2003.
Inside a new, state-of-the-art building designed to meet
the highest standards of energy efficiency-a building many
would call environmentally intelligent or "green"-you
might expect to be able to breathe clean air.
You'd be mistaken.
Clean, fresh indoor air is not a guaranteed by-product
of green design. Indeed, a recent study in Germany found
that air quality inside several highly rated energy-efficient
buildings in downtown Hamburg was nearly four times worse
than on the dirty, car-clogged street. For all the care
taken to save energy by keeping out the elements with better
insulation and leak-proof windows, no one considered the
long-term effects of sealing in the chemically laden carpets,
upholsteries, paints and adhesives used to finish the interiors.
The effects are hard to ignore. People spend 90 percent
of their time indoors, and where buildings with reduced
air-exchange rates are common, so are health problems. In
Germany, where tax credits support the construction of energy
efficient buildings, 47 percent of all 7-year old children
are suffering from allergies, largely due to the poor quality
of indoor air.
Your own office, if it's in a typical commercial building,
could be just as bad. That "new carpet smell"
in the conference room? If your nose tells you there's more
to the lingering odor than the fragrance of the new, chances
are you're right. The installer, after all, wore a mask
while gluing the carpet to the floor. He was thinking about
the warnings on his bucket of adhesive: "Do Not Use
In An Unventilated Area" and, in fine print, "This
product contains a substance known to the State of California
to cause reproductive effects." Does your office window
open?
If only it was just the carpet, just an unpleasant smell.
But our research tells us that many of the materials interior
designers are using today-even designers following LEED
standards-contain problematic chemicals that contribute
to poor air quality and the generally sad state of the indoor
environment. In fact, only a precious few of the materials
used in commercial building interiors are specifically designed
with human health in mind. If the upholstery fabric isn't
abrading an allergen, the paint and the office furniture
are off-gassing formaldehyde. If the carpet is said to be
recyclable, it might be backed with PVC, a polymer built
with a vinyl chloride monomer, a known carcinogen.
What's an interior designer to do?
The Evolution of Green Design
First of all, don't despair. A look at the brief history
and the current landscape of green design can offer perspective,
hope and an empowering strategy for the future-not just
for clearing the air in commercial buildings but for rethinking
the very foundations of design.
Design for the environment is a very new field. Architects,
planners and government officials began to embrace energy
efficiency in the wake of the OPEC oil embargo in the 1970s.
Energy efficiency seemed like a positive goal, and within
the context of the time, it was. No one imagined that sealing
up drafty old buildings and designing new, airtight, energy
efficient structures would lead to a dramatic increase in
indoor air problems. But soon, anecdotal reports from the
sickened occupants of commercial buildings began to pile
up. Over a decade's time they created a compelling case
for re-examining everything about how we design buildings,
inside and out.
Even so, when we began to address indoor air quality in
the early 1980s, there was virtually no in-depth research
on the problem. In the United States, we found only one
company devoted primarily to the scientific investigation
of indoor air. As it turned out, the consultancy's work
was apparently underwritten by a tobacco company and was
designed in part to prove that second-hand smoke in the
workplace presented no danger to public health. We felt
pretty much all alone.
But step-by-step, material-by-material, we tried to examine
everything in the designer's palette that might be problematic.
We explored volatile organic compounds, carcinogenic materials
and anything else in the paints, wall coverings, carpetings,
floorings and fixtures that might cause indoor air problems
or multiple chemical sensitivity. With little or no research
available, we turned to the manufacturers, who often told
us the information was proprietary and gave us nothing beyond
the vague safeguards in the material safety data sheets
mandated by law. We did the best we could at the time. We
used water-based paints. We tacked down carpet instead of
gluing it. We provided thirty cubic feet per minute of fresh
air per person instead of five. We had granite checked for
radon. We used wood that was sustainably harvested. We tried
to be less bad.
Over the next decade, we saw that our sometimes lonely
efforts helped change the design playing field. We saw our
clients grow more receptive to environmentally-intelligent
design. We saw designers adopt a variety of strategies aimed
at making architecture and industry less destructive. But
we also saw that simply trying to be less bad-minimizing
the impact of the things we make, using less energy and
fewer materials, reducing waste, limiting the amount of
toxic chemicals released into the air, water and soil-fell
far short of a truly hopeful, truly transforming strategy
of change.
From Green Design to Good Design: The
Science of Product Quality
Today, being "less bad" continues to be the strategy
of choice for many environmentalists and green designers.
As we have seen with energy efficient buildings, such an
approach, as much as it is based on good intentions, can
create a whole range of deleterious effects. And because
"less bad" strategies tend to define the world
by what we cannot do, they can stifle inspiration and creativity.
This is not to gainsay efficiency. The efficient use of
energy and materials can be a valuable part of a broad strategy
of change and it can help slow down and turn around the
current industrial system. But as long as the system itself
is flawed, attempting only to mitigate its negative effects
is a fatally limited goal-and a dispiriting one as well.
How about an entirely different model? Why not shift the
focus of green design from managing the environmental impact
of a destructive system to creating buildings and materials
that generate wholly positive effects for people and nature.
This changes the entire context in which design decisions
are made. Rather than asking, "How do I meet today's
environmental standards?" designers would begin to
ask, "How do my design decisions make sense in the
overarching context of the natural world?" Ironically,
this focus on the earth takes the green out of green design,
for following the laws of nature is simply the path to good,
high-quality design.
Here's why. In the natural world, the processes of each
organism in a living system contribute to the health of
the whole. One organism's waste is food for another and
nutrients and energy flow perpetually in closed-loop cycles
of growth, decay and rebirth. Understanding these regenerative
qualities empowers us to recognize that all the materials
we use as designers-even highly technical, synthetic materials-can
also be seen as nutrients. Just as nitrogen, water, and
simple sugars nourish new growth as they circulate in nature,
so too can our materials regenerate natural and human systems.
Textiles for draperies, wall coverings and upholstery fabrics
can be designed as biological nutrients, which naturally
biodegrade and restore the soil after use, while technical
nutrients, such as nylon carpet fiber, can provide high-quality
resources for generation after generation of safe, synthetic
products.
These are far more than whimsical notions. The laws of
nature are the bedrock of good design. And they inform a
cohesive set of science-based design practices, which we
call Cradle to Cradle Design TM, that is already redefining
product quality for architects and interior designers worldwide.
Material chemistry is the key indicator of quality in this
new context. We've seen the results of leaving the ingredients
of architectural materials largely undefined. But by following
a rigorous scientific protocol, thorough assessments of
product chemistry root out toxic or problematic ingredients
and discover safe, healthful alternatives. The result: a
new palette of materials that nourishes rather than depletes
the world.
We believe that this new conception of design can be an
empowering force. Designers and their clients need not do
the science-that's what we do through our consultancies
MBDC and EPEA.
Yet by shifting fully into an understanding of design as
an expression of intelligence with nature, and by tapping
into good scientific support, designers can begin to lay
a principled foundation for creating beautiful, healthful,
delightful places for people to inhabit. Quality in this
context is not measured by a cost-benefit analysis, a benchmark
derived from regulations or a simple bottom line standard;
quality becomes a measure of how well a design supports,
enhances and celebrates the health and well being of people
and nature. Whether or not you call it green, this is good
design.
Principles, Power and the Marketplace
The story of Shaw Industries' quest for the perfect commercial
carpet tile provides a good example of how principled, science-based
design actually works and how it can empower effective innovation.
Several years ago, Steve Bradfield, Shaw's Environmental
Development VP, turned his considerable energy toward developing
a modular floor covering that personified the best of sustainable
design. Bradfield had a strong sense of what he wanted his
product to be-an infinitely recyclable, completely healthful
carpet tile-but he didn't know quite how to get there.
Carpet is made from two primary elements, a face fiber
and a backing. Nylon 6, a face fiber, has a demonstrated
ability to be easily depolymerized into its raw material,
caprolactam, which can be used again and again to make high
quality carpet fiber. The alternative, nylon 6,6 does not.
And while the industry typically tries to get high marks
for recycling carpet, no one had a backing optimized for
environmental and human health. As far as backing is concerned,
PVC has dominated the industry for 30 years.
Bradfield saw the industry landscape this way: "At
Shaw, we knew the carpet industry had a long way to go before
it could call itself a sustainable. We also had an instinctive
understanding of the difference between being 'good' and
being 'less bad'. But we lacked the framework that could
bring our path and our destination into clear focus."
Shaw's vision crystallized when Bradfield began to apply
cradle-to-cradle principles to the company's product development
process. Now, working with MBDC, Shaw is doing a "deep
dive" into the material chemistry of carpet fiber and
backing. Dyes, pigments, finishes, auxiliaries-everything
that goes into carpet-is being scientifically assessed.
This may sound like a simple process, but there are more
than 50 chemicals in carpet backing alone and we have to
look at every one.
Out of this rigorous process has come the promise of a
fully optimized carpet tile, a true technical nutrient.
The fiber is branded Nylon 6 from Shaw Fiber, a division
of Shaw Industries, or from Honeywell/BASF. Both fibers
can be separated from the backing after use and will be
returned to Honeywell/BASF for chemical recycling into new
carpet yarn. The backing is a safe, polyolefin-based system,
which Shaw guarantees it will take back and recycle into
new backing. In effect, the new carpet tile eliminates the
very concept of waste. Given the hundreds of millions of
pounds of carpet fiber and backing that each year do not
get recycled (they are sent to landfills or incinerated)
or get recycled into products of lesser value, the significance
of this technical nutrient on the carpet market is huge.
What's a Designer to Do, Redux
There's a lot designers can learn from Steve Bradfield and
Shaw Industries. Bradfield is showing how a single individual,
powered by principles, can have influence beyond measure
in his field. Shaw is showing how an inspired firm can forge
a singular place for itself in the market and move design
for the environment into the mainstream.
Interior design firms large and small can do the same.
It's industry's job to provide the safe, healthful materials
that allow designers to engage in ecologically intelligent
design. But designers can energize industry, and empower
themselves, in a variety ways. Here are a few:
- Specify, specify, specify. Designers can support the
market for intelligent materials by specifying them. Specify
DesignTex, Climatex Lifecycle and Victor Innovatex fabrics.
Specify Shaw carpets. Specify Herman Miller furniture.
Increasingly, the products are out there. Find them and
use them.
- When you can't find them, tell suppliers what you need.
Demand the best. Just as industries can pool materials,
designers can pool purchasing power. Drive the market.
- Get training. As we've said, designers don't need to
be scientists. But understanding the new context of design
decision-making is the key to empowerment. Join MBDC at
ED7 in Washington, D.C. on April 30 for an introduction
to Cradle-to-Cradle Design.
- Get support. Interior designers are supposed to be figuring
out what shade of blue to use in the conference room,
not what is blue made of. That's our job. Getting access
to scientific expertise and the latest tools of design
chemistry can give you the freedom to practice your craft
with confidence in the products you choose.
We have only begun to suggest how designers can tap into
material chemistry and the laws of nature to build a new
context for design. There is, of course, much work to do.
What is clear to us, though, is that these ideas-materials
as nutrients, chemistry applied to creating life-support
systems, design as a celebration of our positive role in
the natural world-represent a powerful strategy of hope.
When applied throughout the design process they entwine
rigorous science with positive aspirations, yielding designs
that take us beyond mere sustainability toward a truly sustaining
partnership between humanity and the natural world. We can't
imagine a more empowering design strategy.
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