January 13, 2002 - Earthhome: The Next Industrial Revolution

Peace Corps Online: Peace Corps News: Peace Corps Library: Reference: Special Interests: Development: January 13, 2002 - Earthhome: The Next Industrial Revolution

By Admin1 (admin) on Sunday, January 13, 2002 - 9:35 pm: Edit Post

The Next Industrial Revolution





Read about and comment on this extraordinary film on the Next Industrial Revolution and the building of a sustainable economy at:

The Next Industrial Revolution*

* This link was active on the date it was posted. PCOL is not responsible for broken links which may have changed.



The Next Industrial Revolution

THE NEXT INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION is a new 55 minute film, produced by Earthome Productions to communicate the work and vision of architect William McDonough and chemist Dr. Michael Braungart, two leaders in a growing movement to transform the relationship between commerce and nature.

McDonough and Braungart work with corporations with over half a trillion dollars in annual sales, companies like Ford and Nike, to redesign buildings, processes, and products to work according to nature's rules.

"When we follow nature's rules, growth is good," says Bill McDonough. "The question before us is not growth versus no growth, It is: what would good growth look like? And this is a question of intent, of design. What if we grow health instead of sickness, home ownership instead of indigence, education instead of ignorance?"

Using the stories of five projects that represent a revolutionary change in the direction of the human economy, THE NEXT INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION inspires people to:

reconsider their current efforts for the environment, reinvent their businesses and institutions to work with nature, redefine themselves as consumers, producers, and citizens to promote a new sustainable relationship with the Earth.

THE NEXT INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION can be purchased in DVD or VHS video formats.

The film is a project of Earthome, a 501(c)(3) Maryland non-profit organization working to promote sustainability and environmental education.

THE NEXT INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION is one of the most informative, brilliant and hopeful films about the transformation of industrial and economic activities that will lead to a healthy, just, socially stable and environmentally sustaining society for all current and future generations. By showcasing the visionary philosophy and unprecedented work of Bill McDonough with outstanding colleagues and a variety of society's most influential institutions, the film is a critical educational vehicle for changing our collective mindset to achieve these goals. It's a "must see"!

Anthony Cortese, Sc.D. President, Second Nature, Inc.

Invitation to a Revolution The Next Industrial Revolution

We live in a time of increasing environmental concerns. Doomsday scenarios abound based on an increasing human population competing for ever scarcer natural resources. Bill McDonough and Michael Braungart offer a different vision of the future -- one where humanity works with nature, where technical enterprises are continually reinvented as safe and ever renewing natural processes.

Can't happen? It's already happening. It's part of what architect Bill McDonough and his partner chemist Michael Braungart call The Next Industrial Revolution.

Serving nature without sacrificing profitability: a sampling of McDonough-Braungart projects depicted in "THE NEXT INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION."

NIKE, Inc.: Changing Corporate DNA

To make products safe for natural systems, McDonough and Braungart have developed a protocol that asks: "are these materials safe for children, not just human children but the offspring of all species?" Using the McDonough-Braungart Protocol, Nike is creating a "green" materials palette - testing the more than 5,000 chemicals used to manufacture their products and systematically eliminating harmful ingredients.


HERMAN MILLER FURNITURE: Perfect Attendance

Sunlight, fresh air, and design that enhances community and connections, Herman Miller Furniture's factory in Holland, Michigan won the first "Good Design is Good Business" award from Business Week and Architectural Record. Energy savings and productivity gains paid back the building's $52 per square foot cost within the first year of operation. And the company gained a workspace so enjoyable that more than half the workers maintain 100% attendance records.

"If you respect the environment," said one Herman Miller employee, "it turns out you respect people. And if you really respect people, you respect the environment."

ADAM LEWIS ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES CENTER, OBERLIN COLLEGE: A building like a tree.

A building that not only cleans its own wastewater and produces more energy than it consumes, the Lewis Center has also become a magnet for campus activities -- attracting students with its combination of visionary design and comfortable connection to nature.


DESIGNTEX, INC./Rohner Textile, AG: Good enough to eat

This leading U.S. commercial fabric firm teamed up with a textile mill in Switzerland and McDonough-Braungart to design and produce an upholstery fabric so toxin free that the local garden club uses factory trimmings as mulch. When Swiss inspectors tested the mill's effluent, they thought their instruments were broken-the water leaving the factory was as clean as when it entered.

FORD MOTOR COMPANY: Rethinking mobility

Ford has commissioned McDonough to direct the transformation of its giant River Rouge plant into a sustainable manufacturing facility in a restored river ecosystem, a two billion-dollar project with a 20-year timeline. Ford's Volvo division is developing sustainable cars that demonstrate a bold rethinking of personal mobility in harmony with the planet.

William McDonough and Michael Braungart have not just envisioned a more hopeful, sustainable future. They are working with individuals and corporations to design and build it right now. THE NEXT INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION offers audiences a realistic, positive message of hope and action -- one that gives people a place to begin building a fundamentally different human economy -- one that works with nature, not against it.




Some postings on Peace Corps Online are provided to the individual members of this group without permission of the copyright owner for the non-profit purposes of criticism, comment, education, scholarship, and research under the "Fair Use" provisions of U.S. Government copyright laws and they may not be distributed further without permission of the copyright owner. Peace Corps Online does not vouch for the accuracy of the content of the postings, which is the sole responsibility of the copyright holder.

.


Add a Message


This is a public posting area. Enter your username and password if you have an account. Otherwise, enter your full name as your username and leave the password blank. Your e-mail address is optional.
Username:  
Password:
E-mail: