featured pic

The coolest Eco Footprints I’ve seen

This entry was written by nomad-one and posted on October 19, 2007 at 10:42 am and filed under Creative Thinking, Design, Sustainability. Bookmark the permalink. Follow any comments here with the RSS feed for this post. Post a comment or leave a trackback: Trackback URL.

When we talk about carbon footprints we think about those forms we fill in online which ask us all kinds of probing questions about our homes, our cars and our activities which impact the planet. William McDonough’s book cradle to cradle discusses the concept of re-thinking how we design things extensively and gives us a new way of looking into the future of product design.

This is an eco-footprint of another kind which makes fantastic use of the concept of recyclability and re-usability in an ultr-cool way. Like McDonough states in his book over & over eco-friendly design does not have to be boring or less brilliant in functionality or visual appeal to fullfill it’s ecological responsibilities. It’s about the design approach.

Designer: Ben Chappell, has taken up the challenge with a not completely original but very much unique sneaker design which embraces the cradle to cradle thinking fully. The “Think” sneaker, a fully modular, meaning it’s made of seperate parts which can be removed & replaced, recyclable shoe.

The Think sneaker - Designed by Ben Chappell, eco-footprint of the future


Think of how long your trainers, even your favourite ones last, and what happens to them once they’ve reached that inevitably unwearable stage. They get stuffed into deep holes within the earth in the hope that they will just, “go away”.

One of the problems with recyclability of products is the dissassembly process which if problematic makes the reclaiming of the “nutrients” used to produce the product expensive and impractical. The beauty of modular designs is they are easy to disassemble and if designed with materials which can be perpetually reclaimed they enter a complete cradle to cradle cycle which means we never lose the “nutrients” used to produce the product. It is a shame that more products, after costing millions of dollars to conceptualize, design & manufacture have not been produced using this simple yet completely sustainable approach.

The Think sneaker - Designed by Ben Chappell, fully modular recyclable trainer

Might give you some inspiration next time you decide to sit down at the drawing board. Article found at – Yanko Design

No TweetBacks yet. (Be the first to Tweet this post)

Similar Posts

An e-Napkin for those coffee shop Brainstorms – I’d buy one of these

Yanko Design is one of my Favourite sources of juicy product design from the drawing boards of some of the most forward thinking product designers out there. Design Sojourn drew my attention to another insanely cool product idea they’re showcasing. Recently I blogged about Sustainable sneakers, e-Write Boards and the MacBook Air but this next


2 eco-friendly bikes from different sides of the tech divide

The one is a slick, high tech hydrogen cell powered beauty which I would love to get my hands on and the other, a humble, down-to-earth bamboo construction which I wouldn’t mind trying out either. Both aim to approach 21st Century transportation in an innovative yet clean way, but don’t expect these to meet each other


Simple resources to combat Global Warming

Working on the SA Climate Crisis logo design for Andre Bothma, lead me to finding some interesting resources online. There’s a ton of stuff out there to help us focus on cutting down our carbon footprints and live a life which is less taxing on the environment. One site in particular, live-the-solution.com, has a collection

2 Comments

  1. aarthi,maviya
    Posted March 13, 2008 at 11:53 am | Permalink

    what material is used to make the recyclable sole? what material are the mechanical locks made of

  2. Posted January 4, 2010 at 11:34 pm | Permalink

    I think the shoe is beautiful. The contrasting materials work seamlessly together. Flowers are a bit much for the heel detail, but I like that thought of graphic cut into the material. The toe of the shoe looks like it could use a bit more support. People are always bumping their toes into something so it would be nice to have a cushion. I look forward to seeing these come out and purchasing a pair!

Post a Comment

Your email is never published nor shared. Required fields are marked *

*
*
retaggr