Friday, April 6, 2012

From wood to manure...it’s a stinky matter


With spring in the air and warmer weather upon us I see many people in their yards.  I see them pruning, mowing, and planting, but what about the transportation and packaging of all their products? I’d like to take you through the buying process at your local store, and suggest a few implications for design use from that process. 

You buy a potted tree, but what was the tree transported on?  Cardboard is no match for the heavy weight items, so distributors use wooden palettes.  However, I wondered what happens to the palettes when they are done?  So I asked.  I was told they keep a few of the palettes around for unloading trucks, moving items, etc.  Others are sent back to the company they originated from, IF they are in top shape.  However, if they are damaged, broken or unusable they are trashed.  Which means the general public could not only get an item for free, but within Cradle to Cradle they could use this waste as a food.

If waste equals resources, then the pallets easily fall into this category.  Interior implications for the palettes can fall under both the recycle and reuse category, as well as, be a member of up-cycling.  The original palettes, although useful, did not have a very “valuable” life.  However, what I would like to propose is converting the discarded palettes into furniture.  This could be a headboard, a seating frame, a shelf on the wall, etc.  According to Cradle to Cradle, this concept falls into a technical nutrient cycle, which means to be within a “closed-loop” industrial cycle.  The palettes are used, given new life as a furniture piece, and then can be turned back into parts for new assembly of more palettes.

  Palette Coffee Table

Now let’s discuss the plant you purchased.  It comes in a nice, flexible green dyed pot.  However, although this pot contains your harmless plant, it also contains harmful toxins.  You also purchase fertilizer, or manure, that comes in a plastic bag.  So why not convert these two product into one?  A pot made from manure, which not only can be used to transport the plant from the store to home, but also can be safely planted into the ground and feed the earth.  According to the C2CAD reading, designers need to phase out other products and only select products that are defined as either biological or technical nutrients. To be a biological nutrient a product must be able to be biodegradable, or feed the environment. The product I am suggesting falls under that category. 

Manure Based Pot

Although I thought I was being innovative by developing this product, I did a little Google searching and found that it already exist in some forms.  One product I found is called “CowPots”, which were developed by dairy farmers.  Their process came from a belief that they could use their cow’s manure to manage their nutrient stream.  This reminds me of Anita Ahuja, a designer discussed in the Textile Futures article.  Ahuja is taking trash and transforming it into trendy fashion, the same is being done with CowPots.  One person’s trash is TRULY another person’s treasure.

3 comments:

  1. Kimberly,

    I really enjoyed reading your blog this week and I think that the palette furniture idea is a great one! I would like to use that piece in my house! I also thought that your idea to create a plant already sold in a pot that can be safely planted into the ground was a strong idea. I had no clue that it had already been invented and was on the market! You did a good job utilizing the reading materials this week for the plant product, but not so much for the palette furniture product. I looked back through the Cradle to Cradle reading, and I think it would benefit you to work in the concept of "products of service" from the technical metabolism section into your explanation. Instead of assuming that all products are to be disposed of, it would be reconceived as services that people want to enjoy. In your case, the palette furniture is an item that consumers would enjoy. How do you plan to market this and make it appealing to buyers? Good job this week!

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  2. Mallory,

    Thank you for your feedback. My main focus was the pots, so Im glad it came across clearly. Yes, the palettes are one's that are not disposed of unless deemed "unusable", but even with consumers usage are still usable. I guess Im unclear on which you are asking me how I'd like to market...whether its the palettes or the pots? However, I feel as though both could be marketed along with all the other "spring" merchandise with ad campaigns promoting each. Home and Garden shows would also be a prime location. Thank you!

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  3. Kimberly,

    I thought your post this week was very well written and creative. I had no idea buying plants put so much waste back into the environment. Buying plants is something you would normally think would be good for the environment. I think making furniture is a great way to make better use of the old damaged wood. I also think the pot made of dirt or manure is a good idea. I had no idea this had already been done before. How do you plan on the plant stores and furniture manufacturers working together?

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