12.28.2006

Holiday Amusements

Here are a few items to check out while you're nestled in front of a fireplace or huddled at your desk during this week of holiday chill…

Merry Christmas! See you in 2007…

12.22.2006

Mohawk Paper features Tricycle as sustainability study


For its new Strathmore Sustainability Portfolio, Mohawk Fine Papers has featured Tricycle as one of six pioneers in environmental and social stewardship. Tricycle, Monterey Bay Aquarium, Herman Miller, Aspen Skiing Company, Hewlett-Packard, and Seventh Generation are profiled with special attention to sustainability as a core philosophical value that permeates company culture and identity. Strathmore writing and script papers are made with renewable, emission-free wind-generated electricity, and come with recycled content, FSC-certified options. Click here to download a PDF of the interview with our chief brand officer, Michael Hendrix, or go to www.mohawkpaper.com > showcase > Strathmore Sustainability Portfolio to read the other great interviews!

12.15.2006

100,000 and growing

Since we began our Environmental Report Card program in August of 2004, eco-minded designers have requested 100,000 SIM from Tricycle® print samples and created 1.1 million room scenes online.

By working through leading commercial and hospitality carpet manufacturers, SIM uses digital modeling and tech tools to reduce the waste generated in product development, sampling and merchandising... and at the same time enables carpet manufacturers to deliver a greater number of options to designers with less economic and environmental cost.

If these 100,000 SIMs were stacked flat, they would reach a height of 83 feet (slightly taller than the second largest Lego tower ever built). If an equivalent number of carpet samples were stacked flat, they would reach the height of the Chrysler building, twice. Much more importantly, these SIMs translate to 25,000 barrels of oil conserved, 150,000 pounds of carpet waste not landfilled, a positive economic impact of $19.5 million.

Because our mission is more than to replace unnecessary samples, but to eliminate waste and improve profitability for manufacturers in ways that serve the design process, we've also created dynamic web sites for commerical and hospitality carpet manufacturers. Using Tricycle tools to enable interior designers to explore more carpet pattern and color choices, faster, these web sites have enabled interior designers to create more than 245,000 custom color SIMs online and view more than 1.1 million room scenes with their recolored carpets installed.

Read more of our story on Core77 design blog.

12.14.2006

Carpet on the Silver Screen

Feeling light-hearted today so … the title credits of Napoleon Dynamite make carpet the supporting actor. Identify each one by type or manufacturer and we'll send you a fancy XL Tricycle "Refuse" T-shirt modeled here by our Design Director, Ben Horner. Sweet.

12.05.2006

What will ‘green’ come to mean?


Crazy sexy cool... and green. Earlier this fall, a new nightclub in the Netherlands (Rotterdam’s “Sustainable Dance Club”) announced plans to power its lights and sound by converting the movement of dancers into electricity. The club will also feature rainwater toilets, biological beer, and walls that change color based on heat generated by its revelers.

It’s this last feature that I think is especially cool, because it’s... well... cool. Because the club’s owners know that even after the novelty of ecotech has worn off, this will still be a SDC-only feature that’s a lot of fun.

Green is everywhere. If you didn’t click the "movement of dancers into electricity" link above, click it now and notice who sponsored the YouTube video. Marketing firms are experiencing a convergence of ethics and economics, that underlayer of meaning that makes sense of spending all day staring at Photoshop. And since many of the marketers now rising to senior creative positions are of the generation that longs to "make peace with our upbringing" (as my big brother once phrased it), today's sustainability-minded design landscape feels like Shangri-La La La.

Not only "feels like," but "is." Sustainability-mindedness in marketers and the market alike is helping change not only how things are talked about and sold, but how they are made. Big manufacturing companies are changing their practices all of the way down to the ground, in the development of product lines that can be examined by the most rabid treehugger, all of the way back to the source. Big corporations are developing new design and manufacturing models that support these products. This is no small feat, and no small feature... because, in other words, they are investing money in new processes. Every dollar spent on these new processes is an argument not to change back to old ways, even after green stops being sexy.

It's like KFC deciding to change its own transfat oil-- all by themselves-- rather than being forced to do so by the New York Health Board.

It's like Shaw teaming with McDonough to rethink waste (see "Shaw me the light" post below). Or Mohawk spreading the use of SIM for initial fulfillment of custom sample requests across all commercial brands. Or Tandus leading the way with more sustainable sampling books that serve interior designers in ways never dreamed of in the old school.

Austin-based friends of ours Adam and Marty Butler recently interviewed me and Anj about the tipping point where green building will go mass market, and asked what we would name the next incarnation of movement... something that would capture its potential and yet also the urgency that needs to sustain as it becomes widely popular and then (inevitably) passé. As the Butler Bros pointed out, everybody still cares about saving the whales, but not so many people still give money.

But we couldn’t bring ourselves to come up with something clever; our goal is that as the trend stops being trendy (as they tend to do) changes will have been made so that sustainable design and merchandising are not 'best practices,' but are the only business practices. Less wasted time, energy, resources and money... better processes, products and marketing. Simply status quo.

Caleb Ludwick is Communications Director at Tricycle, Inc. Sometimes he eats at KFC.

12.04.2006

Shaw me the light


At Greenbuild this year, Shaw Contract introduced an astounding process based around McDonough's Cradle to Cradle philosophy. They have developed a process which uses a proprietary solution to reclaim carpet fiber and backing... so that the fiber becomes reusable fiber, backing becomes reusable backing, and the solution itself is resuable. This reuse of waste is not only meaningful, it's near-magical.

This is another example of how carpet is leading the way in green design... something I didn't expect five years ago was to find out that huge corporations not only care, but really are working for the greater good. Too often, we are conditioned to expect the opposite from big corps, but think about it: a really big corporation can make a really big difference.

So seeing great ideas like this come to production in January... not only as a one-off project, but as mandated process... will be a great way to start off the new year.

Camaro Clutch


Inhabitat Green Gift Guide has begun. This week was kicked off with bags made from vintage automotive fabric from the 70's and 80's. Kim White handbags are all labeled with the year and make of the fabric (ie. '78 Camaro). Also featured in the Green Gift Guide yesterday were UM Felt Bags, Freitag, and Trash Bags all made from reclaimed material.

12.01.2006

Sustainable Commercial Interiors

Penny Bonda, founding chair of LEED CI and the ASID Sustainable Design Council, has co-authored the first "step-by-step guide" for sustainable interiors. The book showcases successful projects and is a great resource for green materials (including SIM from Tricycle on page 172 — Thanks, Penny!) . You can purchase it from Amazon or Wiley.

Our blog is mostly about sustainable design in the interiors industry,
especially carpet. Sometimes it's just about us. Updated when we've got something good to say.