| August 26, 2006 -
Day 4 - Week 21 - Introduction to The Hannover
Principles Note from Ron the Webmaster:
Peter is on a health hiatus for several weeks and
Dr. Wayne Glass is traveling this weekend, so I am
posting items of interest that follow with Peter's
exploration of the issues of health and the
environment. Architect William McDonough is
the author of The Hannover Principles. I am
working to promote a technology that meshes closely
with these principles. Visit
www.roncastle.com/ecocover/ for more
information.
Introduction by Teresa Heniz
I first became aware of William McDonough’s work
in 1984, when he redesigned the national
headquarters of the Environmental Defense Fund. The
redesign of the EDF office was a watershed event.
Not only was it the first “green” office in New York
City, it also laid the foundation for a new design
philosophy: a commercially productive, socially
beneficial and ecologically intelligent approach to
the making of things that Bill and his colleague
Michael Braungart would come to call
eco-effectiveness.
When I hired Bill to design the Heinz family
offices and Heinz Foundation offices in Pittsburgh
in 1991, he and Michael had just been commissioned
by the City of Hannover to develop a set of design
principles for the 2000 World’s Fair. Having chosen
“Humanity, Nature and Technology” as the theme of
the fair, the city wanted to showcase hopeful
visions for a sustainable future. The Hannover
Principles were to put forth an inspiring standard,
presenting to the world the first coherent framework
for rethinking design through the lens of
sustainability.
Getting to know Bill and Michael as colleagues
and friends over the last ten years has given me the
opportunity to see firsthand the impact of the
Hannover Principles. From their elegant insistence
on “the rights of humanity and nature to co-exist”
to their call to “eliminate the concept of waste,”
the Principles echo the deep human instinct—and
wisdom—to care for the world. Indeed, they have
become a cultural touchstone, providing information
and grounding not just for the design community but
also for all those devoted to bringing forth a world
of social equity, environmental health and peaceful
prosperity.
At their core is a simple truth: Human health,
the strength of our economy and the well-being of
our environment are all connected. I learned this
lesson early in life, as a child growing up in
Mozambique. In the East Africa of my youth, the
interplay of nature, health and survival was a
given, something that people who lived close to the
natural world intuitively understood.
For me, that understanding was reinforced by
having a father who was a doctor. Observing him and
the questions he asked of his patients taught me how
illness can be related to environment and the
practices of daily life.
We lived in a place where nature’s laws of cause
and effect were fairly clear. If you went swimming
at sunrise or sunset, feeding time for sharks and
river crocodiles (and indeed, for all the animals in
the savannah), you might get a nasty nibble. We
learned to respect the rules of the natural world
because they had such obvious implications for
people’s personal well-being. Nature taught us the
virtues of prevention—of solving problems by not
creating them in the first place.
Industrialized societies tend to be less in touch
with nature’s rules. In the nineteenth century, the
paradigm was that we should tame nature; in the
twentieth, it became a sense that we are almost
immune to its rules. Today, we tend to think of the
natural world as somehow separate, an entity “out
there” that can be controlled, held at bay or even
ignored. Even our efforts to
protect the environment have been informed by this
“us versus it” mentality, a sense that we are in
competition with the natural world and that the best
we can hope for is to mitigate the damage we cause.
The simple genius behind the nine Hannover
Principles was that they reframed the issue. Rather
than take a certain amount of ecological harm as a
given, with people on various sides of the
environmental debate reduced to arguing over the
permissible amount, Bill and Michael invited us to
consider an alternative. Why not just design
products and institutions that support
the environment, they asked?
The Hannover Principles were the first expression
of that transforming idea. In nine lean declarations
they set forth a value system and a design framework
that Bill and Michael continue to use as the
foundation of their evolving design paradigm. As
they write in Cradle to Cradle: Remaking the Way We
Make Things, nature’s cycles are not just lean and
efficient; they are abundant, effective and
regenerative. By going beyond mere efficiency to
celebrate the abundance of nature, the practice of
eco-effective, cradle-to-cradle design allows us to
create materials, dwellings, workplaces, and
commercial enterprises that generate not fewer
negative impacts but more productivity, more
pleasure and more restorative effects.
The key insight of eco-effective or
cradle-to-cradle thinking is recognizing the
materials of our daily lives— even highly technical,
synthetic industrial materials—as nutrients that can
be designed to circulate in human systems very much
like nitrogen, water, and simple sugars
circulate in nature’s nutrient cycles. Rather than
using materials once and sending them to the
landfill—our current cradle-to-grave
system—cradle-to-cradle materials are designed to be
returned safely to the soil or to flow back to
industry to be used again and again.
Far more than a theoretical notion, this central
principle of sustainability can be readily seen in
the work of Bill’s architectural firm, William
McDonough + Partners, and Bill and Michael’s
industrial design consultancy, McDonough Braungart
Design Chemistry.
Working with clients ranging from small companies
like the Swiss textile mill Rohner to global
megacorporations like the Ford Motor Company, both
firms are showing that designers attuned to this
cradle-tocradle philosophy can replicate nature’s
closed-loop systems in the worlds of commerce and
community. The result: safe, beneficial materials
that either naturally biodegrade or provide
high-quality resources for the next generation of
products; buildings designed to
produce more energy than they consume; cities and
towns tapped into local energy flows; places in
every human realm that renew a sense of
participation in the landscape.
My own hopes for the urban landscapes of
Pittsburgh brought The Hannover Principles home,
literally. At the Earth Summit in Rio in 1992, where
the Principles were introduced to the international
community, I invited Bill and Michael to come to
Pittsburgh to share their ideas. Both were invited
to lecture at Carnegie Mellon University and, as I
had hoped, the Hannover Principles became a part of
the dialogue going on in Pittsburgh at the time
about the region’s environmental future.
Today, Pittsburgh is gaining national recognition
as a leader in green building and sustainable
design. In many ways, that began with the building
of the Heinz family offices, which represented the
first, commercialscale use of sustainably harvested
tropical wood. Our offices served as a laboratory
and model for others to learn from, and not just
locally. The Discovery Channel covered it;
architectural magazines wrote about it; and
builders, designers and architects from across the
country came to study its features. Since then, the
ideas articulated in the Hannover Principles have
never been far from the minds of the staff at The
Heinz Endowments as they have advanced our green
building agenda in Pittsburgh over the past decade.
Those ideas are making communities from
Pittsburgh to Chicago and from Shanghai to Barcelona
better places to live. They are helping people
create buildings and landscapes where natural
processes unfold with renewed vitality. They are
transforming product design and shaping the work of
such influential companies and institutions as Ford,
Nike, BASF, the University of California, the Woods
Hole Research Center and Oberlin College. As more
and more companies
and institutions adopt these sustaining principles,
there is also the chance that the global economy as
a whole will begin to find robust health and
long-term strength through the practice of
intelligent design.
Ultimately, that is the enduring value of The
Hannover Principles and the reason why this tenth
anniversary edition is as fresh and necessary as
ever. The Principles urge us to start seeing
ourselves as part of the natural world and to
replicate the joyful, productive and intelligent
practice of life itself.
Back to Week
21 |