Introducing Instep Greenscore Product Lifecycle Assessment Programme

Greenscore is a Product Carbon Footprint Programme based around ISO14067.(Carbon footprint of products – Requirements and guidelines for quantification and communication). This is a new standard currently in draft form and due for publication in 2014.

Greenscore offers a step by step scientific approach that allows product producers to review findings on a regular basis, and decide at what point the programme delivers what they, or their clients require.

In other words, we make Lifecycle Analysis (LCA) less daunting, customisable and cost effective. Get in touch to find out more.

Why greenscore?

With overwhelming evidence of increased demand from purchasers for product environmental transparency, producers need to have evidence of credible data on Product Life Cycle Inventories and the environmental impact generated from a product during its useful life.

Until now these requests have been daunting for most producers.

Instep has developed a cost effective, scientific programme which allows you to be in the position to meet these important environmental expectations when purchasers are considering their preferred supply chain partners.

Continue Reading →

The Gruen Effect. Victor Gruen and the Shopping Mall

From Vimeo: Victor Gruen was maybe the most influential architect of the twentieth century: He is regarded as the father of the shopping mall. How fundamentally his concept would change the world was something that not even this immigrant from Vienna, who was noted for thinking big, could have foreseen. In the nineteen fifties, Gruen built large-scale “shopping towns” in the suburban sprawl of the United States. Based on the model of European city centers they were not only to facilitate shopping but also to strengthen social ties in the isolated suburbia with a mix of commercial and social spaces. However, in the context of an increasingly consumption- and speculation-driven economy the polyfunctional shopping center turned into a gigantic sales machine, which had a formative impact on the development of cities all around the globe.

Thus, in architecture, the Gruen Effect describes the maelstrom introduced by seductively designed sales spaces that makes us give up purposeful shopping and get lost in the shopping experience. Since the principles of the shopping mall have little by little been transferred to downtown areas, today this phenomenon produces the city as the place of commercialism, the staging of lifestyle, distinction and event; it outlines the creation of a type of downtown, which serves the gods of consumer culture and defines consumption as the prime principle of urban planning.

Continue Reading →

Designing for recovery

From our Tumblr dashboard: A brilliant and super short video about ‘designing for recovery’.  This is the future of design that we wish for.

E-waste Recycling in Singapore

From Press Release (via Ecobusiness): As a provider of electronic services and products, StarHub believes in the responsible disposal of electronic products, for ourselves and for our consumers. On 31 March 2012, StarHub celebrated Earth Hour by launching Singapore’s first electronic waste (e-waste) recycling programme for consumers. We started with five bins, mainly at our Customer Service Centres, and have collected 1.486 tonnes of e-waste in less than five months. But, we wanted to do more.

Continue Reading →

Branding for Good – Elmo can help kids choose healthier food

“Branding has tremendous potential to promote healthier eating. We tend to associate mascots and characters with junk food, but they can also be used to build excitement around healthy foods. This is a powerful lesson for fast food companies, food activists, and people involved in school food service,” Wansink says.

Continue Reading →

The Light Bulb Conspiracy – Fantastic Documentary about planned obsolescence

Why printers fail to work after a number of prints.

Why lightbulb technology (pre-LED) had never advanced since 1879.

Why batteries always begin to not work, and gadget manufacturers never have a replacement.

Yes it’s all planned.

Continue Reading →