Cradle To Cradle: Remaking The Way We - Make Things
Elara, a young industrial designer, stood before the city’s Council of Makers. She held a sleek, sapphire-blue laptop. "This," she announced, "is the Iris-7. It is not designed to be owned; it is designed to be borrowed."
The Council watched as Elara dropped a piece of the outer shell into a glass of water; it began to soften, turning into a harmless starch. Cradle to Cradle: Remaking the Way We Make Things
"The casing is a biological nutrient," she explained. "If you bury it, it dissolves into nitrogen-rich compost for our orchards. The internal circuitry is a technical nutrient. When the processor becomes obsolete, the manufacturer is legally bound to take it back, disassemble it in seconds, and use the high-grade copper and gold for the next generation." Elara, a young industrial designer, stood before the
"We are no longer managers of decline," Elara said, her voice echoing in the sun-drenched hall. "We are creators of abundance. By mimicking the earth’s circularity, we’ve stopped digging holes in the ground and started growing our future." It is not designed to be owned; it