Using a packaging project (a product repositioning proposal) as the vehicle for putting the learning objectives into context, students combined online research, live subject studies, and field research as they work toward their proposed solution. Recently, students in the course from around the US, Canada, and Finland were asked to get a firsthand look at what happens after stuff goes “away.”
For the assignment called What a Dump, students were instructed to visit their local recycling facility, and consider the recovery process and how seeing how materials are handled might impact their design decisions. They were also instructed to ask the facility they’re visiting, ” What would you like designers to know?”
Embracing fully the idea that there is no such place as “away” — Eureka Recycling is a recognized pioneer in materials recovery systems. A “Zero Waste” advocate, Eureka believes that the idea of “away” is just a mindset full of lost opportunities, and that materials not immediately recoverable aren’t just garbage or incinerator fodder, but materials we just haven’t found a better use for yet. Needles to say, Eureka was thrilled to be able to respond to the assignment question, “What would you like designers to know?”
Pictured: Theres (Community Outreach Coordinator and our tour guide at Eureka Recycling) with Megan Graham (MASD student), Wendy Jedlicka (instructor), and Mark Chamberlain (MASD student) from the 2016 Sustainable Design program’s Packaging Sustainability course.