The professional association for design. AIGA Center For Sustainable Design

Defining Sustainability


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Sustainability is a growing concern that affects many facets of our personal and professional lives. If you aren't clear on what "sustainability" actually means, there are several formal definitions to which we can refer. Sustainability is a big subject, and even a quick glance will reveal a wide range of perspectives. Perhaps one of the most widely recognized definition of sustainability was provided by Dr. Gro Harlem Brundtland in her 1987 report, Our Common Future:
    "Sustainable development is development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs."

And whether it's Al Gore touring the globe to talk about climate change, or Robert Kennedy Jr's concerns over environmental justice, there is no shortage of high profile commentators on sustainability:
    "Sustainability means living on nature's income rather than its capital."
         —Murray Gell-Mann, Nobel Prize Winner
Other thought leaders have fleshed out these definitions further, some of them providing much more tangible applications and implications:
    "Sustainability is an economic state where the demands placed upon the environment by people and commerce can be met without reducing the capacity of the environment to provide for future generations. It can also be expressed in the simple terms of an economic golden rule for the restorative economy: leave the world better than you found it, take no more than you need, try not to harm life of the environment, make amends if you do."
         —Paul Hawken, The Ecology of Commerce. 1994
Interestingly, despite his numerous books on the subject, Paul Hawken is still perhaps best known as the entrepreneurial force behind the company that still bears his name (Smith & Hawken). In his capacity as a recognizable business figure, he is not alone in his pioneering approach. In fact, while activists, NGOs, governments and the media all play a role in defining what sustainability means, some of its most vocal and forceful proponents are to be found in the business world:
    "What we thought was boundless has limits, and we are beginning to hit them."
         —Robert Shapiro, (former) CEO and chairman of Monsanto, 1997
Yet despite the growing awareness of this way of thinking, my spell checker still doesn't recognize the word. So right now, "sustainability" is caught in an odd place: in some circles, it has obtained an almost-irritating buzzword status; yet—on the other hand—it has hardly achieved mainstream recognition or understanding. My parents aren't exactly up to speed on this.

So what will become of it? Will sustainability go the way of Y2K? Is it a business fad soon to be replaced by something else in a marketplace constantly looking for that "next thing"? A remark by Thomas Jefferson over 200 years ago provides contrary evidence to this possibility. The ethic he described demonstrates that although the term "sustainable development" is new, the concept has been around for a long time:
    "Then I say the earth belongs to each... generation during its course, fully and in its own right. The second generation receives it clear of the debts and encumbrances, the third of the second, and so on. For if the first could charge it with a debt, then the earth would belong to the dead and not to the living generation. Then, no generation can contract debts greater than may be paid during the course of its own existence."
         —Thomas Jefferson, Third US President, guy found on nickels, 1789
Moving forward, the Center for Sustainable Design will be trying to provide a succinct definition that speaks directly to designers. To get that ball rolling, we would like to hear from you. What does sustainability mean to you as a designer?

For further reading, the resources section of this site features several well written books on the topic. You can also take a look at these links for a deeper dive:

Posted by sustainability in Ideas | December 22, 2006

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Comments (2)

Michael,
When you define triple bottom line for your clients, do you do so with any specific metric? For instance: most of the accounting firms have some flavor of this (ie PwC's "value reporting"), or do you push clients to ascribe to other frameworks such as GRI (global reporting initiative)?

Sorry i missed your presentation at the Gain conference in the fall. i have had your "reverb" piece on my desk for quite some time now -- nice one (perhaps you could tell our readers where that item can be found).

Posted by: Phil Hamlett on January 18, 2007

kevin,
if you read mcdonough/braungart's "cradle to cradle", they refer to this dynamic as "being less bad". the implication being that being less bad is not being "good". they advocate strongly (and persuasively) that we should all strive to be good, not just "less bad."
however, this did not stop them from printing and distributing a book -- which by their own admission runs counter to their own ideology. despite being fabricated out of a non-wood substrate -- the book is "not quite there" as it relates to being good by their criteria.
so what does one do in the meanwhile -- until perfectly harmless ecological alternatives are available? not publish? these are the kinds of questions that torment graphic designers when they look into sustainable issues...

Posted by: Phil Hamlett on February 2, 2007

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