{"id":3814,"date":"2008-11-10T12:09:56","date_gmt":"2008-11-10T18:09:56","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/wordpress-367309-1145705.cloudwaysapps.com\/?p=3814"},"modified":"2017-09-19T19:45:20","modified_gmt":"2017-09-19T23:45:20","slug":"robbing-the-cradle-to-cradle-william-mcdonough-a-saint-and-a-sinner","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/sustainablog.org\/articles\/robbing-the-cradle-to-cradle-william-mcdonough-a-saint-and-a-sinner\/","title":{"rendered":"Robbing the Cradle to Cradle? William McDonough a Saint… and a Sinner"},"content":{"rendered":"
<\/a>As I’m still getting back into the groove of regular writing, I’m a bit late to the game on Danielle Sack’s profile of\/hit piece on architect and “cradle to cradle” guru William McDonough in Fast Company<\/em><\/a>. As you might imagine, this one’s already made the rounds of the green blogosphere, and most<\/a> of<\/a> these<\/a> posts<\/a> involve a healthy degree of introspection regarding McDonough’s place as a “green messiah,” and the worth of the ideas he’s spent much of his career promoting.<\/p>\n With all of that said, though, my primary reaction is “OK… but does any of this really matter?”<\/p>\n No doubt McDonough, like the rest of us, is a flawed human being, and perhaps many of us have been willing to grant him hero status prematurely (we’ve certainly sung<\/a> his<\/a> praises<\/a> numerous times here at sustainablog). I think if we get caught up in the “battle of Bill,” though, we miss the more important issues here: the relevance and importance of cradle to cradle design, the legitimacy of certification processes for “green” products, and the relationship of these concepts to consumption in general.So, let’s get some issues out of the way. No, McDonough and partner Michael Braungart did not originally conceive of the concept with which they’re most famously associated: as Hunter Lovins notes in the article, “Walter Stahel in Switzerland actually coined the phrase [cradle to cradle]<\/a> 25 years ago, long before Bill started using it.” McDonough doesn’t live in a “green” house. He’s likely blown some deals with companies like Interface and Nike by demanding too much money, and making unreasonable intellectual property claims. Some of his projects haven’t lived up to the hoopla (if they’ve been finished at all). And, for all I know, he may well be an arrogant, self-serving jerk (I don’t know the man).<\/h3>\n
\n<\/p>\nCradle to Cradle: Materialism by Another Name?<\/h3>\n