This is one in a series of documents that follow my UCLA winter 2010 course titled Cradle to Cradle: Closed Loop Systems. This interdisciplinary course contributes to the school's Certificate of Global Sustainability.
On National Teacher Day, meet the 2024-25 Kenan Fellows
UCLAx Cradle to Cradle: class 1
1. UCLAx class 1 1
UCLAx Cradle to Cradle: class 1
Every first class is probably similar. We do the typical "getting to know you" kind of
activities. I showed the class a few slides of past work and gave a basic overview of
experience and background in order to reassure them that the school hasn’t hired a hack
to take on this course, and they each told the rest of us something about themselves. One
thing that really interested me was the diversity of professional backgrounds. We have
architects, landscape architects, artists, industrial engineers, marketers, a doctor, a food
manufacturer, a product manufacturer rep., and many more. There are more varied
experiences than I was anticipating. And it’s a group not afraid to talk and express their
opinions. I like that.
During the quarter, we’ll be tackling a number of topics connected to cradle to cradle
thinking and sustainable strategies, but we’ll also be engaged in four projects. There will be
one that lasts the entire course length called the disassembly project, whose primary
objective is to offer students a better understanding of the complexity of everyday objects
and how most of us don’t have a clue how those objects are manufactured, what they are
made of, and what can be done to improve them, from an environmental perspective. Each
student will be required to identify an object or product that is common, or one they take
for granted. For the next twelve weeks we’ll dismantle that object, analyze its component
parts, trace back each material or part, research the history of the those materials and
parts, and conceptualize a better way to produce that same object through a cradle to
cradle lens. There will also be three profile projects - one focused on materials and
resources, one focused on companies and people, and one focused on certifications and
labels. With these three, students will pick one for each and research history, use, context,
and other factors of interest. Here too, the reason for investigation is that few us really
know where products come from, what they are made of, who makes them, and what kind
of testing or grading is required to bring them to market. I’m hopeful that these four
projects will offer students the opportunity to interlink each and get even more out of each
individual project.
Although the course title is Cradle to Cradle: Closed Loop Systems, we will not be
following the book Cradle to Cradle by William McDonough and Michael Braungart. As
a indispensable contribution to the topic, we will use the book as required reading, but will
not be working from it. Instead, to give the idea of cradle to cradle some context, we’ll be
following our Transition Template. This tool is one we use with clients to help them chart a
path from industrial age thinking to sustainable age action. With only twelve classes in the
www.threadcollaborative.com
➜ threadcollaborative
11250 morrison street no. 201, north hollywood ca 91601
2. UCLAx class 1 2
quarter, we will not be able to cover every element of the Transition Template, but we will
cover at least eight - resource preservation, waste reduction, closed loop systems, energy
conservation, embodied energy, eliminate toxins, community engagement, and life cycle
analysis. Each of these topics will be the focus of one class. To cover the topics, we will be
enlisting the assistance of outside parties who make that particular topic a primary focus of
their work. For example, we will do a field trip to the new InterfaceFLOR showroom in
downtown Los Angeles to discuss waste reduction. No other industrial company has done
more to reduce their waste production over the past decade. The folks at InterfaceFLOR
will give the students an inside look at the efforts being made at the company.
With introductions, lots of conversation, and a presentation of projects, tasks, class topics,
and other housecleaning items, we actually ran long and had to be asked to leave the
building. But all in all, I’m excited about the students and their eagerness to dive into this
subject and learn all they can.
www.threadcollaborative.com
➜ threadcollaborative
11250 morrison street no. 201, north hollywood ca 91601