Cradle To Cradle: Remaking The Way We Make Things ★ Limited & Validated
"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."
As she walked home, she passed a neighborhood park where the benches were made of compressed "technical nutrients" from old cars and the playground floor was a "biological nutrient" that smelled faintly of pine. In Oakhaven, the end of a product’s life wasn't a funeral—it was just a new beginning. Cradle to Cradle: Remaking the Way We Make Things
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. "We are no longer managers of decline," Elara
In the city of Oakhaven, the word "trash" had been scrubbed from the local dialect. Following the principles of Cradle to Cradle , the citizens lived by a simple, radical rule: In Oakhaven, the end of a product’s life
She pulled a small lever, and the device blossomed open like a flower. There were no glues, no fused plastics, and no "monstrous hybrids" that trapped precious metals in unrecyclable casings.