The Earth Awards Announces Six Finalists To Redesign Tomorrow
Earth Awards finalists pitch to investors to prove design can build a new economy
18 August 2010: Artificial foam which captures and converts the sunâs energy more effectively than living organisms and earth tiles which empower people to build their own sustainable homes are in the running for a global design award backed by world-leading entrepreneurs.
University of Cincinnati Professorâs David Wendell and Carlo Montemagno designed the Photosynthetic Foam while Cambridge Professor Michael Ramage designed Sustainable Shells. Both innovations have been selected from over 500 entries to be shortlisted in The Earth Awards 2010. They and four other finalists will now pitch to top CEOs at an Innovators Summit in London, to secure funding to bring their designs to market.
Judged by the worldâs top creative thinkers, The Earth Awards identifies viable ideas from fashion to architecture and consumer products, and marries them with investors to provide a real solution to improving quality of life. It is the only global innovation awards where the aim is to give the designer the means to enter the worldwide consumer marketplace.
Professor Wendellâs manufactured system of photosynthesis means that all captured energy is converted to sugars, unlike natural photosynthesis in plants where a large amount of energy is used to maintain the life of the organism. In short, the foam is a far more efficient and versatile energy production platform.
Sustainable Shells enables buildings to be created with natural resources by local people, in the worldâs poorest and most remote areas. It is the first time that ancient tile-vaulting has been fused with earth to create a building which can be replicated across the developing world, removing the need to import skills or materials.
These ideas highlight the groundbreaking innovation needed to make The Earth Awards shortlist. Having won $10,000 to help take their concepts to market, the following six finalists will now go head to head to compete for a total investment of $50,000 at The Earth Awards âInvestors to Innovatorsâ Summit on 16th September.
Sustainable Shells by Michael Ramage, University of Cambridge, England
Polli-Bricks by Arthur Huang, MINIWIZ Sustainable Energy Development Co, Taiwan
Kayu Sunglasses by Jamie Lim, Kayu, USA
AskNature by Sherry Ritter, The Biomimicry Institute, USA
Artificial Photosynthetic Foam by David Wendell, University of Cincinnati, USA
The Butterfly Houses by Andreas Grontvedt Gjertsen, TYIN Tengestue, Norway
Earth Awards judge and design champion Terence Conran comments: âIntelligent design has the power to improve, inspire and shape peopleâs lives. The Earth Awardsâ celebration of sustainable innovation reinforces how cutting-edge ideas can help to build a better world and also be a commercial success on a global scale.â
Fellow Selection Committee member Ira Magaziner, Chairman, William J. Clinton Foundation, adds: âNothing is impossible. And nothing beats the power of partnership in realising dreams. That is the fundamental principle of The Earth Awards: to unite the worldâs greatest innovators with the business people and investors who can make their designs a reality. This is a unique partnership â an opportunity for us to discover some great ideas and see these brought to life for the benefit of all.â
Selected finalists will be showcased at HRH The Prince of Walesâ Start initiative to inspire people to build a better future. They will appear at Startâs âA Garden Party to Make a Differenceâ, in Clarence House, Marlborough House and Lancaster House gardens from 8th-19th September 2010. Finalists will pitch their innovation to an audience of leading CEOs and investors at a Summit held in partnership with the Financial Times at Marlborough House, on 16th September.
Nicole Ting Yap, Founder of The Earth Awards, concludes: âThe Earth Awards is about providing an aspirational platform for consumer-driven ideas, which can challenge designers to build a new economy. We are thrilled to have received such innovative ideas which have real potential to drive positive change, and look forward to showcasing them at HRH The Prince of Wales Garden Party on 16th September.â
- end -
Notes to Editors:
About The Earth Awards
The Earth Awards is an aspirational platform for consumer-driven ideas that challenge designers and innovators to build a new economy. It is the only truly global awards dedicated to identifying viable designs which have the potential to improve our quality of life and build a new economy.
The Earth Awards Selection Committee is made up of world-leading entrepreneurs, designers and thinkers, making the awards the very best in class. They all share the Earth Awardsâ belief in building a new economy founded in innovation and design. Their task is to identify those innovations with the greatest potential and then present them to world industry leaders who have the means to bring them to market.
#-Link-Snipped-#
The Earth Awards 2010 Selection Committee comprises:
Paola Antonelli, Curator for Architecture and Design, Museum of Modern Art
Yves Béhar, Founder, Fuseproject
Sir Richard Branson, Founder and CEO, Virgin Group
Graydon Carter, Editor-In-Chief, Vanity Fair
Majora Carter, President, The Majora Carter Group
Tony Chambers, Editor-in-Chief, Wallpaper* Magazine
Alexandra Cousteau, Founder, Blue Legacy International
David de Rothschild, Founder, Adventure Ecology
His Holiness The Gyalwang Drukpa, Spiritual Leader, The Drukpa Lineage
Rick Fedrizzi, President and CEO, United States Green Building Council
Julie Gilhart, Fashion Director, Barneys New York
Dr. Jane Goodall, Jane Goodall Institute & UN Messenger of Peace
Scott Mackinlay Hahn, Co-founder, Rogan and Loomstate
Peter Head, Director, ARUP
Graham Hill, Founder, Treehugger
Khaldoon Khalifa Al Mubarak, CEO, Mubadala Development Company
Yang Lan, Chairwoman, Sun Television
Ira C. Magaziner, Chairman, William J. Clinton Foundation
Bill McKibben, Writer, Environmentalist
Barry Nalebuff, Professor, Yale School of Management
Sergio Palleroni, Co-founder and Director, BaSiC Initiative
Karim Rashid, Founder, Karim Rashid Inc.
Jonathan Rose RIBA, Principal, AECOM and Masterplanning Practice Leader
Cameron Sinclair, Founder, Architecture for Humanity
Werner Sobek, Founder, Werner Sobek Engineering + Design
Philippe Starck, Founder, Starck Network
Diane von Furstenberg, Founder, DvF
Dilys Williams, Director, Center for Sustainable Fashion
Ken Yeang, Principal, Llewelyn Davies Yeang
The Earth Awards Finalists 2010:
Sustainable Shells by Michael Ramage, University of Cambridge, England â BUILT ENVIRONMENT
Polli-Bricks by Arthur Huang, MINIWIZ Sustainable Energy Development Co, Taiwan â PRODUCT
Kayu Sunglasses by Jamie Lim, Kayu, USA â FASHION
AskNature by Sherry Ritter, The Biomimicry Institute, USA â SYSTEMS
Artificial Photosynthetic Foam by David Wendell, University of Cincinnati, USA â FUTURE
The Butterfly Houses by Andreas Grontvedt Gjertsen, TYIN Tengestue, Norway â SOCIAL JUSTICE
About Start
Tickets for A Garden Party to Make a Difference are available at #-Link-Snipped-#
For media enquiries please contact Bell Pottinger:
Emily Luscombe; #-Link-Snipped-#; 020 7861 2494
Chris Watts; #-Link-Snipped-#; 020 7861 2859
Charli Beale; #-Link-Snipped-#; 020 7861 3029
Sally Gillespie; #-Link-Snipped-#; 020 7861 3974
18 August 2010: Artificial foam which captures and converts the sunâs energy more effectively than living organisms and earth tiles which empower people to build their own sustainable homes are in the running for a global design award backed by world-leading entrepreneurs.
University of Cincinnati Professorâs David Wendell and Carlo Montemagno designed the Photosynthetic Foam while Cambridge Professor Michael Ramage designed Sustainable Shells. Both innovations have been selected from over 500 entries to be shortlisted in The Earth Awards 2010. They and four other finalists will now pitch to top CEOs at an Innovators Summit in London, to secure funding to bring their designs to market.
Judged by the worldâs top creative thinkers, The Earth Awards identifies viable ideas from fashion to architecture and consumer products, and marries them with investors to provide a real solution to improving quality of life. It is the only global innovation awards where the aim is to give the designer the means to enter the worldwide consumer marketplace.
Professor Wendellâs manufactured system of photosynthesis means that all captured energy is converted to sugars, unlike natural photosynthesis in plants where a large amount of energy is used to maintain the life of the organism. In short, the foam is a far more efficient and versatile energy production platform.
Sustainable Shells enables buildings to be created with natural resources by local people, in the worldâs poorest and most remote areas. It is the first time that ancient tile-vaulting has been fused with earth to create a building which can be replicated across the developing world, removing the need to import skills or materials.
These ideas highlight the groundbreaking innovation needed to make The Earth Awards shortlist. Having won $10,000 to help take their concepts to market, the following six finalists will now go head to head to compete for a total investment of $50,000 at The Earth Awards âInvestors to Innovatorsâ Summit on 16th September.
Sustainable Shells by Michael Ramage, University of Cambridge, England
Polli-Bricks by Arthur Huang, MINIWIZ Sustainable Energy Development Co, Taiwan
Kayu Sunglasses by Jamie Lim, Kayu, USA
AskNature by Sherry Ritter, The Biomimicry Institute, USA
Artificial Photosynthetic Foam by David Wendell, University of Cincinnati, USA
The Butterfly Houses by Andreas Grontvedt Gjertsen, TYIN Tengestue, Norway
Earth Awards judge and design champion Terence Conran comments: âIntelligent design has the power to improve, inspire and shape peopleâs lives. The Earth Awardsâ celebration of sustainable innovation reinforces how cutting-edge ideas can help to build a better world and also be a commercial success on a global scale.â
Fellow Selection Committee member Ira Magaziner, Chairman, William J. Clinton Foundation, adds: âNothing is impossible. And nothing beats the power of partnership in realising dreams. That is the fundamental principle of The Earth Awards: to unite the worldâs greatest innovators with the business people and investors who can make their designs a reality. This is a unique partnership â an opportunity for us to discover some great ideas and see these brought to life for the benefit of all.â
Selected finalists will be showcased at HRH The Prince of Walesâ Start initiative to inspire people to build a better future. They will appear at Startâs âA Garden Party to Make a Differenceâ, in Clarence House, Marlborough House and Lancaster House gardens from 8th-19th September 2010. Finalists will pitch their innovation to an audience of leading CEOs and investors at a Summit held in partnership with the Financial Times at Marlborough House, on 16th September.
Nicole Ting Yap, Founder of The Earth Awards, concludes: âThe Earth Awards is about providing an aspirational platform for consumer-driven ideas, which can challenge designers to build a new economy. We are thrilled to have received such innovative ideas which have real potential to drive positive change, and look forward to showcasing them at HRH The Prince of Wales Garden Party on 16th September.â
- end -
Notes to Editors:
About The Earth Awards
The Earth Awards is an aspirational platform for consumer-driven ideas that challenge designers and innovators to build a new economy. It is the only truly global awards dedicated to identifying viable designs which have the potential to improve our quality of life and build a new economy.
The Earth Awards Selection Committee is made up of world-leading entrepreneurs, designers and thinkers, making the awards the very best in class. They all share the Earth Awardsâ belief in building a new economy founded in innovation and design. Their task is to identify those innovations with the greatest potential and then present them to world industry leaders who have the means to bring them to market.
#-Link-Snipped-#
The Earth Awards 2010 Selection Committee comprises:
Paola Antonelli, Curator for Architecture and Design, Museum of Modern Art
Yves Béhar, Founder, Fuseproject
Sir Richard Branson, Founder and CEO, Virgin Group
Graydon Carter, Editor-In-Chief, Vanity Fair
Majora Carter, President, The Majora Carter Group
Tony Chambers, Editor-in-Chief, Wallpaper* Magazine
Alexandra Cousteau, Founder, Blue Legacy International
David de Rothschild, Founder, Adventure Ecology
His Holiness The Gyalwang Drukpa, Spiritual Leader, The Drukpa Lineage
Rick Fedrizzi, President and CEO, United States Green Building Council
Julie Gilhart, Fashion Director, Barneys New York
Dr. Jane Goodall, Jane Goodall Institute & UN Messenger of Peace
Scott Mackinlay Hahn, Co-founder, Rogan and Loomstate
Peter Head, Director, ARUP
Graham Hill, Founder, Treehugger
Khaldoon Khalifa Al Mubarak, CEO, Mubadala Development Company
Yang Lan, Chairwoman, Sun Television
Ira C. Magaziner, Chairman, William J. Clinton Foundation
Bill McKibben, Writer, Environmentalist
Barry Nalebuff, Professor, Yale School of Management
Sergio Palleroni, Co-founder and Director, BaSiC Initiative
Karim Rashid, Founder, Karim Rashid Inc.
Jonathan Rose RIBA, Principal, AECOM and Masterplanning Practice Leader
Cameron Sinclair, Founder, Architecture for Humanity
Werner Sobek, Founder, Werner Sobek Engineering + Design
Philippe Starck, Founder, Starck Network
Diane von Furstenberg, Founder, DvF
Dilys Williams, Director, Center for Sustainable Fashion
Ken Yeang, Principal, Llewelyn Davies Yeang
The Earth Awards Finalists 2010:
Sustainable Shells by Michael Ramage, University of Cambridge, England â BUILT ENVIRONMENT
Polli-Bricks by Arthur Huang, MINIWIZ Sustainable Energy Development Co, Taiwan â PRODUCT
Kayu Sunglasses by Jamie Lim, Kayu, USA â FASHION
AskNature by Sherry Ritter, The Biomimicry Institute, USA â SYSTEMS
Artificial Photosynthetic Foam by David Wendell, University of Cincinnati, USA â FUTURE
The Butterfly Houses by Andreas Grontvedt Gjertsen, TYIN Tengestue, Norway â SOCIAL JUSTICE
About Start
Tickets for A Garden Party to Make a Difference are available at #-Link-Snipped-#
For media enquiries please contact Bell Pottinger:
Emily Luscombe; #-Link-Snipped-#; 020 7861 2494
Chris Watts; #-Link-Snipped-#; 020 7861 2859
Charli Beale; #-Link-Snipped-#; 020 7861 3029
Sally Gillespie; #-Link-Snipped-#; 020 7861 3974
Replies
You are reading an archived discussion.
Related Posts
hi,
i wanted to work on voice and speech recognition software using c or c++....can any one assist me to work on it....
i need some help for mini project, may i know what exactly we need to show if we are showing an algorithm for e.g an k-means algorithm via blender animation,...
hi am a 2nd yr electrical student and i want to know wats real power and reactive power.... 😀
Hi CEans,
There is a coding challenge going on. Its a Intel Threading Challenge 2010 , Show your programming skill and win the exciting the prizes.
Here is the link:-Intel®...
(August 19, 2010) – IObit announces the release of its all-new IObit Toolbox, a free portable suite of easy-to-use software utilities that repairs and prevents the widest range of PC...