What Would Nature Do?

This article is part of the Design for Impact series, a collorabation between Core77 and Autodesk focused on designers using their craft to promote environmental and social change.

Growing Goods for Good

Designers and consumers have an urgent challenge to confront in the current discussion around sustainability. How can we distinguish between goods which seem eco-friendly, but actually contribute to a culture of waste, and those that are truly green? Designer Danielle Trofe had to challenge herself to look at every aspect: from prototyping methods, to production materials, to manufacturing processes, to the ultimate disposal of the object and its component parts.

She ultimately came to a very unique solution: using bio-utilization to grow indoor lighting. Designing with living materials, Trofe is building consumer furnishings that truly embody the best of cradle-to-grave sustainability.

The Mush-Lume Table Lamp

Working with Nature, Learning from Nature

Meet the MushLume Lighting Collection, grown using mushroom mycelium or what the biomaterials company Ecovative – Trofe’s frequent industry partner – calls “Nature’s glue.” Mycelium is the root structure of mushrooms. Along with being the largest living organism on Earth, it’s able to decompose organic compounds, filter toxins from soil, conduct energy, act as a natural insulator and provide nutrients to a vast number of living organisms. Using Ecovative’s material, which combines crop waste like corn stalk with mycelium, Trofe grows custom lampshades. Once they’ve completed the growth cycle (4-10 days depending on the size of the lampshade) the material is heated to halt any further growth. The material is lightweight, soft and entirely stable. In other words, it won’t ‘shroom in your room.

The material matters. From production to decomposition, mycelium feeds the earth rather than stripping it of needed resources. At the stage of disposal, it safely returns to the earth where it once again serves its natural functions. For the purposes of the designer and the consumer, mycelium also happens to be beautiful,, and durable in the long term.

Mush-Lume Hemisphere Light

From Materials to Mimicry

Want to know the dirty little secret of design? Nature does it even better than us. As Trofe continues to innovate, she challenges herself to ask, “What would nature do?” This idea has evolved over years of design exploration but it seemed to catalyze for her after reading Janine Benyus’ seminal work, Biomimicry: Innovation Inspired by Nature.

“Biomimicry is looking at nature’s form, function, and ecosystems and emulating this into human design. Nature has had 3.8 billion years to refine and adapt to the operating conditions on earth. It has found and fine-tuned strategies to deal with the same kind of challenges that humans are dealing with now. We’re now looking at these patterns, processes, forms and functions, and emulating them in design innovation. That includes at a very simple form level, like looking at the knee of a grasshopper and considering how it can propel the grasshopper 100 times higher than its own body. How can we use that knowledge in our own applied design? Or we can look at the way an old-growth forest works and how its many symbiotic relationships cultivate competition and cooperation all the while there are no wasted resources. Everything is recycled. Everything is in this closed-loop system,” Benyus explains.

“As a designer, you have to respect our shared natural resources,” Trofe says. “Would nature create something that would eventually not be able to be broken down into smaller components so that it could be reused or upcycled? It’s kind of this common sense thing. It’s important to ask the question, ‘Does this process or material really make sense in our environment?'”

The MushLume Lighting Collection embodies the value of Trofe’s mantra: What would nature do? Nature would use its resources with form and function as the driver while allowing all of the materials to safely return to the earth at the end of their lives.

Mush-Bloom Orb Planter

Building to Learn

Working with Autodesk and Ecovative empowers Trofe to continually explore and learn. With Fusion 360, she crafts and plays and explores and tests ideas, using 3D models as virtual sketching tools. What emerges are design concepts built from the inside out.

“The first time I’d worked with a 3D modeling program, it was kind of this Aha! moment of, ‘here is a communication tool that works for me.’ Because at the end of the day it’s how you communicate the ideas that are in your head that matters. Having the right tool set to appropriately do that makes all the difference,” she says.

According to Trofe, Autodesk tools also encourage discovery and exploration.
“With Autodesk’s Fusion 360, I find that I get into this workflow, and because I’m experiencing an object three-dimensionally, my mind is engrossed in different angles. It’s a deeper thought process than a pen and paper,” she says.

She also finds a perfect marriage between technology and handcraft in how she makes, and in how consumers experience, her products. I use 3D modeling tools to create particular tooling parts that are conducive to an environment the lampshades can be grown in, and then we’re adding the human touch to it. The tooling is handpicked, satisfying that human touch we deeply crave. So every product we make is just slightly different.”

Watch Danielle Trofe walk us through her amazing design process in this behind-the-scenes video!

Partnerships for Growth

“Trofe’s a great example of the kind of entrepreneur we love to support. She’s pushing the envelope in terms of her materials choice, her use of design technology and the results speak for themselves. Her work is aesthetically so pleasing and also inspires her customers to think about the sustainability of their daily lives. Her work is creative, innovative and hopefully an inspiration for both her customers as well as other designers,” says Pam Hochman, Marketing Lead for the Autodesk Entrepreneur Impact Program.

For Trofe, it’s the various collaborations that make the work flourish. “Collaborations are extremely important, and a lot of times we ward them off due to competition, trying to protect assets. But collaborating, connecting, and sharing these resources and the knowledge base is the thing that really advances our ideas.”

Mush-Lume Cup Light

A Call to Action

“A lot of times we’re just so divided in our own little ecosystems that we kind of get disconnected from nature. The thing that’s most important to me, and I think of it both as a consumer and as a designer, is I want to establish a deeper connection with people and their things, especially the things that we see every day.” This connection is formed by creating a greater awareness of how our objects are made, what they’re made from, and ultimately where they will end up.

Trofe strives to inspire other designers to view their work through the lens of a question she hopes will become a centerpiece for design in the near future: 

What would nature do?

Link About It: HighSnobiety's Gin Guide

HighSnobiety's Gin Guide


“Gin” is translated from the Dutch “jenever” and sometimes takes a backseat to whisky when it comes to education and tasting. But HighSnobiety is breaking it all down for readers—from defining the spirit, to essential ingredients and elements, distilling……

Continue Reading…

ListenUp: Sarah Chernoff: Warm Nights

Sarah Chernoff: Warm Nights


The first track off Sarah Chernoff’s forthcoming solo album, “Warm Nights” offers a sultry glimpse at what can be expected from the singer (and member of CH favorite Superhumanoids). At times breathy, frequently ethereal and smooth through-and-through……

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A watch like you’ve never seen

You know, I thought we were done with watches. I’ve seen so many now that are just derivatives of either analog watches, or of digital watches, or even smartwatches that I said to myself, it would be very hard to surprise me. Guess the guys at Division Furtive took that challenge up, because the Type 50 watch is just insane. On first glance, it looks like someone printed the user manual on the face of the watch itself, and you’d probably wonder why in the name of Geneva would someone make something so complicated? That’s where I come handy, with my explanations and all that. You see, the Type 50 isn’t a regular watch. In fact, it doesn’t even have one conventional element in it aside from the straps that go around your wrist. The Type 50 is completely new, completely different. It isn’t Analog, it’s not really conventionally digital (it doesn’t have a screen either). The watch is just a black box shrouded in electronic mystery that tells the time by flashing white LEDs along a printed numeric guide, telling you the time as well as the day, and even the current lunar phase (the LEDs are powerful enough to even double up as an emergency flashlight). If you thought that was different, get this. The watch is powered by a AAA battery (ridiculous!) and gets calibrated by your phone. Wait what? Your phone…literally programs your watch by flashing strobe lights from its screen at it. Like its speaking some alien robot language to it! I’ve got to admit, the Type 50 watch is so unbelievably different and alien, I’m definitely awed by it… but I’m also a little scared of it!

Designer: Gabriel Ménard

Buy It Here: $239.00 $320.00

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Competition: win a limited-edition V03D-Dezeen watch

Competition: Dezeen has teamed up with Dezeen Watch Store to give away one of only 200 numbered watches designed in collaboration with Void.

Developed in partnership with Swedish designer David Ericsson, the limited-edition V03D watch is based on Void’s bestselling V03, and is inspired by a shared respect for modern simplicity and attention to detail.

The unisex timepiece has a customised monochromatic face design with minimal dial graphics, a black case and a black leather strap to reflect Void Watches and Dezeen’s pared-back aesthetic.

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The collaboration felt like a natural progression in the ongoing relationship between the two companies, according to Void founder David Ericsson.

“When I launched Void Watches in 2008, Dezeen was the first design blog to feature the brand,” he said.

“The positive response from the design community was the feedback that I needed to really pursue watches more deliberately.”

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“Up to that point, Void Watches had just been a fun idea which I did outside of running a product development consulting business,” he added. “After Dezeen’s coverage I realised that there was true potential in my concept.”

To be in with a chance of winning one of only 200 numbered, limited-edition V03D-Dezeen watches, enter your details below.

The VO3D-Dezeen watch is available to purchase for £170 from Dezeen Watch Store while stocks last.

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Competition closes 27 October 2016. One winner will be selected at random and notified by email, and their names will be published at the top of this page. Dezeen competitions are international and entries are accepted from readers in any country.

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A Full Pot of #NationalCoffeeDay

The hashtag #NationalCoffeeDay is at the top of today’s U.S. and Canada Twitter trending lists. But just take a guess at how many other countries around the world are also celebrating this Sept. 29?

If you estimated anywhere near 19 other countries, pour yourself another cup. We’ve written occasionally about the provenance of so-called National Days, but this one takes the coffee cake.

The calendaring of National Coffee Days now extends from April (China, Portugal) to Oct. 1 (U.K., Sri Lanka, Pakistan). And while Saturday is supposed to be the day in the United Kingdom, a bunch of folks there are celebrating our National Coffee Day.

As if all this isn’t confusing enough, Saturday Oct. 1 is also, as first proclaimed last year, International Coffee Day.

Previously on FishbowlNY:
Canadian Newspaper Launches Coffee Subscription Service

Cover Battle: New York Times Mag or Newsweek

Welcome back to another edition of FishbowlNY’s weekly Cover Battle. This round we have The New York Times Magazine taking on Newsweek.

The latest Times Mag features an illustration of a bomb/microphone. The accompanying story is about how Donald Trump might force conservative talk radio to implode, which is something we wouldn’t necessarily mind.

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Speaking of morons, Newsweek’s cover has Trump and an allegation that one of his businesses broke the law. Are you surprised by that?

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So readers, which cover is better? You can vote, comment, or do both.

Which Cover is Better, The New York Times Magazine or Newsweek?

Reader Submitted: The Stone Age Gets an Update With This Surprisingly Attractive Kitchen Set 

Primitive Kitchen Tool is a kitchen tool that allows the user to experiment with spices and optimize their meal’s flavor.

View the full project here

Dezeen Mail issue 325 features this week's best stories and discussions

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The world’s first sex toy for gender-transitioning men features in this week’s issue of Dezeen Mail, along with non-rectangular football pitches in Thailand and the Zaha Hadid-designed headquarters for Antwerp’s port authority (pictured).

Read Dezeen Mail issue 325 | Subscribe to Dezeen Mail

The post Dezeen Mail issue 325 features this week’s best stories and discussions appeared first on Dezeen.

First photographs revealed of Amanda Levete's MAAT museum in Lisbon

Photos have been released of the undulating, tile-covered Museum of Art, Architecture and Technology by Amanda Levete’s firm AL_A, ahead of its opening in Lisbon next week (+ slideshow).

The MAAT is set to open 5 October 2016 – coinciding with the start of the Lisbon Architecture Triennale.

MAAT by Amanda Levete

The building is the first phase of a new contemporary art gallery designed by Levete and her London-based firm AL_A, which first unveiled plans for the project in 2011.

Located on the bank of the River Tagus in Lisbon’s Belém district, the arching structure is designed as a continuation of the promenade. Its gently humped form is covered in 15,000 glazed tiles and is designed to allow visitors to walk over the roof.

MAAT by Amanda Levete

“Our design draws on the context of the site, creating both physical and conceptual connections to the waterfront and back to the heart of the city,” said Amanda Levete.



“The waterfront is so essential to the project that the design literally reflects it,” she added. “The overhanging roof that creates welcome shade is used to bounce sunlight off the water and into the main gallery, one of the four interconnected exhibition spaces.”

MAAT by Amanda Levete

The project was commissioned by not-for-profit organisation EDP Foundation as the centrepiece of a 3.8-hectare waterside art campus that includes the recently renovated Central Tejo power station.

Phase two of the project is set to complete in March 2017 with the opening of four galleries, a restaurant and additional public spaces.

MAAT by Amanda Levete

A park designed by Vladimir Djurovic Landscape Architecture will also open in 2017, alongside a bridge by AL_A that will link the waterfront with the roof.

Photography is by Hufton + Crow.


Project credits:

Architect: AL_A
Principal: Amanda Levete
Project director: Maximiliano Arrocet
Team: Fernando Ruiz Barberan, Mirta Bilos, Alex Bulygin, Grace Chan, Sara Ortiz Cortijo, Alice Dietsch, Ciriaco Castro Diez, Yoo Jin Kim, Ilina Kroushovski, Michael Levy, Cristina Revilla Madrigal, Stanislaw Mlynski, Ho-Yin Ng, Giulio Pellizzon, Raffael Petrovic, Chloe Piper, Filippo Previtali, Maria Alvarez-Santullano, Joe Shepherd, Paula Vega, Konstantinos Zaverdinos
Local architect: Aires Mateus e Associados
Civil, structural & building services engineering: Afaconsult
Landscape: Vladimir Djurovic Landscape Architecture
Restaurant and shop lighting: SEAM Design
Site supervision: Technoplana
LEED consultant: Edifícios Saudáveis
Main contractor: Alves Ribeiro
Sub contractors: Ceràmica Cumella, Disset

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