Nike Creates Circular Design Guide To Promote Sustainable Collaboration

COPENHAGEN – Nike has created an open source design guide to help businesses reach their sustainability goals. The guide maps out the 10 principles of circular design to help the industry codify and standardize sustainability in the supply chain.

“It’s an invitation for a dialogue with the creative groups around the world. We are endeavouring to create a common language between everyone to communicate effectively ,” said John Hoke, Nike’s chief design officer.

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Students from Central Saint Martins and founder of A-Cold-Wall, Samuel Ross has trialed this guidebook. “It’s speaking to this idea of collaboration and cross pollination between facilities, suppliers and ethical ways of production,” Ross said.

The circular design guide includes case studies from Nike, as well as other brands such as Levi’s and Fjallraven, that have achieved or brought to scale one of the 10 core principles of sustainability including materials, cyclability, waste avoidance and green chemistry.

“So there are some case studies that say ‘Here’s an example of this particular principle, but from a collaboration point of view, this is meant to be an engagement, so the idea of the guide is to open source it, but also continually engage with the people who have provided feedback,” said Noel Kinder, chief sustainability officer at Nike.

The guide, which is available to download online, also includes videos of Nike’s employees speaking to the ten principles and also includes a list of questions meant to prompt critical thinking such as, ‘How can your material choices be adjusted to make recycling easier, or how can you think about deconstructing a particular garment or a piece of footwear post consumer?'”

“This is so that the design community can be more deliberate about their choices, because historically designers design for consumer desire and while this is part of our ethos, it’s institutionalizing it in a way where brands will have to go through some steps to evaluate things more deliberately,” said Kinder.

For Nike, design is a big contributor to the sustainability equation. “I think if you pair it with innovation, it’s part of the problem set. We’re trying to solve for performance and sustainability at the same time,” Kinder added, citing Flyknit as an example on how the brand is working to improve the material palette.

“Flyknit is a 2 billion dollar product across eight categories and 38 styles, it’s a massive platform for a shoe that is entirely recycled polyester knit. We’re starting to introduce it into the skate line as well,” Kinder said.

Nike also works outside the fashion industry to give their materials a second life. Coming up on the 25th anniversary of Nike Grind, which is a material made from waste, the shoe company is branching out and partnering with an auto manufacturer to provide Nike Grind material for their seat cushioning.

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