Biomimicry and cradle to cradle in product design

An analysis of current design practice

Journal Article (2015)
Author(s)

E. Tempelman (TU Delft - Materials and Manufacturing)

I.C. de Pauw (TU Delft - OLD Reliability and Durability, TU Delft - Education and Student Affairs, TU Delft - Circular Product Design)

B. van der Grinten (TU Delft - Education and Student Affairs, TU Delft - OLD Reliability and Durability)

E.J.T. Mul (TU Delft - OLD Reliability and Durability)

K. Grevers (External organisation)

Research Group
Materials and Manufacturing
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1504/JDR.2015.074151
More Info
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Publication Year
2015
Language
English
Research Group
Materials and Manufacturing
Issue number
4
Volume number
13
Pages (from-to)
326-344

Abstract

In the field of sustainable product design, the use of nature-inspired
design (NID) strategies such as biomimicry and cradle to cradle has become
more widespread, resulting in a variety of nature-inspired products. Research so
far has studied NID on the basis of individual, key design cases and student
projects. This paper assesses the state of NID at nine companies that have
applied either biomimicry or cradle to cradle in product design. NID comes to
the forefront as a promising but challenging new design paradigm. Analysis of
best practice reveals that companies that applied a top-down approach, invested
in training and/or external NID-experts, set positive and ambitious design
targets, and included value chain partners early on in their projects were
generally successful in removing barriers towards project success.

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