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Eco-Design Competiton

The Judges

A huge thanks to our expert judges:

Anne Noble, Laurie Foon, David Trubridge, Ian Athfield and Peter Salmon


We have a winner!

... and a runner up

This competition asked Massey design students to come up with creative solutions to climate change and sustainable living -  in less that 3 days!

Check out the winner : "No Frills, Just Refills" and runner up: "Planet Points" featured below.

Honourable mentions were also made by the Judges for the following projects:

"Adjust" , "My Sprouts", "Dig"

Click here to check out all the amazing creative entries.

This design solution brings the ideas of sustainable purchasing to the mainstream and revisits the nostalgia of the beloved milk bottle. A perfect, efficient solution for the inefficient daily cycle we have currently – our family would use it - when can we start?

Laurie Foon, competition judge

The Winner

"No Frills, Just Refills" by Karl Thiart, Garth Beer, Jo Anne Tay, Emma Hickey and Grace Aitken




With some social innovations to the way we purchase milk at our local supermarket we could cut back the carbon emissions of plastic bottle production and transport miles. Introducing a self-service milk station that brings back glass bottles that are 100% reusable and recyclable into supermarkets.

In deciding on the winners we looked for a big new idea but also something that worked for people within the confines of our existing social and consumer systems

Ian Athfield, competition judge

The Runner Up

"Planet Points" by Rebecca O'Shea , Fynn Thomas , Charlotte Corrigall , James van Oosten and Carey Kwan



The
 overall 
aim 
of 
the 
Planet 
Points 
Rewards
 Scheme
 is 
to

 create 
an incentive 
for 
consumers 
to 
become increasingly

 sustainably 
aware - to "buy good stuff". Products are labelled according to three main issues of sustainability:
‐personal health (how good the product is for you to consume)
‐environment (how the product has affected the environment)
‐social aspects (the products impact on society)
The more "good stuff" you buy the more Planet Points you can earn to reward your good deeds.