Monday, November 23, 2009
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Welcome to the Dream a Sound Future blog! Dream a Sound Future is a design competition running in the Puget Sound area of Washington State. The need to find collaborative, holistic and innovative solutions to protect and restore our natural, built, social and personal environments is ever increasing. This competition is an invitation for you to create and share your vision for the future! For more information visit www.sustainableseattle.org
As a fine arts major at the Minnesota State University Moorhead, I often envisioned resourceful ways to reuse a variety of discarded, surplus or redundant materials at hand, and combined with my artistic abilities, created unique graphic and sculptural solutions. This set me on a path while working for large corporations like General Electric and AM International in marketing and sales, mid-size companies like Houston Public Television and Computerland , or my independent business BJS Northwest as a Graphic Designer and Product Developer, to always use the resources at hand to recycle materials for new purposes.
In my spare time as a volunteer member of Seattle’s community garden at Interbay, I often found solutions for the garden’s needs readily at hand by simply looking at the world around me and freely allowing my imagination to look outside the box. A prime example: As I wandered the grounds of the old Naval Air Station at Magnuson Park in Seattle, I noticed a long, covered walkway in an area destined to be demolished. I envisioned that a section of that cover would make an excellent roof for a storage space at the garden. By taking ownership and following through with the idea, the garden now has a substantial protected structure, saving the garden major financial expenses for securing important garden equipment and recycled materials, giving storage space for items used during social events, and enhancing the overall functionality of the garden and its food bank program.
The solution for the covered walkway is a perfect example of how recycling one item can have a positive environmental, social and economic impact. This, of course, is just one small action in the ever expanding world of sustainability.
:)
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