Elena Baturina selected the winner of the Founder’s Choice Award in an international student competition in support of the UN’s sustainable goals
The last of the five prizes in the “Second Life of Things in Design” international student competition has been awarded to the creators of PackZero, a circular delivery network that combines reusable packaging with hybrid pickup and delivery.
The project by Ruoyi An, Yanhui Ban and Shijie Luan, students at ArtCenter College of Design, US, has been selected as the winning one by the Founder of BE OPEN think tank, entrepreneur and philanthropist Elena Baturina, and gets the award of EUR2,000.
PackZero proposes to transform the current resource depleting online retail distribution system, with a circular delivery network that combines inflatable reusable packaging with hybrid pickup and delivery experience. It implies building central hubs at locations that users frequent or find easily accessible, thereby reducing overall ‘product miles.’ The reusable package is to be made of durable biodegradable material, which research estimates can be potentially used up to 100 time, which is projected to reduce the shipping packaging waste in the world by 20% from 2020 to 2030.
“I chose to support PackZero because of their system multi-aspect approach to the immense problem of packaging waste. I believe the more aspects of an issue are taken on by the solution, the more efficient it is going to be. Yet I find the ambition and the thinking behind each of the finalist entries remarkable, and am deeply impressed with them. I am hoping that this competition will help drive more engagement with young designers from the SDG-focused businesses, state and public bodies. I am very excited to see how far these projects will evolve.”
In 2019, BE OPEN and Cumulus joined forces to hold an international competition “Second Life of Things in Design” to support the UN’s SDG programme that at the final stage had a total of 683 submissions from 44 countries. Students of arts, design and architecture-related courses submitted works that demonstrate a design-oriented take on the problems of sustainability, wiser production and consumption called for in SDG12.
The United Nations developed the Sustainable Development Goals Programme as a universal call to action to end poverty, protect the planet and ensure that all people enjoy peace and prosperity by 2030. Adopted by all the UN member states, it is the greatest global challenge and an indispensable requirement for sustainable development. BE OPEN think tank and Cumulus Association joined forces and developed an international student competition in support of that.
Earlier this year Elena Baturina explained the purpose of the competition: “It’s vital to give younger creative minds all the support they need to bring their ideas to fruition, because it is the originality of thought that is required to make any breakthrough, and younger people possess that originality. BE OPEN’s whole aim is to support, promote and help realize ideas that will actually change the world for the better. At the same time, we are looking to support the people who are capable of producing these ideas and giving them the inspiration and confidence to progress them.”
The competition offered young creatives four more prizes: three main winners were selected by the international jury and awarded with €10,000, €6,000, €4,000 jointly by BE OPEN and Cumulus; online voting selected the winner of the Public Vote Award of €2,000.
All the winners will attend the awards ceremony to present their ideas to a panel of academics, design professionals, sustainability experts.
In order to develop the success of this year’s competition, BE OPEN and Cumulus have launched a second edition of the UN SGDs-focused competition of a greater scale with wider outreach to students and graduates of creative disciplines all over the world. The awards ceremony is planned to take place in Rome in 2021 and will become part of Cumulus’s 30th Anniversary assembly and educational conference.