Home Green Design InterfaceFLOR Commits to Architecture 2030 Challenge

InterfaceFLOR Commits to Architecture 2030 Challenge

1140
0
SHARE

LAGRANGE, GA.—InterfaceFLOR has chalked up another sustainability first, continuing its legacy of leadership in the contract furnishings industry. The global manufacturer of modular carpet tile has aligned with “Architecture 2030” and is the first manufacturer to adopt the nonprofit organization’s 2030 Challenge for Products.

The 2030 Challenge for Products initiative calls on the architecture, planning, design and building communities worldwide to specify, design and manufacture products that will meet a carbon footprint of 30 percent below the product average through 2014, and subsequently improve on this reduction: 35 percent in 2015; 40 percent in 2020; 45 percent in 2025; and 50 percent in 2030.

“InterfaceFLOR’s own declaration—Mission Zero—to be off oil in the manufacture of its flooring products and eliminate any environmental impact the company may have on the environment by 2020, has so much in common with Architecture 2030 that we were compelled to lead the charge in its Challenge for Products,” said John Wells, president of Interface Americas. “Moreover, InterfaceFLOR is an early adopter of Environmental Product Declarations (EPDs)—statements of full disclosure on the life cycle performance of products, and it’s this ultimate level of transparency in eco-labeling that has qualified the brand to participate in the 2030 Challenge for Products.”

Among Good Company

While InterfaceFLOR is the first manufacturer onboard for Architecture 2030, several of the most influential sustainability-driven organizations are supporting the undertaking, including Athena Sustainable Materials Institute, BuildingGreen, Carbon Leadership Forum, The Green Standard, Green Wizard, Healthy Building Network and Sphere E.

According to Francesca Desmarais, director of the 2030 Challenge for Products, “The critical need for this initiative is underscored by some alarming statistics. The building sector is responsible for almost half of the energy consumption (49 percent) and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions (47 percent) in the United States; and, the statistics for Canada are not much different, at 39.4 percent and 37.2 percent, respectively. While the majority of this comes from building operations, such as heating, cooling, and lighting, the embodied energy and emissions of building materials and products are increasingly having a significant impact. With InterfaceFLOR’s acknowledged reputation and position as a steward of sustainability, we are grateful that they have so resoundingly joined our efforts.”

Go to Architecture 2030 and InterfaceFLOR.

LEAVE A REPLY