Biomimicry Global Design Challenge Opens Now

Biomimicry Global Design Challenge Opens Now
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Highlights

Biomimicry Global Design Challenge Opens Now. The Biomimicry Institute and the Ray C. Anderson Foundation have announced the Biomimicry Global Design Challenge (BGDC) and registrants are invited to submit commercially viable, nature-inspired solutions to our global food system challenges.

The Biomimicry Institute and the Ray C. Anderson Foundation have announced the Biomimicry Global Design Challenge (BGDC) and registrants are invited to submit commercially viable, nature-inspired solutions to our global food system challenges. The grand prize, to be awarded in 2016, is US$100,000. For more on the BGDC, visit http://challenge.biomimicry.org.

“Our hope is that the Global Design Challenge will mobilize thousands of students and professionals around the world to tackle the problem of food security,” said Janine Benyus, biologist, author and founder of the Biomimicry Institute. “Our goal is to show how modeling nature can provide viable solutions to reduce hunger, while creating conditions conducive to all life. And we want to get those solutions to market as quickly as possible.”

“Seeding and accelerating nature-inspired solutions to global challenges is the aim of this new partnership,” said John Lanier, executive director of the Ray C. Anderson Foundation. Interface Founder Ray Anderson, was inspired by biomimicry and his carpet company was one of the first to invite biologist Janine Benyus to the design table, resulting in the company’s number one selling carpet tile product, Entropy. Designed to mimic a forest floor, Entropy revolutionized carpet tile manufacturing and installation, resulting in little to no waste.

The Biomimicry Global Design Challenge aims to accelerate market-ready, scalable solutions with a unique approach: “There are two steps to the competition," explained Beth Rattner, executive director of the Biomimicry Institute. “Beginning this October, we will select the top biomimetic design concepts and award approximately US$50,000 in seed money to the finalists. Then, with the support of a global network of mentors, finalists will spend the next several months completing their functional prototype, returning in May 2016 to compete for the US$100,000 "Ray of Hope" grand prize. At that point we will select the next round of design concept finalists, and the cycle will begin anew.”

“I have to believe that Ray Anderson would have believed this new challenge is, as he would say, ‘so right and so smart,’” said Lanier. “With our support, the best ideas will be the seeds of new businesses that will carry forward Ray’s vision – that with nature as a guide, business and industry can change the world.”

Registration for the BGDC is open and entries must be received by August 3, 2015. For more information, visit: http://challenge.biomimicry.org.

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