A small cardboard schoolhouse launched at the Royal Adelaide Show in 2009 has become a model for both sustainability and the work of sustainable communications consultancy Ecocreative.
The South Australian consultancy designed a package to link learning about sustainability with action in schools. The client was the state’s Department of Education and Children’s Services (DECS).
What set the package apart was an inventive way of using a potential off-cut from the presentation folders. Instead of discarding it, they used the excess to create a fun-to-assemble fold-up schoolhouse. Reinforcing sustainability concepts on a number of levels, the cardboard schoolhouse helped educate children on elements of sustainably designed buildings, including orientation and the placement of eaves.
“Since the die, stock and press-time were already being used for the presentation folders, this extremely successful piece didn’t involve additional costs or use of resources” says Project Manager Jamie Ackerman-Harvie.
Questioning the consequences of potential waste resulted in an inventive solution that supported the sustainable message of the entire package.
Since it began in 1998, Ecocreative has focused on reducing waste and specifying sustainable materials (including giving preference to Australian made products). “Part of the reason clients come to us is because we specialise in sustainable communications,” says Ackerman-Harvie. “So they are usually happy when we specify materials based on their environmental and social credentials. This also supports their procurement policies where they want every aspect of their supply chain to support their values.”
“An important aspect of [our commitment to sustainability] is favouring Australian products, services and materials,” says director Matthew Wright-Simon. “In particular, using resources from local recycling streams ensures that our recycling policy lives again as new products.”
The folder package is typical of that process. It was printed locally with soy-based inks on Australian made paper (made up of a mixture of post-consumer recycled content and FSC-certified virgin fibre from sustainably-managed forests).
“There are a lot of good reasons to buy Australian made,” says Ackerman-Harvie. “One is to limit kilometres that materials have to travel, which reduces the carbon footprint. Another is to support the local economy. It works well for us to work with local suppliers because we have personal relationships with them. We see them face-to-face and are able to check what’s coming off the press—the end result is a better quality and more sustainable product.”

August 26, 2010 - Jamie, Ecocreative
Thanks for the article!
If anyone’s interested, you can see this project profiled on:
http://www.ecocreative.com.au/projects/government/project4
September 3, 2010 - Joan Greer
What an inspiring and creative idea! This is the kind of inititive that the world needs.