Posts Tagged ‘Social Entrepreneurship’

View Profile: Britta Riley, Windowfarms

October 3rd, 2012

SIR.tv profiles Britta Riley of Windowfarms. Check-out her profile, and look out for more innovator profiles coming out of SOCAP12 from SIR.tv.

Britta Riley is nothing if not passionately optimistic. She conceived the wildly successful Windowfarms in response to a moment of urban anxiety: the lack of space to grow her own food. It’s a scenario familiar to most of the world’s 3.5 billion urban dwellers, even though home-growing produce can be one of the most effective environment-saving techniques we can use. “I was so broke I was renting my apt on AirBnB to pay for food and a tiny room,” she says of her time experimenting with alternative gardening methods. This led her to hydroponics and running nutrient-infused water, a “compost tea,” over plant root systems. Her strategic arrangement of plastic bottles and tubing became the prototype for Windowfarms.

A veteran of participatory projects, Britta turned to the crowd-finding site Kickstarter to raise money to build our.Windowfarms, an online portal where users could help develop the final design. The result was an aesthetic and functional triumph: a high-volume hanging garden capable of producing food even in the dead of winter. She turned to her community again for the second phase of fundraising. With well over 30,000 active users of her project, it’s no surprise she was able to achieve four times her goal of $50,000 — more than enough to fund the manufacturing and design improvements. Britta says her faith in the online community comes from “believing that they were like us, that they saw what we saw, and that they just wanted to know, specifically, how to get involved.”

Britta’s grandfather, whom she described on the first Kickstarter campaign as a “passionately environmental engineer/inventor,” helped influence her human-centric design ethos with his advice to create more user-inspired fixes to his generation’s removed and automated engineering techniques. This can be seen in her previous venture, R&DIY (research and design-it-yourself), which she launched with fellow NYU ITP graduate, Rebecca Bray. It serves as an open-source web platform for mass collaboration on physical systems. Being able to “see opportunities everywhere and to be choosy about where to execute” has served Britta and Windowfarms well; as a pioneer of the collaborative design movement and as a forerunner in urban farming advancements.

Powered by:

View Profile: Jonathan Cedar, BioLite

September 26th, 2012

SIR.tv profiles Jonathan Cedar of Biolite. Check-out his profile, and look out for more innovator profiles coming out of SOCAP12 from SIR.tv.

With BioLite’s newly available CampStove preordered well into summer, Jonathan Cedar sees the high demand as nothing shocking. “There was a desire for alternatives to petroleum fuel — gas can be constraining for campers.” Jonathan spent years developing a stove that uses thermoelectrics (the conversion of heat into electricity) to drive a flame-boosting fan, as well as any USB-powered device like a phone or light. “More and more people are carrying their electronics into the outdoors and don’t have great ways to recharge them,” Jonathan explains. “It’s hard to be out in the back-country traveling with these things.” Anyone who’s ever been camping can immediately see the draw, but add to it BioLite’s larger stoves for homes in developing countries it becomes all the more interesting.

It’s a response that mirrors the development of the product itself; Jonathan began with a solution to a recreational product and, while at the ETHOS Conference, discovered its potential for impact on a global scale. “That’s where we really had our eyes opened to the enormous need for reduced in-home air pollution,” Jonathan says.

A majority of the world’s harvested wood goes to cooking fires, which roughly one third of the global population still relies on. The smoke from these fires is the second leading cause of death worldwide; “I don’t think it was fully on our radar that two million people die [each year].” It was a revelation that shifted their mission; BioLite’s revenue from the CampStove helps support long-term development of their HomeStove, which reduces toxic wood smoke by about 95 percent. The stoves pay for themselves quickly, eradicating reliance on (and waste from) fuel sources and diminishing deforestation.

Jonathan began the project with his business partner, Alexander Drummand, while they both worked in product development for Smart Design. Eventually they left to devote themselves to their BioLite CampStove full time. “It’s very hard to get something off the ground from a part time [approach] and I think making that full-on commitment to dedicate all of our time and resources to seeing this through is what gave our investors the confidence to really stand by our work.”

 

Powered by:

Watch: Anne Marie Burgoyne, Draper Richards Kaplan Foundation

September 14th, 2012

Meet Anne Marie Burgoyne of the Draper Richards Kaplan Foundation. Anne Marie speaks to Jonathan Lewis of IonPoverty.tv about how to be an awesome communicator and the opportunities of the new generation in the workplace.

Powered by:

 

 

Listen: Jay Coen Gilbert on Support of Social Entrepreneurs

September 10th, 2012

Scott Henderson of New Empire Builders discusses support and certification of social entrepreneurs with Jay Coen Gilbert, co-founder of B Lab. Listen to this podcast, and look out for weekly discussions from Scott & New Empire Builders coming out of SOCAP12.
-

Powered by:

 

Watch: Jessamyn Lau, Peery Foundation

August 31st, 2012

Meet Jessamyn Lau the current Program Leader at the Peery Foundation, a past SOCAP participant. Jessamyn speaks to Jonathan Lewis of IonPoverty.tv about the role of a generalist versus a specialist in the market of a social entrepreneur.


 

Powered by: