Design Guidelines Developed from Environmental Assessments: A Design Tool for Resource-Efficient Products

The circular economy provides a potential solution to the take–make–dispose model of resource use that currently characterizes the economy. Guidelines for the circular economy often consist of prioritized lists of measures to achieve resource efficiency. However, for the purpose of designing product...

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Main Authors: Siri Willskytt, Sergio A. Brambila-Macias
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-06-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/12/4953
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spelling doaj-b006130e91ba454e95149eedb1f4d4702020-11-25T03:20:57ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502020-06-01124953495310.3390/su12124953Design Guidelines Developed from Environmental Assessments: A Design Tool for Resource-Efficient ProductsSiri Willskytt0Sergio A. Brambila-Macias1Department of Technology Management and Economics, Division of Environmental Systems Analysis, Chalmers University of Technology, SE-412 96 Gothenburg, SwedenDepartment of Management and Engineering, Division of Environmental Technology and Management, Linköping University, SE-58183 Linköping, SwedenThe circular economy provides a potential solution to the take–make–dispose model of resource use that currently characterizes the economy. Guidelines for the circular economy often consist of prioritized lists of measures to achieve resource efficiency. However, for the purpose of designing products, such general prioritizations of measures are less useful. Instead, the tool developed in this study is based on learnings from numerous life cycle assessments and provides design recommendations for the improved resource efficiency of products based on product characteristics. The tool includes measures over the whole lifecycle of different products that lead to improved resource efficiency. The tool also demonstrates how different product types, such as different varieties of durable and consumable products, can become more resource-efficient and when trade-offs occur over the lifecycle of a product. The tool was tested in a design case where its usefulness and usability were evaluated using a comparative life cycle assessment and a questionnaire. The evaluation shows the tool is informative and provides design suggestions that lead to improved resource efficiency. The tool is considered usable and could be implemented in design practice.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/12/4953design guidelinescircular economyresource efficiencydurable productsconsumable productsdesign tool
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Siri Willskytt
Sergio A. Brambila-Macias
spellingShingle Siri Willskytt
Sergio A. Brambila-Macias
Design Guidelines Developed from Environmental Assessments: A Design Tool for Resource-Efficient Products
Sustainability
design guidelines
circular economy
resource efficiency
durable products
consumable products
design tool
author_facet Siri Willskytt
Sergio A. Brambila-Macias
author_sort Siri Willskytt
title Design Guidelines Developed from Environmental Assessments: A Design Tool for Resource-Efficient Products
title_short Design Guidelines Developed from Environmental Assessments: A Design Tool for Resource-Efficient Products
title_full Design Guidelines Developed from Environmental Assessments: A Design Tool for Resource-Efficient Products
title_fullStr Design Guidelines Developed from Environmental Assessments: A Design Tool for Resource-Efficient Products
title_full_unstemmed Design Guidelines Developed from Environmental Assessments: A Design Tool for Resource-Efficient Products
title_sort design guidelines developed from environmental assessments: a design tool for resource-efficient products
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2020-06-01
description The circular economy provides a potential solution to the take–make–dispose model of resource use that currently characterizes the economy. Guidelines for the circular economy often consist of prioritized lists of measures to achieve resource efficiency. However, for the purpose of designing products, such general prioritizations of measures are less useful. Instead, the tool developed in this study is based on learnings from numerous life cycle assessments and provides design recommendations for the improved resource efficiency of products based on product characteristics. The tool includes measures over the whole lifecycle of different products that lead to improved resource efficiency. The tool also demonstrates how different product types, such as different varieties of durable and consumable products, can become more resource-efficient and when trade-offs occur over the lifecycle of a product. The tool was tested in a design case where its usefulness and usability were evaluated using a comparative life cycle assessment and a questionnaire. The evaluation shows the tool is informative and provides design suggestions that lead to improved resource efficiency. The tool is considered usable and could be implemented in design practice.
topic design guidelines
circular economy
resource efficiency
durable products
consumable products
design tool
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/12/4953
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