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 WILLIAM MCDONOUGH

Bill McDonough is a world-renowned architect and designer and winner of three U.S. presidential awards: the Presidential Award for Sustainable Development (1996), the National Design Award (2004); and the Presidential Green Chemistry Challenge Award (2003). Time magazine recognized him as a “Hero for the Planet” in 1999, stating that "his utopianism is grounded in a unified philosophy that – in demonstrable and practical ways – is changing the design of the world."

Bill has been a leader in the sustainable development movement since its inception. He designed and built the first solar-heated house in Ireland in 1977 while still a student at Yale University and designed the first "green office" in the U.S. for the Environmental Defense Fund in 1985. He was commissioned in 1991 by the City of Hannover to write "The Hannover Principles: Design for Sustainability," the official design guidelines for the 2000 World's Fair, which the City presented to the 1992 U.N. Earth Summit in Brazil. William and German chemist Dr. Michael Braungart co-authored "Cradle to Cradle: Remaking the Way We Make Things."

McDonough Braungart Design Chemistry employs a comprehensive Cradle to Cradle design protocol to chemical benchmarking, supply-chain integration, energy and materials assessment, clean-production qualification, and sustainability issue management and optimization.

A recognized leader in sustainable design and development, Bill writes and speaks extensively on his vision of the hopeful, positive, and inspiring possibilities of an environmentally and economically intelligent future-- by design.

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