Timber iQ June - July 2017 // Issue: 32 | Page 12

ASSOCIATIONS 'Seed to Seat' project comes to South Africa Furniture design and Life Cycle Assessment project throws the spotlight on versatile, yet less well-known, American hardwood species and identify the true environmental impact of design. Kick off meetings were held with the designers in Johannesburg and Cape Town. Image: AHEC T he American Hardwood Export Council (AHEC), the leading international trade association for the American hardwood industry, has announced the launch of Seed to Seat, a collaboration with seven of the most prominent and exciting designers in South Africa, who have been given an open brief and asked to design ‘something to sit on’. The pieces, to be made from a selection of four American hardwood species, will be unveiled at 100% Design South Africa 2017 exhibition, which runs from 9 to 13 August, in Johannesburg. With Seed to Seat, AHEC aims to identify the true environmental impact of design and build on its extensive work with Life Cycle Assessment (LCA). The announcement follows kick off meetings held with the designers in Johannesburg and Cape Town earlier this month. The launch of Seed to Seat South Africa builds on prior initiatives in the Middle East, Australia and Europe, which have aimed at creatively promoting American hardwoods, 10 JUNE / JULY 2017 // and have involved the likes of Zaha Hadid, David Adjaye, Matteo Thun, Sou Fujimoto, Norman Foster and Paul Smith among others. According to Roderick Wiles, AHEC regional director, the word sustainable has almost become design rhetoric. While many well-intentioned designers claim sustainability in their approach to their work, there is often little solid evidence to support them in making those claims. South Africa’s Andrew Dominic (Andrew Dominic Furniture); James Mudge (James Mudge Furniture Studio); Laurie Wiid van Heerden (Wiid Design); Christoph Karl (Guideline Manufacturing); Jacques Cronje (Jacques Cronje Timber Design); David Krynauw (David Krynauw); and Adriaan Hugo (Dokter and Misses) are collaborating with AHEC to demonstrate that sustainability can have substance. In response to an open brief for ‘something to sit on’ made from American hardwood lumber, each designer has been asked to create a piece made from American cherry, tulipwood, soft maple or red oak.