The Legacy of Ray Anderson
It’s impossible to overstate the impact that Ray Anderson—who died yesterday after a long battle with cancer—had on the built environment. An engineer and entrepreneur, he founded Interface Carpet in 1973 and spearheaded its growth into a multi-billon dollar enterprise. His now famous eco-epiphany in the mid-1990s set the company on a new course, one that helped transform not only Interface but the entire industry. Although his competitors like to grumble about all the ink we gave Ray—he was good copy, he knew the value of a powerful narrative—his example clearly inspired them to become greener, leaner, and ultimately more profitable. That sort of competition, Ray would argue, was healthy competition.
Ray told the story many times: how a late-night encounter with Paul Hawken’s seminal book, Ecology of Commerce, changed his life. Hawken’s argument was simple and direct: industry was responsible for plundering the earth and uniquely positioned to save it. Our good luck? Ray took up Hawken’s challenge and set a daunting goal for his company: zero environmental impact by 2020. He called it “Climbing Mount Sustainability.” Although the goal remains a work in progress, the company remains dogged in its pursuit of the challenge. Ray’s enduring legacy will be the roadmap he created for future “recovering plunderers” (as he liked to call himself). His message: it can be done.
Related: For our July 2004 issue, Ray Anderson spoke to Martin Pedersen about “Climbing Mt. Sustainability.” His company, Interface, was later featured in Metropolis for their LEED Platinum-rated Atlanta showroom. In 2003, Anderson received the International Interior Design Association’s Star award, and in a 2007 interview, Paul Hawken told us that history may well find that Ray Anderson was the Rosa Parks of green building.








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Ray was one of those really special people we perhaps have the priviledge to meet once in a lifetime. He was passionate, kind, humble, and relentless.
He was the person who propelled me into the role of sustainability advocate; he told me that once I “knew” I could never go back. He was right. He then took me on a joyless, disconcerting, and bumpy ride in the mid-nineties. He was the person who cajoled me into buying my first of three Priuses. He was the inspiration to create a college course in sustainability well before it was on radar. Ray often spoke at our college when it was a hardship in his schedule but he never said a word. He was incredibly generous with his time; passion for his company and its sustainable future; and pride in his family.
Ray touched so many lives around the world and leaves an incredible legacy; I just hope we all live up to his charge to become a better and sustainable planet. So many people will miss this very special man I had the honor to call friend.
Pamm Steffen, Professor
Comment by Pamm Steffen — August 9, 2011, @ 4:37 pm