Posts Tagged ‘Green’


The Life Cycle of a Box – Interactive Tracking System Utilizes QR Codes

Monday, March 21st, 2011

a box life sticker
      What started as an internal company project for Columbia Sportswear has now turned into full-blown initiative to involve outside companies and customers. The successful “A Box Life” program started in 2009. Paul Zaengle, vice president of the Portland, Oregon based company said,“ ‘A Box Life’ is designed to keep cardboard boxes in use longer, reduce the impacts of shipping products, and encourage people to engage around the concept of reduce, reuse, recycle in a personal way.”

      Currently, over 219,000 boxes have already been reused and more are on their way. “A Box Life” has gained lots of strength recently as sustainability has become a popular move for business looking to stay sharp in the corporate and public eye.  Columbia had always offered their customers with the option to receive their order in a used box. Before “A Box Life” was created there was no way to track the reuse of these boxes. By implementing the use of QR (quick response) codes as a means of tracking the boxes, now the boxes life cycle can be recorded. Customers can scan the box with their smartphone and see where it has been, and companies can utilize this to see how many places the boxes have traveled too.

      Columbia places a sticker with a QR code and some instructions on the outside of the box. If you are not familiar with QR codes, they are becoming a popular trend internationally as a means of sharing information quickly. Most smartphones are able to read these codes by downloading a barcode scanner application. You can see QR codes in stores such as Best Buy, and you will also find them all over the web. (Including www.maxicontainer.com – located on the “Contact Us” page, as a quick way to get directions to our office/warehouse.) Riding the “Green” trend and capitalizing on the rising popularity of QR codes, smartphones, and sustainability, Columbia implemented a rather successful program in a short period of time.

“By offering the option to our customers to have their purchases shipped in a cardboard box, we hope to show that we can make a difference by helping reduce the need for new boxes, and that companies of all kinds can impact the global demand for new boxes by incorporating reused ones into their shipping program.”

Paul Zaengle
Vice President of Columbia Sportswear

      Though new for many industries, the life cycle of our plastic and steel drums and IBC’s plays a very important part in the Industrial Packaging industry. If it is still good enough to use again, why throw it away? Take for example the plastic drum, our industry has been investigating the life cycle of plastic drums for over forty years now. Recycling one plastic drum is equivalent to recycling 500 plastic beverage bottles, so that is what we do. The reconditioning process reclaims around 50% of plastic drums. There is plenty of useful information about the Reuse, Reconditioning, and Recycling of plastic drums from the Plastic Drum Institute. Another example is Remanufactured IBC’s, if the outer steel cage is good, (especially with high and constantly fluctuating steel prices today) we pop a new inner bottle in it. If its former contents were food-grade, it is washed out and sold for a discounted price. Reuse and Remanufacturing are integral parts of the IBC market. This got me thinking, what if the Reusable Industrial Packaging Industry tried to start a program similar to Columbia’s?

      The possibilities are endless with the mixture of technology and progressive and eco-conscious thinking. Together we can collect data by tracking packages and then make adjustments to our business/lifestyle simply by returning or reusing this packaging, all while documenting it’s travels. On a large scale, this data could help us learn just how many new boxes we are saving and also reduce the amount of packaging needed, saving money and the environment. On a small scale, a company could learn valuable things about how their packages are used, reused, or not. Overall, “A Box Life” showcases how thinking green cannot only be profitable but fun, creative, and most of all interactive. Now it is time for other companies and other industries to take note of Columbia’s success with this program and start to track the internal use of their products as well. Maxi is currently investigating a similar program, figuring out the best way to implement the use of QR codes with our products to track the lifecycle and make it easier to identify the differences in drums/totes.

a box life steps

Related Links

Original Article by Chrissy Kadleck, appeared in the Waste and Recycling News Feb. 21, 2011

Michigan Schools Teach Our Children How to be Green

Tuesday, March 8th, 2011

Green Schools
Children learn best by doing. If we are to raise a generation of children who care about the environment and who are willing to reduce their carbon footprint, there is no better way than having them practice these activities as part of their daily routine. They can see recycling in action, help make compost from the food waste, learn to buy recycled products. They can incorporate the ideals of reuse and recycling into their daily lives.

Michigan Senate Bill 904, signed into law on December 16, 2010 by Governor Jeniffer Granholm, revised the activities that need to be done in order to designate a school as either a Green, Emerald or Evergreen school. These activities include recycling programs, composting food and organic waste, waste free lunches, buying recycled or biodegradable supplies, and buying locally produced food produce. It can also include teaching about alternative energy or using alternative fuels.

A good example of how to teach children that their actions affect the environment can be found at  Gill Elementary in Farmington Hills, Michigan. As highlighted in a recent article in the The Oakland Press, the school’s green efforts which include recycling, composting, using less packaging and other waste-reduction efforts, have earned finalist status in the National Geographic Find Your Footprint contest. The Gill Green Team, which is dedicated to making the school more earth-friendly, entered the contest under the direction of fourth grade teacher Christine Wilson and Gina Adams-Levy, Gill parent and Green Team member. The Green Team already recycled plastic and other materials, but lunchtime still generated a lot of waste. To deal with that lunchtime waste the Gill Green Team kicked off Waste-Free Fridays in January 2011, showing skits that gave examples of waste reduction at an all-school assembly. The team also sent notices home to parents, encouraging them to pack waste-free lunches on Fridays. The result, on Fridays the amount of lunch waste goes from six trash bags to four.

Maxi Container believes in helping school’s recycle so much that we have previously donated fiber drums to Osborn Preparatory School in Detroit to help start a Recycling Program with City Year Detroit. We encourage other schools to contact us, whether about our rain barrels and compost tumblers or your school’s recycling initiative. When students put these DIY projects together, watch how they work and understand the importance of building towards a sustainable future. Hopefully we help create a lasting impression on the student, one which says, if we each do something everyday to help promote green living, we help protect and better the world around us while building a more eco-sustainable future for future generations.


5 Tips on How to Green Your Ho…

Wednesday, February 16th, 2011

5 Tips on How to Green Your Home http://t.co/O9Us7Sv via @Digg


@NAIASDetroit on our way to se…

Saturday, January 22nd, 2011

@NAIASDetroit on our way to see this years show. Hopefully their are a lot of #GreenCars on display. Thanx 4 the tickets @MICleanEnergy


Live Green Fair is already a huge success for Maxi Container Inc.

Sunday, September 19th, 2010

Maxi had a very busy day, the streets were crowded.
Panorama of Allen St. off 9 Mile (Location of Live Green Fair)
5th generation Maxi family Jasmine Alene Rubin
makes an appearance with her proud mommy
Jessie Rivera (wife of Joshua B. Rubin)
Rick Rubin (owner) outside the Maxi Container booth.

The weekend has been packed full of people interested in green living. Maxi had a lot of fun educating the public about water conservation and composting. One more day left, tomorrow (Sunday) should be fun. Enjoy these photos, more to come!


GREEN BREEZE Green Living Fair is Tomorrow…come out and support Maxi Container Inc. We will be selling Rain Barrels and Compost Tumblers.

Monday, August 16th, 2010

Tomorrow…come out and support Maxi Container Inc. We will be selling Rain Barrels and Compost Tumblers.


GREEN BREEZE Green Living Fair is Tomorrow…come out and support Maxi Container Inc. We will be selling Rain Barrels and Compost Tumblers.

Friday, July 23rd, 2010