Design e2

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e2 design is a six part documentary-style television series produced by kontentreal sponsored by Autodesk investigating sustainable living and green design from New York City to rural Mexico. It is narrated by Brad Pitt. It aired in the United States on PBS television.

It is a part of the larger series e2: the economies of being environmentally conscious, which explore the solutions to prescient environmental challenges. Comprised of eighteen half-hour episodes, the series covers topics including design, energy, water, food, transportation and places & people.

Shot in high definition, e2 features the thought leaders, innovators and inventors who are catalysts for positive change in the relationship between humans and the environment.

Episodes

SEASON ONE

  1. The Green Apple: sustainable design options for skyscrapers in New York city.
  2. Green for All: incorporating cultural values into sustainable design for impoverished communities such as rural Mexico.
  3. The Green Machine: the benefits of authoritarian leadership are demonstrated in the green projects of Chicago mayor Daley
  4. Gray to Green: residential reuse of structural components from Boston's Big Dig
  5. China: From Red to Green: sustainable design in new construction in China
  6. Deeper Shades of Green: profiles of three thinkers in sustainable design

SEASON TWO

  1. The Druk White Lotus School — Ladakh: The school features sustainable technologies that suit the altitude and landscape, as well as Ladakh's cultural climate.
  2. Greening the Federal Government: The U.S. General Services Administration's Design Excellence program commissioned Pritzker Prize-winning Architect Thom Mayne to design the San Francisco Federal Building, a structure that aims to be the prototype for tomorrow's workplace.
  3. Bogotá: Building a Sustainable City: Enrique Peñalosa transformed one of the world's most chaotic cities into a model of civic-minded and sustainable urban planning.
  4. Affordable Green Housing: New York City is known for its diversity, but that quality isn't always reflected in its public housing developments, which often ignore the social and cultural characteristics of the communities who live in them.
  5. Adaptive Reuse in the Netherlands: Dutch planners tap into their innate design sensibility and the industrial landscape to create a sustainable development in Amsterdam's abandoned dockyards, Borneo Sporenburg.
  6. Architecture 2030: Architect-turned-activist Ed Mazria's Architecture 2030 organization is galvanizing commitment to a carbon-neutral building sector by the year 2030.