A Method to its madness

With a wind turbine and solar panels helping to produce energy for its in-house bottle molding and packaging lines, Method is demonstrating its commitment to sustainability at its new LEED Platinum-certified facility in Chicago’s historic Pullman district.

Method built its first and only U.S. manufacturing facility on a brownfield site in Chicago’s historic Pullman area. The site includes a refurbished wind turbine and solar panels that produce energy for the plant.
Method built its first and only U.S. manufacturing facility on a brownfield site in Chicago’s historic Pullman area. The site includes a refurbished wind turbine and solar panels that produce energy for the plant.

Known as “The South Side Soapbox,” Method’s first and only U.S. manufacturing and distribution facility—built on a former brownfield site in the historic Pullman area on the South Side of Chicago—is a sight to behold.

Designed by William McDonough + Partners, the 22-acre campus includes a refreshing amount of native landscaping, a refurbished wind turbine, solar panel installations, an expansive rooftop garden that grows fresh greens that will be sold locally, a flower garden, and an in-house bottle molding facility run by Amcor Rigid Plastics

Mind you, this isn’t your typical manufacturing plant that’s now producing liquid cleaners for Method—yes the company and brand you see in absolutely stunning packaging shapes and colors. No, this “Soapbox” is the world’s first and only LEED (Leadership in Energy & Environmental Design, a green building certification program) Platinum-certified manufacturing plant producing consumer products.

The site is located in the historic Pullman neighborhood of Chicago, a unique community built in the 1880s as a planned model industrial town for the Pullman Palace Car Company. The area boasts a tradition of progressive thinking and is undergoing some renewal projects.

Shannon McCann, Production Manager for Method, explains that the actual facility on the site measures 150,000 sq ft. It includes two work-line levels, with different ceiling heights—the higher ceiling elevation allows for more vertical storage for the distribution center while the rooftop greenhouse rests on the lower elevation. Special steel supports with angled rafters provide stability for the rooftop gardens. The gardens, which will be managed and run by Gotham Greens, will grow up to one million lb/yr of leafy vegetables to provide nutritious food for needy local stores and restaurants.

Ultimately, Method hopes the facility will be able to use 100% renewable onsite energy and capture 100% of harvested rainwater from the site.

First U.S. manufacturing site

For Method, Pullman serves as the location for its first U.S. manufacturing facility; it has an office in San Francisco, but until now, manufacturing was done by contracted companies or by its sister company, Ecover, in Europe. McCann explains that The South Side Soapbox is an important part of Method’s environmental focus. Before the plant was built, Method worked with multiple copackers and two different bottle decorators.

“We were having most of our bottles made in Kentucky, decorated in southern Illinois, and then transported to our copackers for filling, and then transported them to customer distribution centers,” McCann says. “So we could say for every bottle that we had made, we were moving it 1,000 miles. That carbon footprint goes against what Method stands for. Building this facility brings the blowmolder on-site, and the decorating in-house on two new lines, and moves the distribution center here. Instead of moving that bottle 1,000 miles, we’re now moving it 1,000 feet. And it doesn’t require trucks and fuel.”

The LEED Platinum designation precisely fits Method’s environmental goals. McCann explains that qualifying for the various LEED categories requires earning points for such things as the energy efficiency of the building, and the use of solar panels and wind turbines to generate electricity, etc.

But why Pullman as opposed to any other location? McCann says, “We looked at about 150 sites, most of them in the Midwest because it’s all about carbon footprint. So from a distribution standpoint, you want to be able to be in the middle of the country. Out of all those sites, it came down to about a handful.”

The final decision was based in part on the community residents. “We very much wanted to be engaged with the community, so as part of the process of choosing the site, there were community meetings where Method personnel met with community members, and those from the Pullman community were the most welcoming and appreciative of the social, economic, and environmental benefits we could provide,” McCann says. “That’s really what put this neighborhood over the top.”

For many companies, the community might not merit such consideration, but as a founding B Corp, Method is about more than making money. It is certified by nonprofit B Lab to meet rigorous standards of social and environmental performance, accountability, and transparency.

“We’re a public benefit corporation,” explains McCann. “Part of our mission is to provide benefit to the world. We wanted to make sure that wherever we built the factory, we would give benefit to residents of the neighborhood. By the time the plant is at full production, we expect to have hired and trained more than 100 local employees.”

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