Pizza, Pizza (Box)

 
GreenBox with the top split into four plates. (Photo courtesy of GreenBox)
When you鈥檙e trying to satiate a large group, pizza鈥檚 an obvious choice. It鈥檚 simple and quick, feeds many mouths for relatively low costs, and satisfies even the pickiest eater鈥檚 taste buds. Problem is, its packaging generates a bunch of waste that can鈥檛 be recycled because of its former content鈥檚 cheesy-gooey-greasy runoff. The top separates into four plates and the bottom folds up to become a handy fridge-sized home for leftovers. It doesn鈥檛 change the recycling factor, but it does reduce some pizza-eating waste.
 
GreenBox has been around for seven years, but according to founder Will Walsh, now it鈥檚 getting attention in a major way. Starting in August, the box will make its way into to package their brick-oven pizzas, and around the same time, two chains鈥攐ne in Arizona, the other in British Columbia鈥攚ill begin using GreenBox exclusively. The company also has a licensing agreement with a Central American supplier that delivers some 750 million pizza boxes a year.
 
These packages made from 100% recycled material don鈥檛
have a much higher price tag than regular old cardboard containers. Even better, they cost less to the environment. 鈥淚f you use [the box] to its full utility, you don鈥檛 need plates. You don鈥檛 have to waste five to six gallons of water washing regular plates,鈥 Walsh says. You also get to skip the paper goods, whose wax coating often prevents recycling even when they鈥檙e clean, and the plastic wrap or aluminum foil for stashing leftovers.
 
Curious how GreenBox got its start? The story鈥檚 pretty amusing: 鈥淚t came in two stages,鈥 Walsh recalls.
 
The first dates back to his college days. 鈥淚 lived with 40 guys and we didn鈥檛 have any plates. That鈥檚 the honest-to-god truth. We were watching a football game on Sunday and we had pizza,鈥 he says. As grease dripped down the arm of one of his buddies, Walsh noticed the tossed-aside, left-for-

Box bottom as container to store leftovers (Photo courtesy of GreenBox)
garbage box. 鈥淚 reached over, tore [the top] into four pieces, and gave a piece to everyone in the room.鈥
 
Walsh鈥檚 pals insisted he could make some dough with this idea, but he waved them off鈥攗ntil a decade later, when he once again performed his superhero-like pizza-feat for a gaggle of 8-year-olds at a birthday party. 鈥淭hey ran out of paper plates,鈥 he says. 鈥淢y friend was gonna send his wife to the store. And I said, 鈥楴o, watch this,鈥 and I tore the top of the box. The little girls just loved it.鈥 This time, Walsh took the raving seriously. (So seriously, in fact, that he bought 50 boxes from a pizzeria, locked himself in his room for a weekend with an X-ACTO knife, and tested configurations until one worked perfectly.)
 

Now, his product prevents pizza boxes from being single-use, hard-to-handle waste. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know how many people would eat off cardboard plates鈥 would. I don鈥檛 know if my parents would,鈥 Walsh says. But 鈥渢he whole premise is multi-purpose, environmentally friendly products.鈥 For an industry that alone, that really means something.