Let’s design a more humane future.

The Design for Freedom movement brings industry leaders together to eliminate forced labor in the building materials supply chain, create true market transformation, and build a more equitable future.

Grace Farms Foundation is honored to be invited to the 19th International Architecture Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia, curated by Carlo Ratti. The exhibition will open in Venice from May 10, 2025, to November 23, 2025. Learn more about With Every Fiber.

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With Every Fiber is a long-term exhibition aiming to inspire understanding and care about the materials that make up the built world around us. It is currently on view at Grace Farms in New Canaan, CT.

 

sector data

Size up the situation

$13.7 trillion
construction is the #1 industrial sector at risk of forced labor

The construction ecosystem accounts for more than 13% of global GDP and more than $13 trillion spending worldwide (Global Construction Perspectives). The construction sector is one of the most disaggregated and least modernized sectors, at 1% productivity.

12+
building materials at risk of forced labor

The complexity and the sheer number of unique raw and composite materials per building make it nearly impossible to purchase slave-free materials. But a growing list of risky raw and composite materials, as well as global “hot spots,” can provide direction to help make ethical decisions.

75%
of construction firms have no payroll

Systemic change within the construction sector is difficult because of its very nature. In the U.S. alone, 75% of construction firms are owned and operated by one individual with no payroll, working either as freelance contractors or reliant on subcontractors for additional labor. The layers of subcontractors and middlemen along the supply chain adds to the opacity. But the use of big data and other innovative technology can drive slave-free building.

discover

Design for Freedom Principles

1
Find and address embedded forced labor

so that project stakeholders no longer profit from the slavery or exploitation discount.

2
Pursue ethical decarbonization

ethical decarbonization recognizes the link between the climate crisis and embedded forced labor in our building materials.

3
Prioritize circularity

by shortening the supply chain by reusing and recycling materials, we reduce the risk of forced labor at the source or extraction level of the supply chain.

Take action

We are mobilizing the full ecosystem of architectural, engineering, and construction professionals to build a forced labor-free future.
<p>Design for Freedom Toolkit</p>

DOWNLOAD THE TOOLKIT

Design for Freedom Toolkit

With contributions from more than a dozen leading international experts, the newly released Design for Freedom International Guidance & Toolkit shines a light on critical issues related to forced labor in the building materials supply chain, including the legal landscape, the importance of compliance, the role insurers and investors can play to ensure our building materials are not embedded with forced or child labor, and the growing issue of prison labor.

the movement

Impact

Design for Freedom reimagines architecture by raising awareness and inspiring responses to disrupt forced labor in the building materials supply chain. The Design for Freedom Working Group, comprised of more than 100 industry leaders and experts in the built environment, is raising global awareness about the hidden humanitarian crisis through pilot projects, the media, symposiums, and partnerships with leading universities. Thousands of pro-bono hours have been donated by these global leaders to elevate the movement and accelerate much-needed awareness about forced labor in the built environment.

Testimonials

Industry leaders apply their expertise with an ethical lens to illuminate and end forced labor

“Over the past few decades, substantive strides have been compounding to sustainably design and construct with less harm to nature; yet there is a startling blind spot in terms of the entropic brutality forced upon the workers who are critical to the production of the very materials we source. Their suffering should not be built into our construction.”

Sharon Prince
CEO and Founder, Grace Farms Foundation
Sharon Prince
01/10

Join the movement

Stay informed about our collective work to galvanize a movement to eradicate modern slavery from the built environment.

Share in Something Greater

Discover Grace Farms Tea & Coffee's ethically sourced beverages. Grace Farms Tea & Coffee is a certified B Corp that gives 100% of its profits to supporting the work of Design for Freedom and ending forced labor worldwide.

About

Grace Farms is a center for culture and collaboration in New Canaan, Connecticut. We bring together people across sectors to explore nature, arts, justice, community, and faith at the SANAA-designed River building and Barns on 80 acres of publicly accessible, preserved natural landscape. Our humanitarian work to end modern slavery and foster more grace and peace in our local and global community includes leading the Design for Freedom movement to eliminate forced labor in the building materials supply chain.