The bigger picture.
Most people think working from home is just a personal convenience. We think it’s one of the most powerful tools we have for a healthier planet.
One person WFH changes nothing. Billions change everything.
If billions of people worked just one day a week from home, the reduction in commuting emissions alone would be transformative. Two days a week and numbers quickly start to show the change. Three days a week and it goes beyond transport. Quieter roads all week, less infrastructure needed, and something more profound, people no longer having to live where they work.
We are not talking about an exodus to the countryside. But the sustainability benefits of the theory of Urban Decentralisation are well documented. If you work in the city two days a week, you can live outside it, you can have space, a garden, a slower pace. And as a result big cities get less pressure on their roads and their infrastructure. Cities are extraordinarily expensive to run at peak density, every additional person requires water, sewage, transport and waste systems built at enormous cost into ground that’s already full. Every day, thousands of lorries bring food, goods and supplies in, and others take waste back out.
Even modest dispersal compounds across millions of people into something genuinely significant. Less construction. Less energy consumption. Shorter supply chains. More green space per person. The sustainability case for hybrid working goes much deeper than fewer cars on the road.
But we didn't stop at the mission.
The way we make DropTop is inseparable from why we make it. The wood material we use is locally sourced, responsibly made, and carbon negative. The wood absorbs more CO₂ during its growth than is emitted during production and transport, which means your DropTop doesn’t just sit on your wall. It actively holds carbon out of the atmosphere. A piece of furniture that’s also a carbon sink.
Sustainable, premium and durable.
We own our manufacturing because the only way to achieve premium quality without compromising on sustainability is to control every single decision ourselves. No corners cut. No material swapped out because it improves a margin somewhere. No trade-offs that damage the environment on one side of the world so the numbers look better on the other. The result is a product that’s made sustainably, looks and feels premium and it will look and feel the same decades from now.