![]() We’ve been on our own journey to improve our sustainability and codify our design for good mentality into a corporate social responsibility program. We at Madcap were impressed with the campaigns FLOW has organized and the progress you’ve made highlighting the Great Lakes as part of the public trust. We first became familiar with FLOW from Colin McCarthy’s documentary, “Great Lakes, Bad Lines,” which highlights the dangerous state of the Line 5 Pipeline running through Wisconsin, Michigan, and Canada and across the Straits of Mackinac. What led you to FLOW? How does our work resonate with Madcap? ![]() This partnership is meant to reinforce that point and educate our consumers in the process. You can’t grow or brew great coffee without water. We all tend to understand that access to water is important for the farmer in developing nations, but then here at home we witness lead poisoning, oil spills, and a general disregard for this life-giving resource. But we know it’s not that simple: as a specialty coffee company that operates both locally and globally, we see first-hand just how critical our freshwater resources are to our communities and our industry. We turn on our taps, we drive to the beach, and it feels like it’s always there for us. Living and working so close to the Great Lakes, it’s easy to take fresh water for granted. Madcap joined 1% for the Planet this January and as new members we wanted to use our first giving project to highlight something close to home and our hearts. Why is protecting our water important to Madcap’s business and brand? Tell us about Madcap Coffee’s inspiration to highlight water conservation and quality. “As a specialty coffee company operating with both local and national reach, issues like the environment, climate change, and water quality are front of mind at Madcap,” said Madcap Coffee founder and co-CEO Trevor Corlett.įLOW spoke with Josh Weichhand, Madcap Coffee’s vice president for marketing and growth strategies, about the company’s environmental message and support for FLOW. ![]() Ten percent of sales of Lake Effect coffee and merchandise online and in Madcap’s cafés in Detroit and Grand Rapids will directly benefit FLOW and our mission to ensure the waters of the Great Lakes Basin are healthy, public, and protected for all. To celebrate its 1% membership and highlight its retail expansion into Northwest Michigan’s Leelanau County, Madcap Coffee is partnering with FLOW to launch its seasonal Lake Effect winter coffee blend and a supporting merchandise collection. This is NOT the place to go if you're at all in a hurry.This week Grand Rapids-based Madcap Coffee Company announced its initial membership in 1% for the Planet and the company’s intent to donate 1% of annual sales to support nonprofit organizations focused on the environment, climate change, and water conservation. Prices were listed and seemed very reasonable in case you're looking for some unique original art. While waiting for my mocha, there was some cool local art for sale that you could check out. Thank you for caring about the product you send out. The baristas seem to take their jobs very seriously and if they make drinks that good, kudos to them. ![]() I don't know what type of chocolate they used but it was delicious, not syrupy or chalky and it married perfectly with the taste of coffee. It was a hot day so I ordered an iced mocha and I waited interminably long for it but you know what, I ain't mad. Seems like a cool spot to get some work done. I liked how they didn't cram all the seats and tables together. It's nice and open on the inside, if a little sterile. I loved it from the outside, cute exterior.
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