Startup Weekend • 54-hour MVP blueprint

MaterialMatch Chicago

Chicago
Policy + Climate + Civic Tech

Construction leftovers to local projects—before they hit the dumpster.

A marketplace for reusable construction materials (doors, fixtures, surplus) with pickup scheduling and circular impact reporting.

Local fit: Big-city service reliability, building energy compliance, and environmental health; strong need for transparent dashboards and circular construction reuse.

Core user stories

  • As a business, I post a byproduct listing (material, quantity, pickup window, safety notes) in under 2 minutes.
  • As a maker/composter, I search/filter listings and reserve a pickup slot.
  • As a city/partner, I see aggregate diversion stats and top material streams to inform policy pilots.

Clickable demo scope (what you build)

  • Two flows: create listing → browse listings → reserve pickup (no payments).
  • Basic matching + messaging stub (email-style).
  • Impact counter: estimated landfill diversion + local value retained (mock).

Team of four roles

  • Product & Policy Lead: Define acceptable materials + safety notes; choose a first market (construction, pallets, organics) and diversion metrics.
  • UX / Frontend: Build listing creation + browse/filter + reserve pickup flows; design trust cues (photos, pickup windows).
  • Backend / Data: Implement listings, reservations, and basic messaging; add impact estimation (weight diverted, local value).
  • Partnerships / Story / Ops: Recruit 2 supply-side and 2 demand-side test users; craft the circular economy narrative; deploy.

54-hour build plan

  • Hours 0–6: Pick one user segment; do 5–8 quick interviews; lock the “one workflow” MVP.
  • Hours 6–24: Build the clickable flow end-to-end with stubbed data; draft the policy narrative.
  • Hours 24–40: Add one policy-ready output (brief/dashboard/export); tighten UX; seed data for 2–3 neighborhoods.
  • Hours 40–54: Polish demo script; add analytics mock; finalize pitch + one-page handout.

What to show in the final demo

  • The “happy path” (one user completes the core task in under 2 minutes).
  • One policy-ready output (a brief, dashboard view, or export).
  • One local proof point (seeded neighborhoods / agencies / partner types relevant to Chicago).

How it can earn revenue without becoming extractive

Revenue fit (values-aligned): small transaction fee or membership dues that fund local operators (repair pros, reuse centers), plus optional B2G sponsorship for impact reporting.

Guardrails: publish scoring criteria, minimize data collection, and default to community ownership where possible (co-op/commons patterns).