How Green Is Your Closet? musings on Fashion's environmental footprint...
Showing posts with label green building. Show all posts
Showing posts with label green building. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Oh Mexico I'd sure like to go

When I think of Mexico I think of chilis, margaritas, beer - all the wonderful, edible delights that come from a vast country of culinary styles. I do not think of contemporary, sustainable furniture design - at least not until now.

According to the website, Pirwi is a Mexico-based home furniture brand committed to high quality, green manufacturing and good design. Founded by industrial designers, Emiliano Godoy and Alejandro Castro in 2007, today's collection includes over 70 objects by 12 designers and features cutting-edge pieces as well as award-winning designs now considered classics of contemporary Mexican design. 

With a set of Cubos modular bookcases (flash site *sigh* go to Pirwi and click the product selection) made of Birch plywood who needs a closet at all? I'm seeing a sustainable display case for my shoes!

--till next week Restore, Recycle, Refresh & Renew

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Forget the closet. Get a Green Home

Who knew? Philadelphia seems to be the East Coast hub for eco-friendly homes. According to an article by Patrick Pullen in the March/April edition of Arrive magazine, Philadelphia's Greenworks program is an ambitious plan to transform the city into the greenest city in the US by 2015. 

Goals of the program include:
- Lowering city government energy consumption by 30%
- Reducing citywide building energy consumption by 10%
- Retrofitting 15% of homes with insulation, air sealing and cool roofs.
- Purchasing and generating 20% of the electricity used in Philadelphia from alternate sources.

Several companies are helping. Postgreen purchases 18' x 60' infill lots in the city and creates the 100K house, a 1000 square foot, 2 story, 2 bed/1 bath home built on a budget under $100,000. Greenable is a purveyor of eco-friendly building materials. With a design studio in Old City since 2006, Greenable recently expanded into a 3,500 square foot space in Northern Liberties stocking eco-firendly cleaning products, composters, worm bins, paints, countertops, backsplashes, flooring, denim insulation, bamboo plywood, windows, lighting and more. BluPath Design is an architectural firm that has been designing green buildings since 2003 and works in partnership with GreenSteps eco-consultancy.

These are just a few of the companies proving going green is good business.

--till next week Restore, Recycle, Refresh & Renew

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Is your closet under your roof?

Okay this is a stretch and doesn't have anything to do with your clothing closet, but how about your pantry? Budgens, a supermarket in the UK, has started a "Food from the Sky" program in its Crouch End location which just happens to be where I stay when I visit London.

This rooftop garden project is a collaboration with The Positive Earth Project and is designed to bring hyperlocal food to Crouch End - fresh picked from roof to produce section. The first organic harvest has hit the store, tended and harvested by local volunteers.

According to a report in Springwise, "The project is collaborating with the heritage seed library to grow a number of endangered species of food; it also plans to run food growing workshops on the roof and provide seeds from the harvest free of charge to residents and schools."

Proceeds from the not-for-profit venture will be put back into the project. The partners plan to add chickens and follow Fortnum's lead with the addition of bee hives. 
Much more than a green roof, this is soon to be a roof top farm, an innovative way to utilize unused  space and resources - the future of Farm to City;)

--till next week Restore, Recycle, Refresh & Renew

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Closets & Windows

I bet your closet doesn't have a window, but it is the window to your wardrobe soul. This week I'd like to take a minute to give props to a local to me window company that has gained notoriety through President Obama.

Northeast Building Products of Phildelphia offers a range of quality energy-efficient windows and this product offering has lead the company to growth in these economically troubled times. The family owned business has increased its workforce from 185-285 employees. The company has certainly benefited from the Obama stimulus plan, but the greatest impact has come from Obama's mention in the State of the Union Address which lead to a significant increase in sales.

Founded in 1975, this family owned company has work hard to ensure innovation and a commitment to social responsibility. Their work has paid off in spades. Northeast Building Products won two of the most coveted industry awards in 2009: Window and Door Magazine's Crystal Achievement Award for "Most Innovative Plant" and the "Greenest Manufacturer" award from Door and Window Manufacturer Magazine. Investing heavily in green technologies, Northeast customers to qualify for a $1,500 energy tax credit.

Good for the environment. Good for business. Go Green!

--till next week Restore, Recycle, Refresh & Renew

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Sephora & San Fran - Of Course It's Green!












Image: courtesy of Sephora, San Francisco, via vmsd Pulse
According to a recent article in vmsd Pulse, Sephora's Stonestown Galleria store is seeking gold or platinum LEED certification. This is the first time Sephora is seeking certification and plans are in the works for more LEED certified stores. Who knew Sephora has been making green choices for years - FSC (Forest Stewardship Council) certified wood flooring, LED lighting...? Good to know.


"According to Wendy Hawkins, Sephora’s store planning and design manager, this store uses 15 percent less energy; houses Energy Star-compliant equipment and appliances; and has high-efficiency plumbing fixtures that reduced the retailer’s water usage by more than 40 percent. The retailer also recycled all materials from the fixture install, including the protective packaging used during shipping." And they are doing it all, while keeping their signature black and white brand image.

Now if they can make sure that all their product offerings are equally sustainable they will really be doing something special;)

--till next week Restore, Recycle, Refresh & Renew

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Walking the Walk

As reported by Steve Kaufman in VMSD, North Face recently opened a LEED Gold certified store in an old department store in downtown Boise, ID. “We’re not one of those retailers that opens 50 stores a year,” Rice says. “We now have just 26 stores, built over 40 years. We choose our locations carefully and each one has to represent the values of the brand. And we feel this Boise store – with its reuse of an old building and our first attempt at LEED certification – tells exactly The North Face story that we try to tell every time out.”

Boise is one of the fastest growing markets for outdoor activities - hiking, skiing, climbing and has a large youth market on campus at Boise State. The building was home to the flagship Mode Department Store from 1909 to the 1980's and so has high recognition and sentimental value in the market.

The building lended itself nicely to environmentally friendly renovation, providing interesting architectural elements and reusable materials. A series of windows allowed for daylight and passive solar.

Other Leed items include: "Elsewhere, JGA and The North Face crossed all of LEED’s t’s. The building exterior is painted (with low-VOC and low-odor paint) a rustic version of The North Face red to blend in with the surrounding buildings. Powdercoated fixtures (as well as backroom shelving) are made of the renewable bamboo plywood called Plyboo. Feature walls use wood manufactured under sustainable forestry guidelines. The cashwrap and backwrap are built from SkyBlend, a wood particleboard made of 100 percent recycled wood fiber without added formaldehyde. Hardwood flooring is produced from sustainable forestry without insecticides or laminated adhesives. Vinyl flooring is made with recycled content and installed with low-VOC adhesive. And the carpeting is a hybrid yarn that uses renewable fiber from corn starch, installed using a glue-free installation system."

North Face puts the money where there mouth is;)

--till next week Restore, Recycle, Refresh, Renew