ecomii green building blog

ecomii healthy living

Top 5 Green Building Products for Homes at GreenBuild 2009

By Angelique LeDoux
November 18, 2009
File under: Energy Efficiency, Green Building Design, Green Building Techniques, LEED Certification, Remodeling Green

greenbuild.jpg

It’s a far cry from a “tree huggers convention” that began in 2002 in Austin, Texas with only 4000 people in attendance. This years’ 2009 GreenBuild International Conference and Expo drew more than 27,000 architects, developers, builders & innovators, making it clear that a movement is well underway.

Rick Fedrizzi, CEO and a founder of the organization that started it, the United States Green Building Council, or USGBC, spoke to a packed house at Chase Field in Phoenix, Arizona last week. “GreenBuild is about the families who must weigh their power bill against their grocery bill; workers who labor in buildings that take a toll on their bodies and spirits; and it’s about kids who spend their entire childhoods in toxic classrooms,” he said. ”We have the power to make choices that will fundamentally change the environment and people’s lives for the better.”

GreenBuild’s keynote speaker this year, Vice President and climate change activist Al Gore, reiterated Fedrizzi’s sentiment and encouraged all Greenbuilders to stay on track and be proud of their efforts that will undoubtedly be felt by the next generation.

The 2009 GreenBuild event included educational seminars, product showcases and a forum for leaders in energy efficiency, sustainable technologies and climate change to network and share ideas. …read more of Top 5 Green Building Products for Homes at GreenBuild 2009 here

 
Comments (0) Email Link
 

Living in a Jewelbox

By Kirsten Dirksen
November 15, 2009
File under: Energy Efficiency, Green Building Design, Living Space

In a land where the average home size has grown steadily for nearly 15 years and is now over twice that of Europe, there’s a growing group of Americans embracing a small is beautiful philosophy and living in homes “smaller than some people’s closets.”

Call them tiny houses, wee homes, mini dwellings, “sensibly sized” or microhomes, there’s a new movement afoot in the United States, that the Small House Society explains includes “movie stars who have downsized into 3000 square feet, families of five happy in an arts and crafts bungalow, multifamily housing in a variety of forms, and more extreme examples, such as people on houseboats and in trailers with just a few hundred square feet around them.”

While they assert it’s not a movement aimed at being “tinier-than-thou”, there are those micro-homeowners like Jay Shafer who lives in a very wee 96 square foot home, …read more of Living in a Jewelbox here

 
Comments (1) Email Link
 

Living Large in 65 Square Feet

By Kirsten Dirksen
November 13, 2009
File under: Energy Efficiency, Living Space

Homes are shrinking in America. After doubling in size since 1960, the national average dropped for the first time in nearly 15 years (by 9%, the size of an average room). But far from this new average of 2,000 plus square feet are the so-called tiny houses. Also called wee homes, mini dwellings, or microhomes, their definition is not exact, but they run as small as 65 square feet.

And yes, people really live in them. Why? Those at the Small House Society- calling themselves a voice for the Small House Movement- explain the reasons range from economic to environmental to psychological. “The movement is the result of concerns about what we are doing to the environment, and what the environment is doing to us (wild fires, flooding, hurricanes), as well as a shifting economy. Some people just desire to live simply so that others can simply live”.

Jay Shafer builds and designs small houses ranging in size from 65 to 837 square feet for his Tumbleweed Tiny House Company. …read more of Living Large in 65 Square Feet here

 
Comments (0) Email Link
 

5 Simple Ways to Save Money this Winter Pt. 2

By Loretta White ecomii.com
November 11, 2009
File under: Energy Efficiency, Green Building Design, Green Building Techniques, Living Space, Natural Alternatives, Saving Money

winter-saving.jpg

Want to save money on heating this winter? Here are 5 steps you can take to keep the heat in.

The previous post in the Simple Ways to Save Money this Winter series focused on with exterior walls.  Here we discover 5 other insulation solutions that are not only inexpensive but can be done in a short amount of time and don’t require you to tear down walls to accomplish.

…read more of 5 Simple Ways to Save Money this Winter Pt. 2 here

 
Comments (0) Email Link
 

7 Simple Ways to Save Money this Winter Pt. 1

By Loretta White ecomii.com
November 5, 2009
File under: Energy Efficiency, Green Building Techniques, Health Concerns, Living Space, Pest Control, Saving Money

winter-warm.jpg

Although the economy is said to be getting better, most of us are still in savings mode.  With winter approaching and 40% of our energy costs going to heating our homes, the best thing you can do to save money and energy is to ensure that the heat stays there.  And with 80% of homes built before 1980 not sufficiently insulated (According to the Department of Energy), chances are you can you save a bit of money this winter.

The good news is that you don’t have to tear apart your walls to add extra insulation.  In fact, the greatest bang for your buck is by insulating exterior walls.

Here are 7 areas to start insulating to prevent heat loss: …read more of 7 Simple Ways to Save Money this Winter Pt. 1 here

 
Comments (0) Email Link
 
« all ecomii blogs   1 | 2 | 3   Next Page »
 
About this blog

Follow the latest in green design, remodeling and building techniques. Find out about the newest products and where to buy them. Swap stories and advice.

Subscribe in a reader

Add to Google Reader or Homepage

 
recent posts
 
other green blogs
 
blog categories
 
©2009 ecomii, LLC. All rights reserved.