Archive for the ‘Green design’ Category

Give Design to Haiti

Saturday, January 16th, 2010

There are so many ways to help when disaster strikes and the quickest and easiest way is to send money. It seems to be a knee-jerk reaction for all of us but it left me thinking about the hard work of re-building and who was going to do that in Haiti. I know that search and rescue/recovery is still going on, and it may be weeks before that is complete, but it’s time to act quickly and for us designers to offer up our expertise in sweat equity.

Architecture for Humanity is our very best option because 88% of it’s funds are directly funneled back into construction projects. I just offered my services for an indefinite amount of time. It’s kind of scary, but I think it’s really what I’m meant to do because I’ve always imagined helping for non-profit rather than profiting from non-sense.Architecture for Humanity is focused on a long-term reconstruction effort and partnering with Yele Haiti, AIDG and more by supplying pro-bono construction work. AFH has set up a Earthquake Reconstruction page, so please, take a look.

2010 NKBA Kitchen & Bath trends? My West Coast predictions

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010

You’ve heard about have seen the reaction videos on YouTube, but have you thought that designers react to association analysis of predictive consumer trends? I a reaction when I read the press release NKBA Reveals 2010 Kitchen & Bath Design Trends yesterday because I’m not sure if it’s based upon American, North American or trends on the east coast, so I am struggling to find the relevance of some of the trends that my association (which I love dearly and it is very close to my heart) claims.

What I thought would be a good idea is to show the difference that a region, or a select market such as the West Coast, can change the way major associations make predictive trends. Here’s my response list:

Kitchens

1. Eco-chic is the new contemporary

Image courtesy Kohler

A new style is on the horizon and there isn’t quite a name for it, so I’ll just refer to it as “Eco-chic“. Eco-chic style is for the urbanites spa for those who are eco-dense and care deeply about our environment, which includes the sights we see in our homes. A there will be a blending of the current urban designs with sustainable products such as IceStone, PaperStone, Kieri, and bamboo so there will be a mix of light blonde typical of Scandinavian styles or dark woods typical of contemporary.  White will be the primary colour pallet and a secondary colour pallet of cool greens, mid-tone greys, deep purple, turquoise, and steel blues. All this will be hit with a THIRD colour pallet of hot reds, warm oranges, and bright yellows to add pop and that wow-factor.

2. Low-impact woods emerge

I have noticed in the conversations that I have with people, and the posts in the blogosphere, that economical and sustainable kitchens are absolutely key to moving ahead in this world. Flat panel doors in Bamboo, Kieri board, or reclaimed lumber that are clear coated in a semi-gloss low-VOC finish are what I am seeing more and more of. Ply-woods and particle board frames are moving toward formaldehyde free and even Soy and hemp boards are finding their way onto the marketplace. People are asking for them and the industry is responding.

Image courtesy Kohler

3. Flooring that grounds you

For some of us, flooring is the most difficult choice we will ever make. There has been a waive of hardwood in the past couple years, but this year, 2010, will be the year of dark chocolate PlybooStrand and Durapalm. Other flooring options include polished concrete and wide format recycled tiles.

4. Kitchen-tech faucets

With so much changing in the tech industries, our kitchens have taken on the same depth and *poof* here’s Kohler’s KarbonTMfaucet. Men be warned, more dish washing is inevitable with this hot faucet.

Image courtesy Kohler

5. EnergyStar is in the spotlight

EnergyStar approved appliances are here to stay and improve. Smaller-sized appliances (24″ width and depth) are huge because they keep you eating your food quickly, thereby keeping is fresh, thereby forcing you to be creative and have fun with all the local produce and foods in the shops.

6. All hail the drawer dishwasher

The NKBA has it right here and the drawer dishwasher is HUGE! EPIC even! The coolest part is that for small spaces, the dishwasher can go under the sink gaining you that ever valuable cabinet storage space.

Bathrooms

1. Your future spa awaits you

Bathrooms are going to be sustainable with low-flow faucets, dual-flush toilets and integrated bathroom tech. Small LCD televisions, vanity spaces that are simple and clean will be built in (Dare I say that the laundry will be under the counter and the typical dryer will disappear? Oh I dare. I dare allot.) Colour pallets will mirror kitchens with white, turquoise and greys being predominantly mixed with bamboo and low-impact woods.

2. Colour on colour

Corian surfaces, coloured fixtures, polished chrome fittings, translucency, and reflection. It has become ever more clear that we expect that our cleanliness is synonymous with shiny white, but it white is less predominant. Blacks and greens are strong contenders in the bathing spaces and they are being married with curves and translucent materials. But grey never seems too far behind, again.

Image courtesy Kohler

glam-Appledom

So what does all this mean? All this white with tone-on-tone, natural products, and pops of colour. Well, it’s all a response to the glam-Appledom of white and silvers, the dialed down spending, instant cash-cab culture, viral marketing, and fashion. Here are a few of my favorites from the Louis Vuitton 2010 fall show.

24 rooms in 344 sq. ft.

Friday, January 8th, 2010

HONG KONG – I don’t know how I EVER let this post slip me by because it’s AWESOME!

Gary Chang, Architect and small space guru, has 24 spaces all within 344 sq. ft. in Hong Kong. Renovated in 2008, Chang has lived in the SAME seventh-floor apartment since he was fourteen, when he moved in with his parents and siblings. Talk about life-cycle! Walls slide, chairs and tables fold down, and there are even 3 bedrooms in this place. Can you beleive it?!?

He had been itching to tear down the walls since his teenage years, when he sketched new designs for the family home, and he then began in earnest. In the last two decades, he has renovated four times, on progressively bigger budgets as his company, Edge Design Institute, has grown. His latest effort, which took a year and cost just over $218,000, he calls the “Domestic Transformer.” – via New York Times

Check out the pics below or the video by clicking here.

All images courtesy Marcel Lam for the New York Times

24 Rooms Tucked Into One, New York Times (01.14.2009), Virgina Gardner

Hong Kong Space Saver: Worlds Greenest Homes, Planet Green  (01.07.2010)

Moving walls transform apartment: Four minutes of WOW! (video), TreeHugger.com (01.06.2010), Lloyd Alter

Gary Chang’s domestic transformer, TreeHugger.com (01.15.2009), Lloyd Alter

Builders Zero In on New Goal of Energy-Neutral Housing: Wall Street Journal

Thursday, January 7th, 2010

Wall Street Journal – Jim Carlton writes that the green building movment is aming for a zero net energy use goal, and I agree that he’s right. Play the zero sum game by clicking the links in the article.

But a bigger shift toward net-zero construction faces hurdles, largely because such buildings often are more expensive to build. To reach zero energy use, for instance, a building needs to produce its own power such as through solar or wind. Rooftop solar panels can cost upward of $10,000 on a three-bedroom home alone.

Some industry analysts say the costs of erecting net-zero homes have declined somewhat as green building has become more mainstream. With energy costs more than doubling across the U.S. in the past decade, energy-savings measures have become more attractive to builders.

Wall Street Journal (12.24.2009) link; Carlton, Jim

144 sq ft micro home by BC’s own twelve3

Monday, January 4th, 2010

Vancouver Island (BC)John Stewart says the future is small and he wants you to live in it. Twelve3 is a Vancouver Island based company specializing in 123 or 103 micro homes and are high-tech and affordable. Sounds too good to be true, doesn’t it? Not so! It comes complete with a dishwasher, microwave, oven, closet, bathroom and so much day-lighting that this dreary rain won’t be noticed. All this for around $25,000.

When I started designing the cube,” John told Small House Stylea conscious decision was made to make it comfortable and practical. Somewhere you could be happy to invite friends over to, somewhere you would be proud of. A home, not just shelter.

So I started with a blank piece of paper and concentrated on what I liked about a conventional home and tried to eliminate what I didn’t like. It had to be bright and airy, nothing toxic involved in its construction, and built in as environmentally friendly way as possible.

Read more at Small House Style.

Upcycling: new word for old tricks

Wednesday, December 23rd, 2009

Upcycling is a term (and I use “term” loosely) that was coined in by William McDonough and Michael Braungart in their book Cradle to Cradle: Remaking the Way We Make Things. In their book, McDonough and Braungart claim that to reduce potential waste material that is a good idea to make use of said waste material as a new product without the additional expense of recycling. Upcycling is nothing new, and it’s not a new way of actually doing anything, it’s already an important middle part of the Three R’s (Reduce, Reuse, Recycle) – reuse. It’s a fake and I don’t buy it.

The part that we’re missing about the importance of upcycling is that the word has gone viral, meaning it’s not popular quite yet and it’s still pretty cool to an exclusive few who are in the know, but again, it’s nothing new and has simply replaced a GenX term. But, I strongly urge you to know what the word upcycling actually means before using it inappropriatly. According to the Sustainable Dictionary, upcycling is “[t]he process of converting an industrial nutrient (material) into something of similar or greater value, in its second life. Aluminum and glass, for example, can usually be upcycled into the same quality of aluminum and glass as the original products.”

Reusing products and materials are already out there like using that old pair of underwear as a household rag, wearing your grandmothers wedding dress, or reclaimed lumber. There are also several websites popping up like Upcycle Canada (upcycle.ca), which if you were to just use your common sense that it would never be there. It’s also already in mainstream industries, like Freitag, who since 1993 has been using old truck tarpaulins to make their products (pictured).

So I have to say that this whole “upcycling” thing is simply just a new word for old tricks.

www.flickr.com

More photos or video tagged with reuse on Flickr

UK Smithfield uses 100% cardboard for shops’ interior

Sunday, December 13th, 2009

[exclude](Manchester UK) Smithfield is an independent menswear shop that had an agenda.

The shop, boasting a striking, interesting and unique interior, made from 100% recycled materials, by sustainable designer Peter Masters, will stock a host of Scandinavian and European brands including: Wood Wood, Spitfire Design, On Tour, Organic label Knowledge Cotton Apparel, Dunderdon and local brand Three Crowns, as well as selected music titles from local labels Fat City Recordings and Electrik Souls.

Peter Masters of Burnt Toast, designed the shop around cardboard boxes, shipping tubes and all sourced from Romiley Board Mill. All the wood in construction came from MRC, a local Manchester timber recycling company. I think the idea is genius. Taking an everyday object and use it in a new way that benefits the function and form of the shop.

Inhabitat Green Gift Guide 2009: Sexist?

Saturday, November 28th, 2009

[exclude]Inhabitat came out with a sleek Green Gift Guide for 2009 this past week. Some of them are pretty cool and I especially like the idea of purchasing something that has great value and isn’t newly manufactured.

Only problem is, it’s kind of a segregated guide. I went strait to the category marked “gifts for girls” because of this AWESOME Eco-Chalet Dollhouse. So I re-wrote the description:

Encourage your little girl’s child’s inner green architect with this beautifully-made green dollhouse. Made from all natural recycled rubber wood, it’s no ordinary dollhouse! It comes with a whole host of green design features (miniature replica photovoltaics!) as well as two separate units that can be arranged and rearranged until she they’re is satisfied that she they has have the house of her their dreams.

Holiday sexism sucks.