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Building
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Sort results by: Date Added | Alphabetically - Controlling moisture movement in foundations is important for several reasons.
- Exposure to radon gas increases your risk of developing lung cancer. Here's how to test your home for radon and what to do if you have high radon levels indoors.
- In the U.S. today we're far more likely to breathe some of the most debilitating compounds at home. How did things get this bad? A historical perspective.
- How to reduce your exposure to this common chemical.
- Formaldehyde is an important industrial chemical used to make other chemicals, building materials, and household products. Here's how to limit your exposure.
- Rather than leaving ventilation to chance, these systems exchange stale air for fresh air in your home, while helping to maintain indoor climate control.
- Yes and no.
- With energy prices skyrocketing and the temperature continuing to spike, most homeowners dread receiving their energy bill in the height of summer. But what most homeowners don’t realize is that they could own a high performance home that requires much less energy.
- Find out how to tell whether a product or action is "green" or not.
- Going green may be easier than you think.
- Use the principles of separation, elimination, and ventilation to deal with pollutants originating from any source.
- The Healthy House Institute built a model demonstration house designed to optimize occupant health by minimizing indoor air pollution.
- Most people have heard that tight houses cause indoor air pollution. Actually, this represents a simplistic view of the problem. Tight construction is, in reality, part of the solution. This article explains why.
- LEED homes offer many benefits to home owners, including lower energy and water bills; reduced greenhouse gas emissions; increased comfort, less exposure to indoor pollutants such as mold, mildew and other indoor toxins, and lower maintenance costs.
- Various ways in which windows affect our environment.
- By incorporating green remodeling practices, homeowners can avoid serious health issues linked to unhealthy indoor air.
- Green remodeling can be done in small ways and doesn’t necessarily have to encompass the entire home.
- Bright ideas for better lighting.
- Making a case for central vacuums.
- John Bower's advice on building healthy homes.
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Information provided by The Healthy House Institute is designed to support,
not to replace the relationship between patient/physician or other qualified
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