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Building
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Sort results by: Date Added | Alphabetically - When you consider the number of hours spent indoors, it only makes sense to build a healthy house, or convert your existing home into a healthy rather than an unhealthy one.
- Ice damming — which can lead to mold, mildew, or rot — can sometimes occur with improperly vented roofs in the winter.
- Radon reduction usually involves one or more mitigation strategies.
- Newer, more benign materials are now available.
- Think you're ready to remodel? Do your research first.
- While air conditioning becomes a pressing need as temperatures rise, taking time to look into energy efficient models can reap long-term benefits.
- Preventing home health hazards by avoiding imported building materials.
- Sierra Club Green Home.com proposes a new industry standard that balances our longtime desire for lots of space with the current and future need to downsize.
- Planning and implementing an energy and space-efficient, eco-friendly bathroom.
- Design details for a more energy-efficient bathroom.
- Some ERVs can recover formaldehyde in the same way that they recover water.
- Is it possible to build without toxins, using breathable walls, and still have an energy-efficient, cost-effective home?
- While plywood and other manufactured wood products have long been a source of formaldehyde in our indoor environments, now formaldehyde-free plywood is available.
- It is sad when people decide not to incorporate healthy features into their home project because of cost.
- New federal standards in 2012 will mean more efficient light bulbs and a change in the way light bulbs are labeled and purchased.
- The primary lesson I have learned in my first two weeks of home ownership is to let go of expectations.
- When using the term “green prefabricated homes”, some of us can’t help but imagine a small double-wide mobile home covered in some sort of mossy overgrowth. While that notion is pretty far out, many of us have preconceived notions about green housing that frankly aren’t true. This book - Prefabulous + Almost Off the Grid - contests these fallacies.
- The author shows prefabricated homes can be built with customizable, attractive, and quality green materials in less time than traditional construction, while reducing waste and yielding an energy-efficient, sturdy, and cost-effective home.
- Jennifer Schwab addresses the debate on how much downsizing is ideal and who should take this step.
- How all the components are assembled ends up being just as important as which pieces are selected.
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