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Energy Saving
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Sort results by: Date Added | Alphabetically - CR also explains personal carbon footprints; the dark side of compact fluorescent light bulbs.
- Rather than leaving ventilation to chance, these systems exchange stale air for fresh air in your home, while helping to maintain indoor climate control.
- Web site allows consumers to calculate how their personal energy use contributes to greenhouse gas emissions, air pollution.
- A few tips smooth out this money-saving trick.
- 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.
- Start \"going green\" by replacing standard incandescent bulbs with compact fluorescent light bulbs (CFLs).
- Find out how to tell whether a product or action is \"green\" or not.
- Going green may be easier than you think.
- The Healthy House Institute built a model demonstration house designed to optimize occupant health by minimizing indoor air pollution.
- 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.
- Dr. Arthur Weissman offers tips that can protect your health and surroundings — and just might save you money!
- Green remodeling can be done in small ways and doesn’t necessarily have to encompass the entire home.
- Bright ideas for better lighting.
- Giving an old house - a 1926 craftsman-style bungalow - a greener, healthier future; This Old House (TOH) dedicated its 50th project to an eco-friendly remodel.
- Beat the potential health risk of gas appliances and, over time, the expense of utility electric.
- How to fix them.
- Consider everything from energy use to the ideal lighting conditions in your home before selecting permanent or free-standing lamps.
- This article describes the design, construction and guiding philosophy of the first healthy house built by John Bower (founder of the original Healthy House Institute) in the early 1990s. Although times have changed and technology has advanced, Bower's founding principles - "eliminate, separate, ventilate" - pictured by the three green vertical bars of the current HHI logo, still apply.
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