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Window
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Sort results by: Date Added | Alphabetically - The Healthy House Institute built a model demonstration house designed to optimize occupant health by minimizing indoor air pollution.
- Green homes link sustainable materials and practices with better human and environmental health.
- Simple strategies that can help you lower your energy bills.
- Designing and building an energy-efficient home.
- Viewing the whole house as an integrated system helps.
- Don't just hang some and forget about them. Your choice of window embellishment could have an impact on your health.
- Whether you’re a homebuyer or a renter looking for a green home, how do you know if a home is truly green?
- While home energy costs are on the rise, homeowners can save energy and money with high-performance windows.
- The American Society of Home Inspectors (ASHI) answers common questions about home inspections, and explains why getting your home inspected is a good idea.
- Energy-efficient glass with a low-E coating is one of several types of insulated glass.
- Create a plan for ventilation whether building, remodeling or leaving things as they are.
- Low-emissivity (Low-E) coatings on glazing or glass control heat transfer through windows with insulated glazing. Windows manufactured with low-E coatings typically cost about 10%–15% more than regular windows, but they reduce energy loss by as much as 30%–50%.
- Measuring glass surfaces using infrared (IR) thermometers helps ensure higher performance windows.
- Revealing facts about mold problems, how they start, and how to safely clean them up. This guidance was written for people living in the northwest USA, and isn't for hot and humid climates.
- Natural ventilation is becoming an increasingly attractive method for reducing energy costs while improving indoor air quality, according to green building advocates.
- Everyone is at risk of being poisoned by carbon monoxide exposure. Older adults with pre-existing conditions, such as chronic heart disease, anemia, or respiratory problems, are even more susceptible to the effects of this odorless, colorless gas.
- If you suspect your home has lead paint, there are steps you can take to reduce the risk.
- Make your home more energy efficient and save.
- Specialty glass work helps make a house a home with very little impact on your family's health.
- CR also explains personal carbon footprints; the dark side of compact fluorescent light bulbs.
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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
healthcare provider.
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