Skip to main content

Home/ Sustainable Design/ Group items tagged materials

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Andrew Dal

With Building Materials UK Adding a Bedroom was a Breeze - 0 views

My parents are coming and have plans in living for good here at London. My house is out of bedrooms so I made up my mind and planned to convert my garage into a bedroom. That way, my parents will h...

Plywood sheets Supalux OSB board

started by Andrew Dal on 07 Mar 11 no follow-up yet
Ako Z°om

Binders, Glues & Bioplastics - 0 views

  • Inspiration, News & Infrastructure Action & Inspiration Eco-labels Environmental News General Ecodesign Green Energy International Regulations Professions & Competitions Employment Opportunities Green Architecture Green Design Journals Green Product Designers Green Design Competitions Product Design Schools Strategies & Methods Appropriate Technology Biomimicry Design for Disassembly Human Power Life Cycle Assessment Materials Antimicrobial Alternatives Binders, Glues & Bioplastics Green Fabrics Ecofriendly Materials Green Chemistry Lead-free Solders Non-brominated Flame-retardants Paints & Finishes Paper, Recycled or Certified PVC Alternatives Recycled Metals Recycled Plastics Wood, Certified Sustainable
  •  
    a page of good links to more important sites...about green design
Andrew Dal

More Space, More Fun - 1 views

When my niece and nephew went to college, they moved to London and boarded in at our house. I decided to convert our attic into a bedroom so that they will have a room to stay at for the time being...

insulation boards metal ceiling plaster walls

started by Andrew Dal on 02 Mar 11 no follow-up yet
Andrew Dal

Saved by the Fire Curtains - 1 views

Last week, our microwave oven overheated and there were black smokes coming out from it. I am asthmatic and inhaling fire smoke could be crucial to my health. Thanks to Building Materials UK fire c...

fire curtains

started by Andrew Dal on 15 Apr 11 no follow-up yet
saltydrawers

Inhabitat » PAPERSTONE & RICHLITE: From Countertop to Half Pipe! - 1 views

  • The recent fad of using wood cladding, louvers, and filigree as sun shading for buildings has left architects scrambling for a substitute material that’s beautiful, structurally stable, durable, and sustainable - - - oh, and reasonably priced. Two manufacturers, Kliptech & Richlite have brought to market resin-impregnated paper building products that can not only be used for a resilient building skin, but have also been used as countertops, cutting boards, and skateboard ramps. The two products vary in their aesthetic quality, environmental claims, and price. We’ve also recently covered ShetkaStone which is similar in composition, but has a more terrazo like appearance. If you’re looking for an alternative to teak, redwood, cedar or Parklex, read on…. Both products exhibit superior durability and are available in thicknesses from ¼” to +1″. These “resin paperboards” can be worked by standard wood workers’ tools, but because they produce very fine particulate dust, respiratory protection is highly recommended.
saltydrawers

Common Greywater Mistakes and Preferred Practices - 0 views

  • Only Looks Like a Tempest when You're in the Teapot > Bad news: > Greywater reuse offers much more benefits than are realized > in most systems. > Good news: > Even the worst shortfalls in greywater design rarely cause > actual harm, and for the few that do, it's not much. > For every hundred greywater users in the US, probably 15 are achieving most > of the benefit they should, eighty-some could do better, and a few systems have > overall negative net benefit. > Of these, most have an overbuilt system—the problem is that the ecological > cost of the pumps and pipe are greater than the saved water. > Perhaps one greywater user in a thousand is discharging diaper greywater directly > to a water way, which is about the only way you can create a significant health > hazard. Almost all such systems date from a time when the ecosystem was much > bigger and the human imprint much smaller. > There has not been one documented case of greywater transmitted illness > in the US. > In our area, we have curbside recycling of mixed recyclables as well as trash > pick up. > I've observed that well-meaning citizens put plenty of stuff which looks vaguely > recyclable but is not in their recycling bins (e.g., polystyrene packing), as > well as totally recyclable materials in in a form which is impractical to recycle, > like thousands of bits of loose paper, broken glass, and specs of plastic. At > the sorting facility, they send this sort of stuff to the landfill. > For some households, the percentage of their recyclables which are actually > recycled is as low as 20%, though it could be 95% with good information. This > does not mean recycling is dangerous or illegal. > This is a totally different kind of "failure" than, say, burning > PVC in the backyard (which forms clouds of carcinogenic dioxin). These folks > just need to know what they're doing wrong, and how to do it better. > The aim of this web page is to share with greywater users and regulators > what they're doing wrong. The aim of our > greywater > books > is to detail how to do it better. > Please bear in mind as you read the exhaustive litany of "problems" > that even the most pathetically misguided attempts at greywater reuse still > wind up showing some net benefit relative to the alternatives. > Here's an overview of the failure of greywater reuse to achieve more of the > benefit which it easily could: > Most new complex grey water reuse systems are > abandoned, most simple ones achieve less than 10% irrigation efficiency within > five years. > If grey water treatment systems were built according > to overdone legal requirements, many would consume so much energy and materials > to save so little water that the Earth would be better off if the water were > just wasted instead. > Claims made for packaged grey water filtration > systems are often inflated. Some are very expensive and many don't work. > Some also have the preceding problem. > The majority of successful grey water recycling > systems are so simple and inexpensive they are beneath recognition by regulators, > manufacturers, consultants, and salespeople. > A web search on "grey water" "greywater" > "gray water" or "graywater" will yield hundreds examples > of the errors below. Many are designs from the early 70's, reprinted on the > web as cutting edge, despite having been discredited in the field for twenty > years. >
  •  
    Gray water solutions
Ako Z°om

MoreInspiration » Innovations to inspire your thinking - 0 views

  •  
    a very useful site for inspirations... full of objects/matters/materials... a little sum up and some comments ..; you can find there good stuffs ... CREAX uses Triz matrix too
Andrew Dal

Plasterboard Ceiling System for Sturdier Roofing - 1 views

I am planning to have my ceiling renovated because some of the tiles are broken. A friend of mine recommended Building Materials UK where I can purchase high quality plasterboard ceiling system and...

building materials design

started by Andrew Dal on 06 Jan 11 no follow-up yet
Andrew Dal

Armstrong Ceiling for my Kitchen - 1 views

I am looking for a suspended ceiling for my kitchen. Since the kitchen is always prone to oil and moisture, I wanted to have a kitchen ceiling that is easy to clean. At Building Materials UK they o...

kitchen ceiling Armstrong

started by Andrew Dal on 28 Feb 11 no follow-up yet
Ava Smith

Chief Architect Drafting and Modeling Services - 0 views

  •  
    Chief Architect software is without a doubt one of the most impressive architectural software to create 3D renderings, construction documents and material lists.
kebony1

Durable Wood Decking for Miami Science Barge | Kebony - 0 views

  •  
    Kebony and CustomBeach recently installed more than 900sq. ft. of environmentally friendly Kebony wood decking for the Miami Science Barge, a floating urban ecological laboratory and public environmental education centre.
Ako Z°om

Presse environnement : pro environnement, magazine environnement et démarche ... - 0 views

  •  
    mag super bine fait qui dit beaucoup notamment des pbs de pollution sur certains produits connus ... 
Alex Parker

Raleigh-Durham Airport Terminal 1 Modernisation - 1 views

  •  
    Raleigh-Durham International Airport (RDU) in Wake County, North Carolina, US, has had its modernised Terminal 1 opened, marking the end of several development projects at the facility over a 20-year period.
Alex Parker

Empowering women and girls with clean energy - 1 views

  •  
    Empowering women through clean power technologies has been put firmly on the agenda thanks to recent events held by the United Nations and Ashden Awards. So how is clean tech changing lives and how can it be scaled up to game-changing levels?
Alex Parker

Cerro Dominador Solar Power Plant - 1 views

  •  
    Cerro Dominador is a 110MW concentrated solar power plant (CSP) being developed by Abengoa. The plant is situated in the commune of María Elena, in the Antofagasta region, Atacama Desert, Chile.
Ako Z°om

ReGeneration - Tips & Downloads - 0 views

  •  
    a vivide group regenerated ... green all over... but not you... :)
  •  
    ooops, that's not design, but that's media, just before materialization... the shouts from... some interesting links...
saltydrawers

ArchitectureWeek - Building - Recycling Gets Concrete - 2004.0811 - 0 views

  • It was found to be more practical and less expensive to bring a concrete crusher to the site than to haul the 12,750 tons (12 million kilograms) of concrete elsewhere to be crushed. The crusher broke the concrete into pieces of a size that could be put back into the ground as backfill for the new construction. A conservative estimate is that more than $485,000 was saved through recycling and reusing materials on site.
saltydrawers

On-Site Reuse of Concrete From Demolition Projects for New Construction Projects - 0 views

shared by saltydrawers on 12 May 07 - Cached
  • On-Site Reuse of Concrete From Demolition Projects for New Construction Projects– Rich Jones, John Gottleib, Richard Scheidet, and Peter D. Pohlot During 2006, Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL) demolished 10 buildings/structures while constructing 2 new facilities (the Research Support Building and the Center for Functional Nanomaterials). This paper details how the concrete from the demolition projects was re-used as part of the new construction projects at a significant cost savings to the Laboratory. BNL has an authorization from the New York Department of Environmental Conservation to operate what’s known as the “Borrow Pit”. The Borrow Pit is an area where sand was mined for a Laboratory project, leaving a large void space in the firebreak area south of the Laboratory. The authorization allows BNL to fill the void space with Construction & Demolition (C&D) debris. Approximately 4-years ago when the Borrow Pit was close to capacity, a decision was made to bring in a concrete crusher and mine the Pit to generate Recycled Concrete Aggregate (RCA) to be used around the Laboratory’s firebreak road system to stabilize the roadways and as new road base for new parking areas and roads. Prior to this, the Laboratory purchased virgin crushed blue stone to stabilize the firebreaks. During 2006, numerous older structures (pre-1950) were demolished due to issues such as advanced stages of deterioration, energy inefficiency, and repairs not being cost effective. The following table details the buildings that were demolished and the respective amounts of material (in tons) that were recycled (concrete and metals) and the remains that were sent off-site to a C&D management facility (i.e., roofing shingles, lumber, siding, etc…) Building Concrete Metals C&D 86 300 3 260 326 5 0 18 400 parking lot 2000 0 0 422 80 0 160 445 2600 2 12 527 0 0 150 707/707A 220 20 0 707B 32 0 0 715 6 0 6 753 12 0 12 750 CT & Tank Storage 250 10 0 Totals (tons) 5505 35 618 These demolition projects generated over 5500 tons concrete, which was crushed at the Borrow Pit and recycled as RCA (see Figures 1 and 2). The majority of this RCA (approximately 4800 tons) was used as the predominant base for the parking lots of the two new construction projects – the Research Support Building and the Center for Page 2 Functional Nanomaterials (see Figures 3 and 4). The remainder was used for position: absolu
saltydrawers

TCP - News - Restoration specialist discovers the benefits of TCP's compact crusher - 0 views

  • Restoration specialist discovers the benefits of TCP’s compact crusher Specialising in restoration and conversion work, M.E. Endersby Builders of Willington near Bedford frequently has to remove large quantities of broken concrete and bricks from site prior to importing hardcore for new ground floor sub bases and hard standing areas. Recently Mr. Endersby, or ‘Tich’ as he is known by most people, spotted one of TCP’s compact tracked crushers during a visit to his local Wolseley UK Center and he could immediately see the many potential benefits of recycling material on his own projects. These benefits were proved conclusively the very first time the Hi-C40 was hired for a farm building conversion job where several tonnes of rubble were put through the unit for reuse on site. Commenting on the success of the trial, Mr. Endersby said: “I was delighted with the crusher’s performance and ease of use and I will definitely be hiring one on a regular basis to take advantage of both the cost and environmental savings.” The crusher offered by the Hire Center Bedford branch is in fact one of ten units recently purchased by the company. Commenting on the decision to add the machines to its nationwide plant holding, Wolseley UK brand director for Hire David Himsworth said: “Our interest was initially stimulated by an enquiry from the Isle of Man where skip charges have increased fourfold during the last two years. With the planned increases in landfill tax the problems associated with skips are set to escalate dramatically, so we took the decision to add the crushers to our fleet following the success we have already experienced with TCP’s compact tracked dumpers.” The Hi-C40 is powered by a reliable 7.4 kW Kubota diesel engine, offers an impressive crushing force of 60 tonne at the jaw outlet and has an efficient and unique method of external adjustment to provide a finished product size ranging from 20 to 70 mm.
Ako Z°om

Biomimicry Institute - Case Studies - 0 views

  •  
    of course this institue is one of the next to be founded
  •  
    yes some examples...
1 - 20 of 25 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page