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It’s
Easy Being Green at Home
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by: ARA
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(ARA)
- “It’s not easy being green,” laments
Kermit the Frog. However, today it is easy being
“green” at home. Interior designers can help
you make your home “healthier” thanks, in
part, to a new generation of home furnishings
including fabrics, wallcoverings and flooring
materials that are beautiful, non-toxic and
“earth friendly.”
In fact, a green interior is just like any other
well-designed interior space, says Victoria
Schomer, ASID, owner of a design consulting
business in California. It considers good
functionality and pleasing aesthetics. Schomer’s
business has focused on sustainable and healthful
interiors since the late 1980s.
What do you need to do to make your home green and
healthy? Ask for and use sustainable products
during home renovations. According to the American
Society of Interior Designers (ASID), many
environmentally responsible home furnishings and
building materials are available and affordable to
consumers. Availability will increase and prices
will drop even further when more consumers become
aware of the many benefits of these products and
purchase them. You can also work with an interior
designer who specializes in sustainable design. A
design professional can help you seamlessly
incorporate green innovations into your home and
ensure the final result meets or exceeds your
expectations.
One of the first things a designer will check in
determining a home’s health is its indoor air
quality. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
considers poor air quality a top risk to human
health. “At a minimum, there are key spaces in
the home that should be as environmentally
friendly as possible,” says Trudy Dujardin, ASID,
a Connecticut-based designer and expert on
sustainable design. Dujardin says because “the
liver allows the body to detox during…sleep, the
sleep environment needs to be as clean and pure as
possible.” The addition of a room air purifier
can help, as can the use of non-toxic wall and
floor coverings, paints, furnishings, wood
finishes and textiles, according to Dujardin.
What else can you do to green your home? Use
environmentally responsible paint, textiles and
wallcoverings. Manufacturers have come a long way
in offering a variety of “eco-friendly”
products at “consumer-friendly” prices. Ask
for low VOC (volatile organic compound) paint when
painting interior walls. Strides have been made in
improving low VOC paint, which today is as easy to
use and as high in quality as latex paint, says Ed
Mattingly, ASID Industry Partner, of Mattingly
Decorating in La Grange, Ill. Today stunning
fabrics are being offered made from paper,
recycled soda bottles, straw, wool and tires.
Wallcoverings are being created using natural or
recycled materials, and printed with water-soluble
inks containing no heavy metals. Some
wallcoverings also are “breathable,” reducing
the amount of mold or mildew that can grow over
time. For wallcovering installation, always ask
for low VOC glues and water-soluble application
products.
Floor coverings also have gone green. Installation
of eco-friendly carpeting and flooring in a home
can improve indoor air quality, as well as support
the environment. Eco-friendly carpeting is not a
misnomer, as many top manufacturers offer
excellent recycled, residential products. Explore
using natural flooring materials: beautiful palm,
bamboo, limestone and recycled wood, to name a
few. While the initial costs may be higher than
other types of flooring, in the long run these
materials are cost effective as well as
environmentally responsible. You are installing a
longer-lasting material than traditional carpet,
which can end up in a landfill when replaced.
Nationwide, about 4 billion tons of carpeting end
up in landfills every year.
“I think people still assume doing a green
interior means making a lot of compromises and not
being able to have the finished result they
want,” Schomer says. By becoming an educated
consumer, you can learn that the opposite is true:
home interiors can be green, functional and
drop-dead gorgeous. It’s easy to be green. Sorry
Kermit.
To find out how to locate a qualified interior
designer in your community, check out the free
ASID Worldwide Referral Service at
www.interiors.org. To learn about the benefits of
working with an interior designer and green
design, go to www.asid.org.
Courtesy of ARA Content
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