Building a green home is one step we all can do to lessen the greenhouse effect we have on this earth
When it comes to building a green home , few people would look to paper, recycled glass and old blue jeans for building materials. However, according to The Center for Green Building in Bridgeport, Connecticut, all of those items provide greater health, energy efficiency and sustainability than the materials most of us are used to using. We Americans are very much behind when it comes to recycling when compared to our European brethren.
Erin Buckley started the eco-friendly building supply business after her husband, a building contractor, was constantly sick. “As we did our research, we discovered that so many of the traditional building materials contain formaldehyde and other hazardous chemicals that can be so damaging to our health.”
Some of the more popular green home items carried by Buckley include solar roof shingles, made from recycled glass which reflects heat away from the roof, and Icestone, composed of recycled glass, and Paperstone, which is made from recycled paper from the local school districts. According to Buckley both of these make for excellent, strong, durable countertops without the health risks of granite.
“Many people don’t realize that granite emits radon gas, which is the leading cause of lung cancer,” says Buckley. “These other materials present a great option for homeowners without the health risks.”
According to Buckley, The Center for Green Home Building is founded on three basic principles: Health, Energy Efficiency, and Sustainability, “We find people often come in looking for healthy building options and leave being excited about the ability to be energy efficient as well.”
And where do those old blue jeans come in? The Center partners with a company that turns people’s old blue jeans into insulation. Buckley says they have found that the blue jean insulation is three times as effective and lasts six times as long as traditional fiberglass. Making blue jean recycling in to insulation quite a proficient solution to what to do with those old jeans. Now this is a great green home product!
The Center and its building green home supplies were recently featured on “Attainable Sustainables” a program carried on MXTV, a cable channel created by MXenergy, one of the nation’s leading independent energy providers. This company has made it its mission to not only provide reasonable rates for power but to also work with the community an the country in becoming more energy efficient as a whole.
“We are constantly looking for ways to educate our customers and viewers about ways they can become more energy efficient in their own lives,” says Marjorie Kass, MXenergy Managing Director. “The company offers truly innovative options for people who are building or remodeling their homes. Not only can people make their homes more energy efficient, they can also make them healthier as well.”
In order to educate people about the importance of energy efficiency and other environmental issues, MXenergy has created its own On Demand cable channel, MXenergyTV, or MXTV for short, which can be found on Cablevision iO Channel 654 in the Northeast United States. The piece “Green Home” is just one of many programs focused on energy efficiency and “green living.” The complete story can be found on the MXTV archive at http://mxenergy.com/mxenergytv-video-archive.html.
When it comes to building a green home, few people would look to paper, recycled glass and old blue jeans for building materials However, according to The Center for Green Building in Bridgeport, Connecticut, all of those items provide greater health, energy efficiency and sustainability than the materials most of us are used to using
For MXenergy initiatives on preserving energy and on how to become carbon neutral MXenergy can offer you information on both as well as offering you MXenergy Promotional rates on natural gas as well as electricity in Georgia as well as 15 other deregulated states.