Going Green Interior Design. Today city-planners, engineers, builders, designers and consumers are...

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Going Green Interior Design

Transcript of Going Green Interior Design. Today city-planners, engineers, builders, designers and consumers are...

Page 1: Going Green Interior Design. Today city-planners, engineers, builders, designers and consumers are looking for ways to reduce fuel and water consumption.

Going Green

Interior Design

Page 2: Going Green Interior Design. Today city-planners, engineers, builders, designers and consumers are looking for ways to reduce fuel and water consumption.

Today city-planners, engineers, builders, designers and consumers are looking for ways to reduce fuel and water consumption and conserve resources in both commercial and residential buildings.

Page 3: Going Green Interior Design. Today city-planners, engineers, builders, designers and consumers are looking for ways to reduce fuel and water consumption.

A green home may save as much as 40% in energy costs over a traditional home.

Page 4: Going Green Interior Design. Today city-planners, engineers, builders, designers and consumers are looking for ways to reduce fuel and water consumption.

Green homes have less impact on the environment by saving energy and reducing wastes.

Page 5: Going Green Interior Design. Today city-planners, engineers, builders, designers and consumers are looking for ways to reduce fuel and water consumption.

Green building (n) is the practice of increasing the efficiency with which buildings and their sites use energy, water and materials.

Page 6: Going Green Interior Design. Today city-planners, engineers, builders, designers and consumers are looking for ways to reduce fuel and water consumption.

Green design (v) is reducing the impact buildings have on human health and the environment through better siting, design, construction, energy efficiency and operation, maintenance and removal through the complete building life cycle.

Page 7: Going Green Interior Design. Today city-planners, engineers, builders, designers and consumers are looking for ways to reduce fuel and water consumption.

Carbon Footprint - a measure of the impact your activities have on the environment in terms of the amount of green-

house

gasses

produced.

Page 8: Going Green Interior Design. Today city-planners, engineers, builders, designers and consumers are looking for ways to reduce fuel and water consumption.

Building footprint – the impact a building has upon the land, the amount of land it uses.

Page 9: Going Green Interior Design. Today city-planners, engineers, builders, designers and consumers are looking for ways to reduce fuel and water consumption.

Organic - made solely from plants, plants grown without fertilizers, hormones or

pesticide.

Page 10: Going Green Interior Design. Today city-planners, engineers, builders, designers and consumers are looking for ways to reduce fuel and water consumption.

Biodegradable – things that decompose quickly without harmful effects on the environment.

Page 11: Going Green Interior Design. Today city-planners, engineers, builders, designers and consumers are looking for ways to reduce fuel and water consumption.

Sustainability– resources that are easily and quickly replaced, renewed or grown. A sustainable resource meets the current needs without effecting

future

generations.

Page 12: Going Green Interior Design. Today city-planners, engineers, builders, designers and consumers are looking for ways to reduce fuel and water consumption.

Green Space – areas of trees, grasses, etc.

Page 13: Going Green Interior Design. Today city-planners, engineers, builders, designers and consumers are looking for ways to reduce fuel and water consumption.

Urban Heat Island Effect is the over heating of a downtown-type area due to the concentration of buildings, roads, concrete and lack of green space.

Page 14: Going Green Interior Design. Today city-planners, engineers, builders, designers and consumers are looking for ways to reduce fuel and water consumption.

Greenhouse gasses – a term given to gasses such as carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide and methane that are suspected of raising the temperature of the earth due to their increasing concentration in the atmosphere.

Page 15: Going Green Interior Design. Today city-planners, engineers, builders, designers and consumers are looking for ways to reduce fuel and water consumption.

Active solar power – the collection and utilization of solar energy.

Page 16: Going Green Interior Design. Today city-planners, engineers, builders, designers and consumers are looking for ways to reduce fuel and water consumption.

Passive solar power – the use of sunlight as a light source in a room or a building.

Page 17: Going Green Interior Design. Today city-planners, engineers, builders, designers and consumers are looking for ways to reduce fuel and water consumption.

Four R’s – reduce, reuse, recycle and renew

Page 18: Going Green Interior Design. Today city-planners, engineers, builders, designers and consumers are looking for ways to reduce fuel and water consumption.

Renewable Energy – is energy that comes from Earth’s natural forces: wind, solar and water.

Page 19: Going Green Interior Design. Today city-planners, engineers, builders, designers and consumers are looking for ways to reduce fuel and water consumption.

Fossil Fuels – are fuels created from products produced from the Earth that are not renewable.

Page 20: Going Green Interior Design. Today city-planners, engineers, builders, designers and consumers are looking for ways to reduce fuel and water consumption.

Become Energy Efficient by seeking to reduce fuel consumption (esp. fossil fuels) and resulting carbon emissions. Use energy efficient products.

Page 21: Going Green Interior Design. Today city-planners, engineers, builders, designers and consumers are looking for ways to reduce fuel and water consumption.

Energy efficient hotels automatically shut off electricity to individual rooms when guest use their electronic keys to lock and exit the room.

Page 22: Going Green Interior Design. Today city-planners, engineers, builders, designers and consumers are looking for ways to reduce fuel and water consumption.

Practice Resource Conservation – Reduce the use of fossil fuels, save water, and use reclaimed or recycled materials.

Page 23: Going Green Interior Design. Today city-planners, engineers, builders, designers and consumers are looking for ways to reduce fuel and water consumption.

Buy local – Use of local materials (wood, stone, etc.), materials brought in from manufacturing sources that are not more than 500 miles away. Long distance transportation creates polluting carbon emissions.

Page 24: Going Green Interior Design. Today city-planners, engineers, builders, designers and consumers are looking for ways to reduce fuel and water consumption.

Improving indoor air quality - Good ventilation keeps indoor air cleaner, as does avoiding products that “off-gas” volatile organic compounds, (VOC’s). A VOC is a potentially harmful chemical and an organic compound that becomes a gas at room temperature – benzene, toluene, and xylene. Ingestions of these gases can cause mild to severe allergic-type reactions. VOC emissions can last anywhere from one week to several months.