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Century Kitchens Factory Tour

Posted by Dave Haines on Thu, Dec 11, 2008 @ 01:52 PM
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On Dec. 10,2008, Dave Haines of Haines Contracting Inc. got a first hand view of the making of the Century Kitchens Cabinet line. He was greeted by Mike Cosmo,Business development manager and owner and inventor of the Century Cabinet Line, Pete Saia.Century Kitchen tourCentury Kitchen exterior  

Century Cabinets have been around in the cabinet business for many years. But in 1987, Pete Saia decided he could build a better cabinet with his engineering background. 30 years later its improvements are well noted. They are noted for new just installed State of the Art water-based UV finishing line from Italy is the most advanced finishing system available for cabinetry today and is considered the most"Green" in the industry.  There are no VOC emissions released into the atmosphere.  If you would like to see more watch our tour slide show and vist Century Kitchen Cabinet website at http://www.centurycabinetry.com/.

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Green Remodeling 101

Posted by Dave Haines on Mon, Dec 08, 2008 @ 08:20 PM
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November 20, 2008
Green Remodeling 101 By Coral Nafie 9/2008 About.com: Interior Decorating   Quoted: NARI Past President Advisory Council Chair Everett Collier, CR, and Chair of the NARI Green Education Sub-Committee, Chris Donatelli, CR, CKBR.  Go Green

It's hip to be green.  
And remodeling a home green is easier than you think.

The National Association of the Remodeling Industry (NARI) has launched its Green Remodeling educational program, offering remodeling contractors across the country a unique opportunity to incorporate cost-saving and earth-sustaining green concepts into their clients' homes.

It is estimated that more than a million homes per year undergo major renovation or remodeling.
NARI is a professional association whose members voluntarily subscribe to a strict code of ethics. The association has submitted the following information for publication:

What is Green Remodeling?
NARI's approach to teaching Green Remodeling is an all-encompassing approach that emphasizes making a home healthy, comfortable, and efficient. Consideration is given to indoor air quality, energy conservation, resource conservation, reduced material waste, and the use of products that are better for the environment (and for people).

Why Go Green?
It's easier on the earth, it lowers costs, and it provides a healthier home in which to live. According to the Sustainable Building Industry Council (SBIC), housing alone consumes 20% of America's energy.
  • Homeowners who choose to remodel green can lower their energy consumption by 30-50%. It's widely agreed that forests produce 40% of Earth's oxygen, and that building supplies use 25% of its forests.
  • Remodeling green by incorporating recycled materials or sustainable species will help homeowners to tread more lightly on Earth's natural resources.
  • Green remodeling is becoming more popular as homeowners consider health issues, skyrocketing energy costs and Earth's natural resources.
NARI Past President Advisory Council Chair Everett Collier, CR, states, "Remodeling Green offers every homeowner the opportunity to reduce home energy demands, lessen home maintenance costs, and increase comfort. Remodelers are increasingly exploring green remodeling principles for their overall value for their clients and for the sake of the environment."   The new Green Program at NARI helps remodelers do just that. "If a remodeling contractor seeks to develop knowledge and skill in the area of green remodeling," says the Chair of the Green Education Sub-Committee, Chris Donatelli, CR, CKBR, "the NARI Green program will help realize those goals. This program thoroughly educates the contractor who desires to focus on environmentally friendly remodels."

Facets of Green Remodeling

Energy Conservation
The average home today utilizes systems for heating, ventilation, and air conditioning, and most homes are not built as efficiently as they could be, all of which result in high energy consumption. The U.S. Department of Energy believes if current buildings were green-improved, they would use $20 billion less energy per year.

Green remodeling puts a strong emphasis on making homes as efficient as possible with modifications like energy efficient appliances and thermostats that can be programmed at different temperatures for different times of the day.

Indoor Air Quality

There are many sources that contribute to the air quality inside a home. They include pollutants brought in from the outside, toxic chemicals existing inside the home, and the activities of the occupants that create pollutants.

Major polluting contributors are tobacco smoke, smoke from the burning of wood, coal, kerosene or other such substances, toxic fumes from sealants or chemicals from cleaning products, lead paint, asbestos from insulation, damp carpets or fabrics, and certain pressed-wood furniture products that release chemicals into the air.

Green remodeling seeks to remedy these problems with things like better ventilation systems and using wood, paint, and sealants that are nontoxic.

Reduced Material Waste and Resource Conservation

When remodeling a home, there is often a large amount of construction waste. This amounts to 136 million tons of waste annually, according to the EPA, which in turn makes up 20% of the waste in landfills.
Green Remodeling focuses on reducing this waste during remodeling and reusing materials whenever possible, as 85 to 90% of materials thrown out can be recycled.

Using local materials, building with engineered lumber, and using recycling companies to remove waste are all ways this can be achieved during remodeling.

Environmentally Safe Products

Many products and practices used in the remodel of a home have negative effects on the environment. From chemicals and materials that pollute the air to the disturbing of the surrounding landscape, a myriad of actions taken can cause harm.  With green, care is given to minimizing or eliminating products that could cause harm to the environment or the occupants during remodeling or after.

Overall green remodeling proves to be very beneficial for homeowners.

Green Remodeling:
  • Reduces operating costs in the home by increasing efficiency
  • Conserves natural resources.
  • Increases the value of the home
  • Reduces waste
  • Reduces emissions costs
  • Increases productivity of occupants
  • Improves quality of life
Ways to Implement Green Into Your Home

Green remodeling can be done in small ways and doesn't necessarily have to encompass the entire home. It's easy to pick and choose elements that fit each particular homeowner such as:
  • Non-toxic paints and sealants
  • Programmable thermostats
  • Energy efficient appliances
  • Natural flooring
  • Local building materials
  • Natural fiber rugs and fabrics
  • Recycled material roof shingles and tiles
  • Energy efficient lighting
  • Insulated hot water pipes
  • Tankless water heaters
  • Quality insulation
  • Native plants for landscaping
For more information about remodeling and incorporating green elements into your new space, visit the NARI Web site.

NARI members represent a select group from the approximately 800,000 companies and individuals in the U.S. identifying themselves as professional remodelers.

Consumers may wish to search NARI Headquarters [online] to find a qualified professional who is a member of NARI.

Consumers can also call the NARI National hotline at 800-611-NARI and request a free copy of NARI's brochure, "How to Select a Remodeling Professional," or visit www.RemodelToday.com and click on the homeowner's guide for more information.
 

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The End of Time

Posted by Dave Haines on Wed, Dec 03, 2008 @ 07:43 AM
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  (This is a story written by a fellow I met at the Mockingbird Caffe, a local town restaurant in Waveland )

THE END OF A TIME

Paul Estronza La Violette

(laviolette@datasync.com or www.annabellepublishing.com)

 

Stella has left her key ring on the table where I'm working. She's outside hanging cloths on a makeshift clothesline; I'm making notes on the chores I had to do for the day.

It's a long list. I had to call and get an internet service connected to the old farmhouse so I could access e-mail with my laptop, find out where I could another cell phone for Stella to replace the one we had left at the house, cancel our old phone service, see about cable service for the borrowed TV ... 

The list is too long. I pick up Stella's keys. Any divergence is be welcome.

Unlike my own keys, which are on two separate rings, truck keys on one, car keys on another, Stella's keys are all on one ring. In total, they made quite a handful, a bulge in her purse that I had kidded her about.

She had lost her keys once. That had been an experience. We had to replace remotes and ignition keys for both of the vehicles, the post office box key and the house key. It had been both time consuming and because of the remotes, rather expensive. But today, as I looked at the keys on the ring she had left on the table, I realized that if she lost them now, the expense would be small.

I began pulling off keys from her ring that were no longer useable.

The first was my truck key and its remote opener. There was no longer a white Ford Ranger for me to drive around. The Ranger had been a wonderfully pleasant truck that I enjoyed driving. I had owned it for less than a year, actually just eight months, but it had been a very pleasant experience. My too often told jokes about it being white and thus invisible among the other white pickup trucks on the road was no longer germane.

It was no longer invisible; it was gone.

The next key on Stella's ring was the post office box key. For various reasons, we don't keep a mailbox in front of the house. I usually dive once a day to Coleman Avenue and collect my mail from the Waveland post office. I suppose it's possible that the small building may be still standing. I doubt it. The building stood at a comparatively low elevation and, despite being brick, had probably been washed away in the 35' foot storm surge that all of Waveland experienced.

In any case, it would be awhile before the post office would be operating again. I took the key off and put it aside, sort of something that will come back in use in the indistinct future. In doing so, I began to think about Terry, the Postmistress and a close friend. Had she left in time? This started a bad line of thinking that I quickly squashed. There were too many unknowns, too many friends that we hadn't heard from.

I looked at the keys remaining on Stella's key ring. The last key that I was looking at would be the hardest to remove. It was our house key.

Stella and I had lived in that house for thirty years. We had designed and built much of its sprawling redwood structure ourselves. Each year we had expanded it with the help of a close friend. Working in the heat, arguing about what we were doing, modifying, extending the structure until in the end, it had fitted Stella and I like a glove.

In the last week, I had been working aboard a 36' trawler owned by Ned, a friend who lived in Pass Christian. He, I and three other close friends had spent the week sailing the eastern end of the Mississippi Sound mapping the debris field of an 1812 naval battle. I had written a book on the battle and we were looking for small relics of the nearly 200 year old naval action.

At noon on Friday, the last day of the survey Ned received a call on his cell phone. He listened for a moment and then announced, "Katrina's coming right at us. It's up to a category three and will be here late Sunday, early Monday." We quickly broke off mapping and headed the trawler back to Bay St Louis and the Casino Magic Marina. We worked securing the boat from the storm. Then, calling the various wives to come and get us, we all went to my house where Stella was waiting with a farewell supper.

 It was a glorious, wonderful evening that fitted well the ambience of the old house. We sat in the dinning room told stories, laughed, spoke about next year until late in the evening and then broke up and said our goodbyes.

Stella and I spent Saturday cleaning up, lowering storm shutters and clearing things about the grounds. It was work, but it was a drill we were used to doing. The coming hurricane, while promising to be bad, didn't worry us overly much.

The house had been built extra strong (one inch plywood, 2by6 studs at 2by4 spacing), the roll down shutters were heavy plastic reinforced with steel strips, and the house elevation at seventeen feet, was fairly high for our area.

We felt secure in that we could take 130-knot winds and the ten to fifteen foot storm surge that usually accompanies a category 3 storm. We had done so in Hurricane Elaina, a rather bad category 3 storm.

That night, Stella and I went to bed tired, debating wearily whether in the morning we should stay in the house or leave and seek shelter. We realized that no matter what we finally decided, the next week would be extremely uncomfortable, but we were not overly worried.

We went to sleep. 

The next morning, I got up at 6:30 and turned on the cable TV weather station. Katrina was now a category 4 and would increase to a category 5 by noon. Waveland would get gale winds by noon, hurricane winds by 6 PM and the eye or just east of the eye, would hit our area dead on sometime Monday morning.

Eye or no eye, we were in the worst possible quadrant of the storm, the northeast. The winds would be terrible, but the tremendous surge both n height and force would be catastrophic. I woke Stella and told her we had just a few hours to leave before the roads became clogged with evacuees. We gathered our important papers together, downloading the two computers to a laptop, packed a few clothes, put Holly in his carrier and, driving Stella's car, left by 10:30.

My white truck stayed in the garage. Maybe... Monday, we sat in a hotel room in Tallahassee, Florida and watched the radar show the storm's eye make the hurricane's third landfall, this time directly on the Mississippi coast. All indications pointed to the coast experiencing a terrible calamity. We slept that night knowing that the chances of our escaping a personal tragedy were very small.

Aerial pictures over the next few days showed that the tragedy was much more than personal. They indicated that the coastal Mississippi coast towns, especially Waveland, Bay St Louis and Pass Christian, had been washed over by a storm surge 35 to 40 feet high that had gone a mile inland. Not only was our house gone, but our town was gone as well.

We are in Pennsylvania now staying in an old farmhouse, sleeping in the same room that Stella had been born many years ago.

Things in Waveland and the Bay are different now. They had been significantly changing the last two years and now, Katrina's drastic changes overshadow all of these. I believe much of the wonderful easy way of small town coastal life that I have so carefully tried to document in my writings and books is gone.

So, as to the keys, it hurt, but I began removing the house key from the ring.

 

 

 

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