7 Stunning Recycled Home Decor Items

Check out these amazing items made from recycled materials, courtesy of Kalyani Bansode and Green Diary. Impressive!

Various furniture designers across the globe have proved that recycling is very interesting and is not reserved just to stuff cans, cardboard, and bottles in the containers. A ‘shopping cart chair’ and ‘bathtub couch’ are definitely some out of the box ideas. You never know you might just get inspired and create some new stuff using the older stuff lying around the house.

So read further to check the seven stunning home decor items made using recycled materials.

1. Shopping Cart Chair: This creative Shopping Cart Chair is definitely not designed considering the body ergonomics. However, this adaption of a shopping cart into a comfortable chair is worth a look. It is a well detailed chair, which sports a structurally-sound seat. You can bend the chair slightly. The soft cushion on the back and the arm rest is surely useful. It also adds plush appeal to the overall look of the chair. You can use these attractive and funky chairs during your BBQ parties.

2. Crushed-Can Chair: These crushed can furniture pieces are simple and vibrant. Of course they won’t blend with all interior design schemes, but are robust. You can use them as outdoor furniture, they will go well with the rugged environment. Don’t worry no one will really notice the rust on the chairs!

3. Old Sports Equipment Chair: Are you a sports freak, or anyone else in your family loves sports? Then it’s certain that you might have a collection of some old sports equipment. Here is a simple way to use old sports equipment. You can cleverly reuse them and create funky furniture. It may not suit your current furniture style, however you can also design one and gift it to one of your friends who is a sports fan. He or she will indeed love this sporty yet personally recycled furniture present!

4. Dishwasher Drum Table: Have you ever considered a dishwasher drum to be reused as a furniture piece? Take a look at this recycled dishwasher drum table. It works well as a side table. Once transformed, the odd object suits its new roll. It works well as the base of a cylindrical table. You can also add some interesting lighting patters with it. In addition the hollow center makes the table a light and versatile furniture.

5. Old Bathtub Couch: If you are planning to remodel your bathroom and are wondering what to do with that huge and awkward old bathtub, check this out! You can transform your big bathtub into a useful couch. With some simple modifications, you can design a romantic love seat or a kitsch creation. There are numerous options, so think of one that suits you.

6. Old CD Chair: With the developments in the IT industry, everything related to computers and laptops is getting smaller and fewer. People used to use lots of CD’s. Some of the simple reuses for CD’s are coasters and decorations. Why not use the old CD’s in designing a creative chair? Of course it is a pretty efficient way for reusing loads of CD’s all at once. However, you have to wonder whether the CD chair is going to be comfortable!

7. Cycle Spokes Table: Don’t throw away that smashed and bended bike wheel. You might be wondering what to do with it, so here is a cool solution. You can put together the broken pieces into various useful and attractive furniture pieces. As shown in the picture you can design some eye-catching center tables and side tables.

 

‘Living’ Buildings Inhaling Carbon Emissions?

Intriguing idea from the UK!

By George Webster, for CNN

London (CNN) — What if buildings had lungs that could absorb carbon emissions from the city and convert them into something useful? What if they had skin that could control their temperature without the need for radiators or air-conditioning? What if buildings could come “alive?”

Science fiction? “Not as such,” claims Dr Rachel Armstrong, senior TED fellow and co-director of Avatar, a research group exploring the potential of advanced technologies in architecture. “Over the next 40 years, ‘living’ buildings — biologically programmed to extract carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere — could fill our cities.”

Armstrong works on the cutting edge of “synthetic biology,” a relatively new science devoted to the manufacture of life-like matter from synthesized chemicals, and is something of an evangelist for the discipline. The chemicals Armstrong works with, concocted in the lab, are engineered to behave like organic microorganisms — with the added benefit that they can be manipulated to do things nature can’t. Armstrong refers to them as “protocells.” “For instance, a protocell could be mixed with wall paint and programmed to produce limestone when exposed to carbon (dioxide) on the surface of a building,” she said. “Then you’ve got a paint that can actually eat carbon and change it into a shell-like substance.”

So, just as iron rusts when it comes into contact with oxygen and water, protocells can produce simple chemical reactions when they come into contact with carbon dioxide (CO2) molecules, turning the CO2 into calcium carbonate, or limestone, which stops the greenhouse gas from rising up into the ozone layer. In effect, we are living in (buildings’) waste like we were living in the effluent of animals during the Agrarian revolution,

As a by-product of this process, the British scientist says that limestone produced by protocells could naturally “heal” micro-fractures in walls, channeling through tiny breaks, helping to extend the life of any structure it was painted on to. “And not only that,” added Armstrong. “The thickness of the limestone will grow over time, creating insulation and allowing your building to retain more heat or indeed sheltering it from heating up underneath the sun.” The layer of limestone could take anywhere between a year and a decade to form depending on the concentration of carbon dioxide in the surrounding air. However Armstrong says that “eventually we will see protocell technology become self-repleting (able to replenish itself) and (it) will be considered alive.”

Dick Kitney is professor of bio-engineering at Imperial College London and co-director of the Centre for Synthetic Biology and Innovation. He says that, while the concept is sound, moving it into industrial production is a different story. “It’s a question of scalability,” he said. “Getting the process to work in the lab is one thing, but after that you need to work very closely with major industrial manufacturers to understand if it is at all possible to produce on a mass scale. Sometimes it’s just not possible.”

Kitney says that nobody has yet managed to get any synthetic biological product to the manufacturing stage: “The science is being taken very seriously — particularly in the UK and U.S. … but it’s still early days.” While Armstrong says the science has been proven in the lab, she too acknowledges that commercial applications are still some years down the road. “This is bulk chemical manufacturing we’re talking about, so the process is slow,” she said. “If it were pharmaceuticals it would be much quicker.”

But Armstrong’s work is gaining interest from the industrial sector. “There’s a traditional paint manufacturer here in the UK that is looking into it, but we’re all under non-disclosure agreements,” she said. Armstrong admits that, at present, the paint would be capable of absorbing only a tiny fraction of the carbon dioxide emitted in a city like London, which spewed out around 42 million tons in 2009, according to government figures. “The primitive paints we are developing are not very efficient yet, ” she added. The idea is that carbon is absorbed by a building to create light. Can you imagine a whole city lit by the walls of its own buildings? Armstrong doesn’t think the paint will be ready for market much before 2014 and, at this stage, she cannot comment on how much it will cost to produce commercially. Despite this, she says a major Australian property developer has already placed a future order for it.

Award-winning British architect Richard Hyams, who worked for 12 years under internationally renowned architect Norman Foster before setting up his own practice, is also an advocate of self-regulating building materials. But, he says, attitudes will have to change before this technology makes it into the mainstream. “As with any significant step-change, it’s slow to take off,” said Hyams. “From developers, to agents, to buyers themselves, people generally don’t want to be the first to risk investment in a relatively untested industry when the costs are high.”

In addition, says Hyams, legislation is slow, “slicing off the worst building practices from the bottom, rather than advancing the best ideas at the top.” However, Armstrong and Hyams agree that, as the burden on cities to reduce their vast carbon footprints intensifies, the market will look to more radical solutions. “We’re also currently experimenting with the process of bioluminescence,” said Hyams. “The idea is that carbon is absorbed by a building to create light. Can you imagine a whole city lit by the walls of its own buildings?”

Whatever the future has in store, our relationship with cities’ megastructures and the carbon they produce will likely change. Armstrong concludes with a sobering thought: “At present, buildings are big machines that take our resources and turn them into poison. In effect, we are living in their waste like we were living in the effluent of animals during the Agrarian revolution.”

 

12 Green Things I Am Thankful For

What a great article about being thankfully green!!! Compliments of Roland Oehme from the Sierra Club.

Ring in the New Year with gratitude for what this year has given us, and excitement for what the next year holds. Here Sierra Club Green Home writer Roland Oehme shares the top 12 things he is grateful for going into 2012.

12 Green Things I Am Thankful For:

1) My family and friends are the most important things in my life. I am grateful for the time I’ve been able to spend with them this year.

2) My local nature park that I enjoy daily walks in. The simple act of exercising in nature rejuvenates my body and spirit. I think everyone should be able to take walks in forests, meadows, hills, valleys, streams, wetlands, and other natural ecosystems.

3) I enjoy relatively clean air, water, and soil. However, I see this as the minimum of what is acceptable. Much more can be done to clean up my local environment, especially the Chesapeake Bay (the largest estuary in the United States).

4) All of my fellow human beings who are actively engaged in protecting the earth’s animals, environment, and people in order to create a healthier future for all.

5) More and more people are aware of the major impact we have on the global environment be it climate change, radiation leaks, trash, air pollution, soil pollution, or loss of animal and plant diversity. More importantly, more and more people realize that we can turn this around.

6) Many governments are taking concrete action to ensure a cleaner environment. For instance, Denmark, Germany, and Spain are committed to changing their energy supply from fossil fuels to renewable energy.

7) More people are advocating for the regenerative design model, as described by John T. Lyle in Regenerative Design for Sustainable Development and by William McDonough in Cradle to Cradle. Regenerative design allows all life to not just exist but to grow and flourish in a healthy state.

8) Nature’s beauty inspires and motivates me every day.

9) Many people are learning about and adopting vegan and raw food diets. Adopting a vegan diet has enabled many people, including former President Bill Clinton, to lead a healthier life.

10) Animals’ welfare and protection is important to many people.

11) By choosing a healthy living food diet and lifestyle, I feel healthy and full of energy.

12) That the planet earth is my home.

Roland Oehme is a green and healthy living reporter. Read his blog at www.we-love-rawfood.blogspot.com.

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