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Lost In Fiber. Biennale Internationale Du Lin de Portneuf. NEWS! Plastic Relics. Go Green || Sustainable Design - Buildipedia.com™ Upgrade your home’s insulation and air-seal gaps and cracks sooner rather than later. This is one home improvement that will pay for itself relatively quickly and then continue to generate savings for as long as you live in your home. Even if a full upgrade is not in your budget this year, you can tackle several low- or no-cost improvements right now.

Here are 10 tips to keep your home comfortable this winter. 1. Use the passive solar heat that’s available to you. If you have a sunroom or enclosed porch with a southern exposure, it can collect a great deal of heat. Use a small fan or natural convection to move air through a doorway from solar-warmed rooms to adjacent interior spaces. 2. In winter, a surprising amount of cold air can leak into your house around window and door openings, due largely to the fact that the framed (or rough) opening of a window or door is bigger than actual size of the window or door. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.

The Best Green Designs from the NYU ITP Spring Student Show | Inhabitat New York City. One of the very first things that caught our attention was the Re-cyclelight designed by Becky Kazansky and Alexander Kozovski. The small bike light is powered by kinetic energy recovered from braking the bike — perfect for alerting drivers that you are slowing down. Smart and practical, the light only has a few small pieces so its very non-invasive, and it requires no extra work from the cyclists to activate. Another incredibly practical design came from Michell J.

Cardona and Nelson Ramon. The duo created a low-tech windbelt, that harvests wind energy using an electromagnetic system without the need for a wind turbine or other rotating device. They constructed a wood frame, which they then attached strips of Scotch tape to.