Jun 28, 2008 at 5:00 am by Mike Sowden

Links to Green Your Weekend

unfurling leaf
Read through all our articles for the week? At a loose end? Curl up with a few of these...
The home of Good Housekeeping over in Harlem, NY, has had an eco-friendly makeover. LEED-certified, the new building opens July 30th and is running tours of the premises shortly after. (Ecorazzi gave us the heads-up).
CFLs: great while they're working, not so much afterwards. That mercury is a problem for consumers and recyclers alike - so let's applaud Home Depot, since as Grist reports, the biggest DIY store in the States now collects CFLs for safe recycling.
Amanda Melodini's article here (great title) tells of the latest innovation in air filtration: it's called a plant. (In fact, the breakthrough is all about aerating the leaves and roots so the plant can filter as much air as possible).
Curling up with a good e-book? However eco-friendly, it's a hard sell - but Sony is amongst the companies trying hard to change our minds. Gabrielle at Daily Tomorrow got hold of the Sony PRS-505 E-book Reader. Have a read of her very thorough review - is it worth the $300 price-tag?
Is this the ultimate faucet? It's touch-free, and when the water comes out, it powers a turbine that generates electricity for the touch-free sensor!
With some people, it's shoes. But the latest chic-to-collect is the tote bag. If you're one of them (and you're not alone by any means), don't miss the Savior bags - decorated with a quote that you may recognize.
Here at Ecosalon we like to keep up with the latest in stylish and practical technology. May we introduce the Solar-Powered Bra. (And also point out that those two sentences have nothing to do with each other. Thank you). As usual, it's Environmental Graffitti keeping us abreast of things.
Being fans of Nigel's Eco Store, we were delighted to see the man himself has given an interview with Adam over at Life Goggles. (You even get to see him juggling flying saucers).
EcoStreet has 10 suggestions for looking swish as you cycle. Unsurprisingly and entirely correctly, "Not Wearing Tasteless Lycra Outfits" is right at the top. Wild applause.
Old wax crayons kicking around, edging nearer the trash? Grab them, read Hippyshopper's article, and get sculpting.

Happy reading!

Image: gripspix

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Jun 13, 2008 at 1:00 pm by Mike Sowden

Links to Green Your Weekend

laptop reading with tea and gadgets

Is the week over already? How did that happen? And there are so many other things we wanted to tell you about, such as:

It's Father's Day this Sunday (bought a present yet? How about this or these?).  So you haven't got long to enter Greenupgrader's competition in which you can win a host of Dad-oriented prizes.

Read how building consultants design the perfect green home, over at National Geographic's Green Guide...

...and read the story of architect Winy Maas, who wants to beautify cities by making "vertical suburbias" and manure-powered skyscrapers (no, I'm not making it up). Darcy Frey reports the story for the New York Times.

Don't forget to water the curtains. Air-plants are back in fashion, and this time they're decor. Apartment Therapy can tell you more.

As Vanessa wrote recently, oysters are a marine eco-farmer's dream. Yet as Envirovore reports, oyster-farming in Chesapeake Bay is proving a struggle, despite an investment of $58 million. (It turns out that what oysters need most is clean water, not artificial reefs - polluters take note).

Hit refresh: what we need is to follow some relaxation, thought-clearing and "unbaking" techniques, such as those suggested by Jonathan Fields here. ("Unbaking" is my new favourite word).

 Windfarms have a tendency to rile the local communities under them. Over at Living On Earth, T. Boone Pickens defends his latest project, the biggest windfarm in the world. (Real Audio or mp3 format). Our thanks to Treehugger for blowing this one our way.

Shipping containers have already been adapted into offices, shops and hotels, as we reported back in January. Now, Brio 54 have released the first prefabricated container houses (and very nice they look too). Read the full story over at Ecoble.

Amendment: Brio 54 have let us know that their prefab eco-homes are not in fact created from shipping containers, being instead the tailor-made solution outlined here at prefabcosm. Thanks!

If you're feeling crafty - as in creative, not sneaky - pop over to Whipup and get pleasantly lost amongst the posts until you see something that you absolutely have to try out yourself. (This probably won't take long).

But it's the weekend, and maybe crafting seems a poor alternative to a bit of self-pampering - in which case, Pretty By Nature have plenty of eco-friendly, artisanal suggestions for you. (It's Noel Drake Boehm behind the scenes - thanks, Noel!).

Have a great weekend, everyone.

Image: kofoed

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