Remember these floors?
They needed a lot of love and care. Even the wood floor under the ripped up carpet was in dire need.
After spending a couple of weekends with a couple of sanders and some awesome volunteers, it was clear, the floors needed professional help. FLR Sanders to the rescue! After learning of our project, our goals, our trials and our budget, FLR Sanders sent in their A-team to get us through the rough parts, all in the name of community support and greener, healthier living. They sanded for 5 days straight before applying the first coat of finish. The floors look beautiful.
Before the end of the month we will buff the floors once more and apply two more coats of finish (we are using Bona Water-based Sheer Polycoat) - and refinish the stairs. Once we have a solid streak of weather above 55 degrees and the ground thaws we will able to paint the porch floors and finish the patio. The result? A finished home ready for the market.
A very special thanks to FLR Sanders for coming to our rescue and helping save us time, money and a few tears.
Stay tuned for news of open houses and watch for updated photos.
Dynamic Green Home (DGH)
929 Edmund Street - Pilot Project
Thursday, April 3, 2014
Monday, December 23, 2013
Progress!
Happy Holidays! We've been making progress here at our Dynamic Green Home.
Here's some pictures of the first floor walls we painted.
Kitchen Walls (painted) © harrington
Living Room Walls (painted) © harrington
We've also started patching the floors on the first floor.
Here's what that looks like.
First Floor floor repairs © harringtonThen, we need to
1. hook up our equipment,
2. scrape where needed, and
3. sand everywhere.
1. Sander with vacuum © harrington
2. Scraping gunk off floors © harrington
3. Sanding the floor © harrington
After the holidays we're going to do a workshop on finishing the sanded floors. We're still sorting the schedule on that.
Check back soon for the date and come see how it's done.
Sunday, December 15, 2013
A little help from our friends?
Today is Sunday, December 15. We've got two, that's 2!, days to go in our Barn Raising for the Dynamic Green Home project. Our volunteers, sponsors, material donors and other contributors have helped make awesome progress and we're headed toward something we can all be proud of. Now, we need your help to get us the rest of the way. To quote from an (in)famous movie "we've got a long way to go and a short time to get there." Here's a link: DGH Barn Raising so you can contribute.
Here's what the floors looked like last weekend.
first floor before Barn Raising
first floor before Barn Raising
first floor before Barn Raising
This weekend, and after the holidays, we're going to be scraping and wiping and vacuuming and patching and renting sanders and sanding and vacuuming and applying several coats of finish. We'll go from something you might hesitate to walk on to something you might be willing to eat from? Anyway, we're going to make huge improvements, so these floors will be OK for kids to play on.
Did I mention we need your help to do this? Did I give you a link to our Barn Raising site? Wouldn't you like to be able to come back to this blog in a few weeks and see the great looking floors YOU helped provide? How's that for a Happy Holidays memory? 2013? oh, yeah, that was the year we gave a local family a healthy green home. I donated a can of stain. My wife chipped in a floor tile. Does that work for you?
Enjoy your holidays! Help someone else enjoy theirs?
Sunday, December 8, 2013
DGH Painting Primer: Success!
Saturday, December 7, was our Dynamic Green Home Painting Primer. Thanks to the dozen or so volunteers who came out in some remarkable cold to learn and paint. Thanks as well to our Sponsors and Partners, represented by
and to our DGH crew members
- Paul Bergevin (Hirshfield's Paint)
- Steve Lincowski (Wooster Brush)
- Phil Kirkegaard (general contractor)
- Cindy Martimo (interior design teacher at Dunwoody)
Next week we'll have some pictures of the finish coats when we show up for the Fundamentals of Flooring session. (Speaking of which, have you contributed to our Barnraisings effort yet?)
For now, here are some shots of what Saturday looked like.
Welcome Volunteers sign © harrington
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Volunteers signing in © harrington
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Paul Bergevin, Hirshfield's © harrington
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environmentally friendly, family owned, local © harrington
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low and no VOC contractor's paints © harrington
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zero VOC paint © harrington
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Steve Lincowski, Wooster © harrington
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commercial grade brushes and rollers © harrington
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brushes and rollers awaiting volunteers © harrington
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wall, before painting © harrington
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volunteers cutting in and rolling © harrington
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volunteers cutting in and rolling © harrington
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volunteers cutting in and rolling © harrington
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One of the things that I learned is that changing the composition of paint to make it low or no VOC triggers a need for corresponding changes in application tools. We already know that Hirshfield's has been working to produce their paints in an environmentally friendly way. Hirshfield's and Wooster have been working for quite awhile at making it better and easier for contractors (and homeowners) to be more environmentally sensitive when painting.
Join us next weekend at our Dynamic Green Home for Fundamentals of Flooring. We'd love to see you there.
Sunday, December 1, 2013
Help Wanted
Happy Holidays. As you read this, are you somewhere warm, maybe at home. Are you healthy and looking forward to the exchange of presents during your celebration of the holidays? Would you consider adding one more request to your list?
During the next few days you have a chance to help give a Twin Cities family a healthy, affordable home where they can enjoy their holidays. For a few hours of your time or a few dollars of your money, you can help us "green up" our first Dynamic Green Home.
DGH 929 Edmund Credit Board © harrington
Let's try to put some perspective on why this is really important. There have been numerous studies on the benefits of (and need for) healthy housing. The United States Green Building Council, in a 2012 brief, found:
"An unhealthy home with high operating costs due to inefficiency in energy and water consumption is not affordable....
"Currently, high utility bills are pervasive in the affordable housing. Indeed, low - income households spend on average 19.5% of annual income on home energy costs, while the average for median - income households is just 4.6%.1 ... high utility bills are a serious problem, but asthma, allergies, and other chronic problems that can be exacerbated by exposure to toxins in the built environment can be matters of life and death..."
1"The Cold Facts: The First Annual Report on the Effect of Home Energy Costs on Low - income Americans. " National Fuel Funds Network , National Low - income Energy Consortium , National Energy Assistance Directors’ Association . 2002. http://www.nliec.org/facts.pdf
The Minnesota Chapter of the USGBC, working with Greater Frogtown Community Development Corporation and our community partners, is taking care of two major healthy home factors in the green rehabilitation of 929 Edmund Street. First, this coming weekend (December 7), with help from Hirshfield's, we're painting the interior with low VOC paints. Join us if you can and donate some time. Give yourself a chance to feel really good this season. Second, and here's where we could use both your money and your time, we're fundraising for our Fundamentals of Flooring work the following weekend (December 14).
Why are we making such a deal of this? Why do we think this is not only important, but critical? Hardwood floors provide fewer places for dust mites and other asthma triggers to hide than does wall to wall carpeting. They also make it easy to see when it's time to vacuum or sweep. Have you ever seen the costs of treating asthma, just for our children in Minnesota? They're astounding.
929 Edmund St. (before) © harrington
According to the Minnesota Center for Environmental Advocacy and the Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy,
"The best estimate of total costs of environmentally attributable childhood diseases in the state of Minnesota is $1.569 billion per year, with a range of $1.393 to $1.890 billion. Cost estimates for specific diseases are:
So, we know that childhood asthma costs Minnesota more than $30 million a year. It costs the families of these children much more than money. There's lost time from school for acute attacks. Lost learning when children don't feel well. Anxiety and stress for parents. Let's speculate for a minute that substantially reducing asthma triggers in a green, healthy home doesn't eliminate asthma, but reduces the frequency and severity of asthma attacks by 40%. Simple math tells me we could save more than $12 million dollars every year on our health bills under such a scenario. Childhood asthma: $30.6 million Childhood cancers: $8.2 million
Lead poisoning: $1.223 billion Birth defects: $4.5 million
Neurobehavioral disorders (excluding lead): $303 million"
Dynamic Green Home (work in progress) © harrington
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Sunday, November 17, 2013
Work in Progress
We though you might be interested in an update on the Dynamic Green Home. We've got much, but not all, of the planting and landscaping done. The contractor's obviously making progress on the exterior. (Interior shots come next month.) For a construction site, despite some litter, it's pretty clean and organized. No, the fact that the building is now red doesn't mean it's not a green project. Our green is more than skin deep.
Credit Board
New siding
Over house wrap
Mulch awaiting installation
East side yard serviceberries
Hydrangia
Retaining wall and patio to be
Monday, November 4, 2013
DGH Paint Partner
Dynamic Green Homes (DGH) is delighted to have Hirshfield’s as a Community and Education Partner and a material donor. Through their partnering in the DGH, Hirshfield’s is broadening their corporate engagement with the neighborhood. More about Hirshfield’s role can be found in this video. If you join us on December 7, you’ll get a “hands-on” opportunity to learn more about how Hirshfield’s products can help you green both the DGH and your own home.
Throughout its history, Hirshfield’s Paint Manufacturing (HPM) has been committed to delivering quality products, formulated with the selection of raw materials that are safe for the environment, safe for their customers, and safe for their employees. Being environmental stewards has always been important to Hirshfield’s operational objectives, as demonstrated in the following:
• Hirshfield’s manufacturing facility operates a closed loop reprocessed water system. All wash water used in clean-up process and in the purging of manufacturing equipment is re-used.
• Their facility is designated and in compliance with being a very small quantity generator of hazardous waste (solvents). HPM is committed to a program where less than 200 gallons of waste solvent is generated annually.
• Recycling of all cardboard and paper products generated in manufacturing process.
• Refitting of facility lighting system that conserves 76,000 kwh of power annually. (That’s equivalent to the total electricity consumed each year by about 100 Minnesota homes.)
• Hirshfield’s products can help meet green building criteria such as the United States Green Building Council’s LEED® certification.
• Hirshfield’s collects all dust-like particles generated in the manufacturing process with dust collectors and recycles all filtered dust particles, preventing airborne contaminant from entering into the environment.
• They have converted all forklifts used within the manufacturing facility to battery packs, eliminating all trucks which ran on fossil fuels.
• The utilization of non-toxic raw materials throughout all of Hirshfield’s Paint Manufacturing’s formulation base. As examples, Hirshfield’s avoids using carcinogenic chemicals such as crystalline silica, and Ethylene Glycols.
• They manage a container return program and recycle totes and recycle drums.
For additional environmental preservation please look for Hirshfield’s “green choice”
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