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The Wonders of Oneness: The Power of Community

Has anyone attended the Sustainable Living Center series? The current series is entitled The Wonders of Oneness. It is a film series that focuses on peak oil resilience, community building and growing food locally in addition to other sustainable practices. The film showing this week will be How Cuba Survived Peak Oil. The film details how Cuba endured hardships and struggles after the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1990 caused their economy to take a dip. The film also shows how the Cuban people recovered and transitioned from their industrial agricultural system to one with organic methods. A few examples of the organic methods they used include farming and local, urban gardens.

After the film concludes Susan Kroll, international traveler, will hold a discussion on locally grown food. Head out this Thursday to see how a community overcame economic despair through local and organic gardens.

  • What: The Wonder of Oneness: The Power of Community
  • When: Thursday Jan. 27 from 7pm-9pm
  • Where: Sustainable Learning Center main room
    • 2309 Meridian Street
    • Bellingham, WA
  • Admission: Free
  • For additional information call 733-8307

Image from ReSources

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4 Tips for Choosing Green Decor

Cascade Joinery

Island Craftsman bathroom by Cascade Joinery

Now that your eco-friendly timber frame home is complete and you are ready to begin decorating stay on the path of green home living. The best thing to outfit your timber frame home with is green decor. Just like your home, green decor is good for the earth, and given all of the innovative designs of today stylish and creative. Because we want you to decorate you home with green accessories and we know that all products labeled green aren’t, we are going to share four tips for choosing green decor with you:

  1. Know where it was made. Before purchasing wood furniture research to find out the wood’s origin to see if it comes from a sustainable forest.
  2. Know where it will go once it is useless. Check to see if the company you are purchasing from has a recycling program set up for its products once they are no longer useful. You can even invest in quality heirloom pieces that will last throughout many generations.
  3. Breathe toxin free. Choose products that are not made of pressed-wood and those that contain low levels of VOCs so you won’t have to worry about inhaling toxic fumes.
  4. Stay local. Although shopping online is easier, having an item shipped from thousands of miles away is not eco-friendly. Shop in the local stores in your town and check to see if they carry eco-friendly lines or antiques.

Tips adapted from Timber Home Living.

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What's New in the New LEED Draft ?

Over the past few months have you been hearing buzz about the new LEED rating system draft that was released by the U.S. Green Building Council? The draft for the next version was released and for the first time there was time set aside from Nov.8, 2010 to Dec. 31, 2010 for the public to comment. If you missed the last comment period there will be another in the middle of this year before the new system is released in November 2012. Just in case you weren’t aware of the new draft at all, or you simply weren’t sure what it included, we are going to share what’s new in the new draft of LEED that we found on Building Green.

  • What’s new in Water Efficiency (WE)…
    • Additional Landscape Water Use Reduction is renamed (from “Water Efficient Landscaping”) and its calculation method overhauled. Like the new prerequisite (see below), it only applies to projects with more than 1,000 ft2 of exterior vegetated space, and is based on the WaterSense Water Budget Tool.
    • Sustainable Wastewater Management is renamed (from “Innovative Wastewater Technologies”), and also has some key changes. Option 1, to reduce water use for sewage conveyance by 50%, is simply reworded. Option 2, which previously focused on treatment of 50% of wastewater onsite, is now focused on reusing 25% of wastewater. Option 3 is a wholly new requirement, although projects pursuing Option 2 under LEED 2009 are probably at least part of the way to meeting it. It requires resource recovery and reuse for 25% of the baseline nitrogen or organic carbon loading from building occupants.
  • What’s new in Energy and Atmosphere (EA)…
    • Demand Response is a new credit, with two main options: incorporate the capability to participate in a demand-response program through a local utility, or implement electrical load-shifting measures, such as ice storage, that permanently transfer regulated electricity demand from daytime hours to off-peak hours. Either measure would contribute to reductions in peak demand for utility power, avoiding the typically high emissions during those periods. The benefits of load-shifting are usually captured in electricity costs, but not in source EUI metrics, so this credit would help offset the reduced emphasis on cost in the new Optimize Energy Performance credit.
  • What’s new in Materials and Resources (MR)…
    • Recycled Content now merits a prerequisite. The threshold for recycled content is set at 10% of the materials budget, and post-consumer and pre-consumer content are valued equally.
    • Construction and Demolition Waste Management Planning is another new MR prerequisite. Projects would have to develop and implement a Construction Waste Management Plan. There would be no minimum threshold for implementation.
    • A new Whole Building Reuse credit caters to historic preservation. It gives credit to projects that not only maintain at least 75% of the total building, but that reuse a historic building in a historically appropriate way, or that reuse an abandoned or blighted building.

To see what else is new in the new LEED draft visit Building Green.

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Common Timber Frame Definitions

Cascade Joinery Timber Frame home

Anacortes Frame construction by Cascade Joinery

Are you looking into timber frame home designs for the first time but you aren’t able to keep up with the lingo? We understand that you may not understand certain terms specific to the timber frame industry, and we want to help. We are going to provide you with a few common timber frame terms and definitions to help you navigate through your research better.

  • Timber Frame: A construction style where skilled craftsmen joined timbers by mortises (wooden holes) and tenons (wooden pegs) before the use of nails or screws. The style allows for open floorplans and cathedral ceilings.
  • Post and Beam: A construction system with open floorplans that uses metal fasteners between timbers, which can include plates, screws and through-bolts.
  • Hybrid Design: A popular method that combines elements of a timber home with the lower cost of conventional construction.
  • Distributed Load: Found in traditional construction, by which a skeleton of 2-by-4 or 2-by-6 studs hidden beneath walls carry the weight of the structure. “Load-bearing walls” are found throughout the house.
  • Point Load: A system where a few horizontal and vertical beams shoulder all the weight of the roof and walls.
  • Trusses: The apex of timber-frame design that carry the load of the home’s appeal, as well as the weight of a second floor or roof system without any support from below (unless it’s for decorative purposes only).
  • Bent: When trusses are combined with the vertical posts and horizontal beams, they are called bents, which form the basic cross-section of a timber frame. Bents give the frame the strength it needs to carry structural weight.
  • Horizontal Beams: Timber sills (the perimeter of floor sections upon which posts stand), girts (which span between posts; also where the term “girder” comes from), joists (used to support floors), purlins (used between exterior posts or to tie roof sections together), and the ridgepole (horizontal apex of the roof system).
  • Vertical Posts: The legs of the timber frame which include principal posts (used at the corners) or king, queen and crown posts — to name just a few. Each has a specific role in supporting other beams or trusses. For example, a samson post supports the intersection of four horizontal upper-story beams. A joweled post (also called a gunstock post) is fashioned from a whole tree turned upside down to utilize the natural flare of the trunk.

Still unsure about a few things? Give us a call at 360-527-0119, we would love to help.

Definitions from Timber Home Living.

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MLK Day of Service at Whatcom Creek

In celebration of the Martin Luther King, Jr. Day of Service the Noosack Salmon Enhancement along with the City of Bellingham Parks Volunteer Program will serve Bellingham parks on Monday January 17th. The groups will work to remove non-native and invasive plant species, plant new native trees and shrubs, spread mulch and maintain the retoration along Whatcom Creek at Red Tail Reach. Head out this on MLK Day to honor the work of Martin Luther King, Jr. and give back to our beloved city of Bellingham by keeping the landscape of the creek clean.

  • What: MLK Day of Service
  • When: Monday January 17, 2011 from 10am – 1pm
  • Where: Whatcom Creek at Red Tail Reach. Just behind Iowa St between Meador St. and Racine St. in Bellingham.
  • Additional Info: Parking will be available in the Geri Fields parking lot located near the corner of Puget St. and Fraser St.
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How to Downsize Your Timber Frame Home

Are you currently in the process of designing your timber frame home but you’ve hit a brick wall? Have you endured a few life changing events and now you must reconsider you timber frame home plan? If you have recently decided it would be best to downsize your timber frame home for any reason you are probably already under a great deal of stress. Because we want planning your timber frame home to be a pleasant experience you cherish, we would like to help you out. We’ve compiled 3 tips to help you figure out how to downsize your timber frame home. Consider these tips from Timber Home Living as you rearrange your plans to downsize your timber frame home:

  • 1. Keep rooms open and diverse.
    • Fill your timber frame home plan with multipurpose rooms, such as a family or great room, which combines space for living, dining and cooking. You can also include a loft that doubles as a guest bedroom to expand square footage while combining functions. The design strategy is known as “open planning,” because it eliminates unnecessary interior walls, which also helps reduce costs.
  • 2. Don’t let space go to waste.
    • Two of the most infamous wastes of space in today’s family home are the formal living and dining rooms because many people don’t use them. If you know that you will not use one or the other, or either, think practically and leave the rooms out of your design. Incorporate or expand a space you consider a necessity.
  • 3. Focus on the Kitchen
    • It is well known that everyone congregates in the kitchen. As highly social activities cooking and eating require fully functional and comfortable spaces.  If you frequently host parties design your kitchen for this type of activity by installing extra dishwashers, sinks, ovens and storage. This will ensure that you use the space in your home in a practical and necessary manner.
classic_timber_framearvin-0714

Classic Frame kitchen by Cascade Joinery

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Top 10 Green Building Trends for 2011

Now that the year is 2011, we are back from vacation and you are fresh off your polar dip or plunge, it’s time to dive back into green building. Since it is the beginning of the year predictions and trends for every industry have been released, including those for the green building industry. With the popularity of green building increasing more each day green building experts are weighing in. Green building consultant Jerry Yudelson offers his insight on what the top 10 green building trends for 2011 will be as reported by PR Web:

  1. The worldwide green building movement will continue to accelerate, as more countries begin to create their own green building incentives and developing their own Green Building Councils. More than 70 countries, on all continents, will show considerable green building growth in 2010.
  2. Green building will rebound in 2011, as measured by the new LEED project registrations as a proxy for this growth. “The reduction in commercial real estate building in many countries,” he said, “was not offset by other sectors such as government, and so the growth rate of new green building projects fell dramatically in 2010.”
  3. The focus of the green building industry will continue to switch from new buildings to greening existing buildings. “The fastest growing LEED rating system in 2010 was the LEED for Existing Buildings program, and I expect this trend to continue in 2011,” said Yudelson. “My 2009 book, Greening Existing Buildings, documents the strategic components of this trend.”
  4. Blue will become the New Green. Awareness of the coming global crisis in fresh water supply will continue to grow, leading building designers and managers to take further steps to reduce water consumption to increase sustainability. This will be done in buildings through the use of more conservation-oriented fixtures, rainwater recovery systems and innovative new water technologies. “My latest book, Dry Run: Preventing the Next Urban Water Crisis, shows how to do this in green buildings all over the world.”
  5. Green building in the U.S. will continue to benefit from the Obama presidency with a continued focus on greening the executive branch. New announcements of a commitment to a minimum of LEED Gold for all new federal projects and major renovations confirm and highlight this macro-trend.
  6. Zero-net-energy designs for new buildings become increasingly commonplace, in both residential and commercial sectors, as LEED and ENERGY STAR ratings become too common to confer competitive advantage.
  7. Performance Disclosure will be the fastest emerging trend, highlighted by new requirements in California and other states. Commercial building owners will have to disclose actual building performance to all new tenants and buyers.
  8. Certified Green Schools will grow rapidly as part the LEED System. This trend will accelerate as understanding of the health and educational benefits of green schools grows. Already by mid-year 2010, green schools represented nearly 40% of all new LEED projects in the U.S.
  9. Local and state governments will step up their mandates for green buildings for both themselves and the private sector. We’ll see at least 20 major new cities with commercial sector green building mandates. The desire to reduce carbon emissions by going green will lead more government agencies to require green buildings.
  10. Solar power use in buildings will continue to grow. This trend will be enhanced by the increasing focus of municipal utilities as they need to comply with state-level renewable power standards (RPS) for 2015 and 2020. As before, third-party financing partnerships will continue to grow and provide capital for large rooftop systems such as on warehouses. However, we may very well see a slowing of large solar and wind systems, as federal grant support, in lieu of tax credits, is phased out.
  11. Yudelson added two “bonus picks” to his list: “First, there will be a continually growing use of software and the Internet “cloud” in green building design, construction and operations; S Second, the revolution in sustainable building materials is gaining momentum each year, one that gives higher performance at ever lower costs.”

    What are your thoughts on the predictions for the top green building trends for 2011?
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Happy New Year from Cascade Joinery!

Although we are still out on vacation we wanted to take the time to wish you a happy and prosperous new year. We will be back on the 3rd during our normal business hours. And don’t forget to partake in a polar bear event tomorrow, we’re interested in knowing how it goes!

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New Year's Day Polar Bear Events in Bellingham

Padden Polar Bear Dip

Participants in years past Padden Polar Bear Dip.

Although we are still on vacation we want to take the time to remind of you a few New Year’s Day events right here in and around Bellingham. We’re sure you’re familiar with the Padden Polar Bear Dip and Resolution Run. This year’s resolution walk/run will begin at 11am, ending with the polar bear dip at noon. Snacks and heaters will be provided before the dip and heated showers and goodies after.

Not too far away in Blaine the 28th Annual Birch Bay Polar Bear Plunge will take place. Registration will begin at 9am with the plunge at noon. Participation for both polar bear events are completely free of charge. Those who register at Birch Bay will receive an “I took the Plunge” certificate along with hot beverages. Commemorative t-shirts will also be on sale for $15.

So, will you be taking the icy plunge or dip on New Year’ Day?

Image from Bellingham Parks and Recreation

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