Earth Day 2002: Improving Housing by Educating Consumers on Environmentally Friendly Technologies

Tuesday, April 23, 2002

As part of Earth Day 2002, the Department highlighted a series of consumer publications that focus on new technologies for improving housing through recycling and reuse of materials, alternative means of power creation such as conservation or conversion, and improved energy efficiency and sustainability.

"Educating people on the importance of recycling will not only create cleaner and more desirable communities, but will ensure a brighter tomorrow for our children," said HUD Secretary Mel Martinez.

Technology Scanning (www.pathnet.org/active/forecast.html) pamphlets and brochures inform the public about technology developments in other industries as well as those from other countries, federal laboratories and other building sectors. They are published by HUD's Partnership for Advancing Technology in Housing (PATH), a joint public - private partnership to advance technologies in the housing industry.

The pamphlet on Materials Recycling and Reuse provides information on technologies that are made from environmentally attractive materials such as salvaged products, recycled content or rapidly renewable products, or products that use less material or do not deplete the environment. Soybean composite products and organic wall coverings are two examples of technologies that could provide more environmentally friendly alternatives to common building ingredients.

Another brochure, Energy/Power Systems Generation, is about alternative means of creating, conserving or converting power without using traditional gas, coal-produced electric or nuclear-based energy. Fuel cell technology, for example, combines hydrogen and oxygen to generate electricity and water. It is virtually silent and produces no pollution. Fuel cells can be used to power homes, offices, factories and vehicles.

The Sustainable Design Strategies brochure highlights technologies and land use orientation ideas that contribute to improved design efficiency, particularly as related to energy efficiency and sustainability. It notes that "urban micro-climate," the effect a cluster of homes has on each individual home, is often neglected in urban design. But proper street orientation and the layout of homes can have considerable effect on the shading, which affects the urban micro-climate and environmental performance of the homes.

A PATH booklet, A Guide to Deconstruction, is about the process of taking apart existing buildings carefully and then reusing the parts. This is not only environmentally friendly, but it can also provide job-training opportunities for low-income residents.

Copies of a wide variety of Energy Efficiency and Environmental Impact brochures and pamphlets are available on PATH's Innovative Topics page (www.pathnet.org/topics/energy.html), or by writing to PATH, 451 Seventh Street, S.W., Washington, D.C. 20410. You also may visit PATH's homepage (http://www.pathnet.org) for additional information and publications.

 
Content Archived: September 09, 2009