Eco Friendly

The Art of Shade

Tuesday, February 16th, 2010
Kenyan Pattern Curved Shade

Kenyan Pattern Curved Shade

Let’s face it “green” design doesn’t automatically go hand-in-hand with beautiful design.  Green design is vital to our great planet earth, but must it be so utilitarian?   This past October, while attending West Coast Green, I found that not all green design is just about efficient function. We can have style, panache and feel good about it.

Decorative Screens

Decorative Screens

Parasoleil has created wonderful copper panels that can be used for shade, privacy and dare I say, pure for aesthetic enjoyment, and come in three finishes– verdigris, bronze and raw. The patterns are inspired by many different cultures from around the world.  The panels are made from 90% recycled content copper. Although copper was the original material for the panels, now you can get them made in aluminum, acryllic, steel, composite and FSC wood.   Parasoleil crafts these shade partitions in Boulder, Colorado.  The local distributor, Living Green Design Solutions, is located in Fresno, California.

Flanagan Shadow

Flanigan Shadow

My personal favorite in the Flanigan pattern with the verdigris finish.  I’d use it to hide that ugly pool equipment.  The panels are definitely works of art but the best part, in my opinion, are the shade patterns they create.

desiree

Soul Salvation: Sonoma’s Artefact Design

Friday, November 20th, 2009
Bicycle Taxi

Bicycle Taxi

Recently, I was in Northern California’s wine country. Sonoma is a beautiful and tranquil town.  Now, as much I enjoy drinking wine, especially the Petite Syrah varietal, I wasn’t there for the wine.  I had heard from a friend of a friend about an amazing interior design shop.  So, of course I traded cars with son number 2. He got the convertible with zero trunk space and I had the “old” but very trusty suburban.  You can’t be too careful when it comes to purchasing things for the home or garden. Who knows how large and bulky they might be?  Now, when I purchase something for my home, it MUST come immediately  home with me. I have no patience for waiting. Seriously.  Ask any family or friend and they will rat me out!   So, I filled up my “green” economic car to the tune of $100 and headed north.

Bowling Set

Bowling Set

Artefact Design  Salvage is on the edge on Sonoma.  Salvage yard doesn’t quite do it justice.  I expected something a little more “junkyardish”.  Actually,  Sanford and Son came to mind,  but Artefact couldn’t be farther from the sitcom. In fact it was more like  Soul Salvation.  They carry relics from a different time and place and it’s absolutely wonderful.

Greyhound Protectors

Greyhound Protectors

Some of my personal favorites were the statuesque Greyhounds.  If I had the proper estate and bank account,  these two would be my choice in protectors.  They’re priced at $1150. each.    The teak scrap spheres are so mesmerizing and at $ 195. I almost brought one home.

These light fixtures came from a milk factory in Belgium.  They have both a rustic andindustrial feel to them.   I can imagine a Belgium milk maid sitting on a little stool. The cows are munching on hay and she is working away milking the cows.  Fantasyland…yes, but that is the picture in my mind when I see these fixtures.  I think they could work well in any kitchen or even a workshop.

Milk Factory Lights

Milk Factory

One of the most interesting things I came across was a Medusa panel.  It came from the last cast iron building in San Francisco. It was originally built in 1873.  The detail in the panel is stunning.  Thinking of the time that this was made and the tools available, I am amazed by the craftsmanship.  And,  for me makes it that much more fabulous.

The tables are original designs by Dave Allen, the owner of Artefact.  He uses reclaimed wood from truck and train beds.  So, being “green” can look wonderfully chic.

Now, was it the perfect California weather or this interior design mecca? I can’t say for sure,  but my head was spinning with ideas.  If you are within a hundred miles a road trip in within order.  Artefact will inspire you, it will rejuvenate you.  And before you head home, stop and have a glass of wine to reflect on the day. You’ll be glad you did!

Artefact Design and Salvage

23562 Highway 121

Sonoma, CA 95476

deseyeleft

Here’s the complete slideshow:

Get the flash player here: http://www.adobe.com/flashplayer

Turning Over a New Leaf With PG&E

Sunday, October 4th, 2009

I love to hate my local utility company.  My less than favorable relationship with Pacific Gas and Electric began 10 years ago during the major remodel of our tiny home.  I spent hours and then days trying to get electricity and gas reconnected so we could officially/legally move back into our new homestead.  I cursed PG&E privately.  And then in an embarrassing moment I cursed directly to an employee, not my proudest point in time (I did call back and apologized to the employee).  I also, sobbed hysterically in my front yard to the electrical technician because the gas technician had to cancel his appointment.  During the course of a remodel there are so many choices that have to be made from light fixtures to counter tops but one thing you can’t choose is your utility company.  That week trying to get power to our home was hands down THE worst week during the whole remodeling process and PG&E played a major role.

Fast forward 10 years. I’m attending West Coast Green and anticipating the opening keynote speakers.  I hadn’t read the full list so I was a little shocked to find myself listening to Peter Darbee the CEO of PG&E.  Well,  I was more than pleasantly surprised to learn that Newsweek rated PG&E the greenest utility company in our nation.  PG&E currently uses 12% renewable energy with plans to grow that number to 20%.  PG&E was also recognized for their efforts to control energy demands.  During Mr. Darbee’s keynote, I felt my relationship change with this not so evil, big utility company.  I even felt, dare I say proud that Northern California’s PG&E was leading the way.  So congratulations to PG&E on their greenest utility company rating. Glad that we can both move forward.

Rockridge Kitchen Tour Showcases Modern and Classic

Wednesday, September 9th, 2009

rockridge kitchen tour
Looking for kitchen remodeling ideas, or just want to ogle? A drive to Oakland on Sept. 20th will give you a feast of choices. The Rockridge Kitchen Tour will be showcasing nine — count ‘em nine — kitchens on a walking tour through the charming Rockridge neighborhood.rockridge kitchen tour

The kitchens range in style from Craftsman to modern, with the latest in storage solutions, trendy tile and innovative materials and lighting.

As a special bonus, the entire “Margarido house” will be on tour, a newly-constructed, LEED certified house that is eco-friendly in just about every way. Check out the recycled building materials and the rooftop garden.margo

Tickets for the tour that starts at 12:30 p.m. can be purchased in advance for $30. AFter Sept. 18, the price goes up to $40. For more information, click here.

The tour is a fundraiser for the Rockridge Community Planning Council that supports local parks and libraries and public art projects.
(photos courtesy of Kenneth Rice Photography.)

Julia - lookiloos.com

Green Building Materials – Ohmega Salvage in Berkeley

Sunday, March 22nd, 2009

Green Building Materials - Ohmega Salvage in Berkeley

You know you’re immersed in the Berkeley vibe when you wander down San Pablo Avenue at Ashby. You can’t help but feel all “green” inside when you stop at Ohmega Salvage yard, where re-use and repurpose is at its best. It’s a place that was in business long before the term “green” became vogue, and has even been featured on “This Old House.”

Stained Glass - Green Building Materials - Ohmega Salvage in Berkeley

Here in the open lot, you can find everything from old bathtubs to Buddhas from Bali. Ohmega Salvage specializes in pre-1950 architectural artifacts, so if you’re restoring a Victorian or old Craftsman, you can find stained glass windows, chandeliers, sinks and doors. Stacks of old glass block can be purchased for $4 a block. A pair of cast iron chairs sell for $300, plus another $150 for the pub table with the marble checkerboard top.

Ohmega Too is across the street, where the lot has more of a flea market feel. Urban Ore, another salvage yard, is on Murray Street around the corner. It calls itself an “Ecopark”. Hit all three, plus grab an organic, free-range, locally-grown bite at almost any corner restaurant, and you will have experienced Berkeley.

Art Deco Light - Green Building Materials - Ohmega Salvage in Berkeley

Julia - lookiloos.com

Related Stories:
Italianate Victorian-Before and After
Manderley Revisited-Restored Victorian in La Selva Beach
Los Gatos Craftsman on Home Tour
New Craftsman Mirrors Old
Restoring a Victorian Saves a Neighborhood

Update:
Lookiloos featured in the San Jose Mercury News
This post is featured in the San Jose Mercury News Home and Garden section here.

Here’s the complete slideshow:

Zonal Home Interiors – Hayes Valley American Country Style Furnishings

Wednesday, January 14th, 2009

Zonal Home Interiors - Hayes Valley American Country Style Furnishings

At 568 Hayes Street in the trendy Hayes Valley neighborhood of San Francisco sits a local icon – Zonal Home Interiors

Zonal Home Interiors - Hayes Valley American Country Style Furnishings - Lamp

For 19 years, Russell Pritchard has been filling his store with a mix of contemporary custom furniture and items depicting primitive American country style.  The eclectic shop is known for discovering and promoting local artists and Depression Era farm furniture.  For example, an early 1900’s Queen sized iron bed frame ($1400.00) graced his basement showroom and sat next to a luxe modern micro fiber sofa showing just how easy it is to blend the old with the new. 

During this visit, Zonal featured paintings from self taught local artist Carol Aust, whose art is breath taking.  She employs rich colors, layering them perfectly to show the complexities of her subjects.  I was struck by her simple, yet profound images.

Zonal Home Interiors - Hayes Valley American Country Style Furnishings - Journal

I am in love with a line of lamps made by a Central California coastal family, who made these beauties with 80% recycled materials.  One lamp in particular was made of a laminated arch beam and a handmade paper shade.  It is sure to be a conversation starter.  A set of reclaimed library book covers turned into journals caught my eye ($15.00 each) too!  I could imagine myself jotting down secret notes between the covers of an old “Boy Scout” manual.  What fun!

Zonal Home Interiors - Hayes Valley American Country Style Furnishings - Spool Chair

What is worthy of the special trip to Zonal?  In Pritchard’s opinion, one should not miss his favorite, a Depression-era Spool Chair from Kentucky.  The quality of this restoration is such, that he plans to donate it to a local museum for posterity’s sake.  He also pointed out a sculpture made of bed springs that he pulled out of Nothern California’s Clear Lake.  He saw it across a cow pasture and knew that it was perfect for his collection.

On a street, where design shops turn over quickly, I asked him what was his secret to surviving the ups and downs of retail.  “Simple – I only carry things that I would want in my home” said Russell.  If what he carries at his shop is an indication of what adorns his home with, then I am sure it is stunning.

Sheila - lookiloos.com
Zonal Home Interiors
568 Hayes Street
San Francisco, CA  94102
415-255-9307
www.zonalhome.com

Here’s the complete slideshow:

Green Furniture at Harvest Home Stores – Los Gatos

Tuesday, December 23rd, 2008

Green Furniture at Harvest Home Stores - Los Gatos

How do you update your living room or dining room and save the earth at the same time?  Buy sustainable furniture.  No, I am not referring to logs with a bit of moss for cushion, but

Green Furniture at Harvest Home Stores - Los Gatos - Mirror

rather reclaimed lumber that are stylish and repurposed to make your home gorgeous.

I stumbled across Harvest Home Stores in Los Gatos, CA.  This Bay Area based store features high quality furniture and several lines of green furniture.  Essentially, vintage wood is saved from buildings slated to be torn down and used to make new items, like dining room sets, mirrors, chairs and coffee tables.  Others make flooring, light stands and beds.

Scientists estimate that we are losing more than 137 species of plants and animals every single day because of rainforest deforestation.  Experts write that logging tropical hardwoods like teak, mahogany, rosewood, and other timber for furniture and other wood products is unsustainable for any length of time.  So using reclaimed wood saves trees and allows more living forests to remain intact – now how is that for a feel-good buy?

Green Furniture at Harvest Home Stores - Los Gatos - Dining Buffet

What immediately drew me into the shop was an over sized mirror, which was made with 80 year old recycled Elmwood.  I was also impressed with a beautiful dining room buffet from the Old Lumber Tahoe Dining Collection.  All of the wood is 100% reclaimed and made in Southern California.  It is perfect for casual California dining and makes for a great dinner conversation.

Harvest Home has six locations:
Los Gatos
29 North Santa Cruz Avenue
Los Gatos, CA 95030

Menlo Park
639 Santa Cruz Avenue
Menlo Park, CA 94025

San Francisco

2325 Polk Street
San Francisco, CA 94109

Check their website for the Corte Madera, Emeryville and Sonoma locations.

 

Sheila - lookiloos.com

Built It Green Home Tour Recap

Tuesday, September 30th, 2008

Built It Green Home Tour Recap

Typically home tours are all about the Persian rugs, the antiques, crown molding and the designer window coverings, the Build It Green Home Tour featured that and so much more.  I spent the morning comparing the homes in Santa Clara county and found that my fellow lookiloos and I talked more about the "bones" of the house than what we could find adorning it. 

There were a total of 14 homes on the tour, 2 stood out for their sheer difference in approach.  Both homes were in located in the upscale Willow Glen neighborhood of San Jose off the 280 freeway, within walking distance to the trendy Willow Glen main street, Lincoln Avenue.

Built It Green Home Tour Recap - Cherry Avenue
The first home on sunny Cherry Avenue was built by Lorrie Broderick, for whom this was her second venture as a developer.  She purchased the plans for the home online and set out to find ways to make her investment  more green.   I am not quite sure what I expected when I walked in, but the home was gorgeous and modern and frankly, blew my expectations for what "green" meant.  It  quickly inspired me to think about how I could replicate many of the amenities Lorrie installed in my own home.

The bathrooms had Watersense ultra low flush and dual flush toilets and occupancy sensors. They also featured Energy Star bathroom fans, which meant that these fans used 65% less energy, reducing rot, mold and other moisture problems.  The house is well insulated and built with high-performance windows, thus the three story home only has air conditioning on the top floor.

Built It Green Home Tour Recap - Cherry Ave Backyard
Most interesting to me as a parent was the backyard.  Willow Glen being a family friendly neighborhood, Lorrie assumed that the buyers of her home would most likely have a family with small children.  Rather than pouring a full concrete backyard, she saved part of the yard in case a family wanted to put in a jungle gym.  She put down recycled rubber mulch on the right side of the yard which matched the real mulch on the left side.  Purchased at costco.com, she said this recycled material ensured that there would be no mold, slight cushioning for those inevitable falls and no splinters for little toes.  Great idea. 

Overall the home had big and small touches for easy green living.  Lorrie was able to recycle 90% of construction waste, used spray foam insulation and low VOC interior paint.

Built It Green Home Tour Recap - Hicks Ave Hallway

In contrast, the home on Hicks Avenue, called Villa Terra,  is architect’s Noel Cross’ dream home. Hidden from the main street by a garden of native California landscaping, this home can be described as a modern day "adobe".  The exterior walls are PISE (pneumatically impacted stabilized earth) – a type of rammed earth construction, where a moistened mix of earth and concrete were sprayed through a hose under pressure against form work.  When the form work is removed then the walls are done.  The results are old world rustic.  The house stays cool and is warmed with radiant floor heating.   The ceiling is insulated with recycled blue jean materials.   The house also featured both a passive solar heating system and a 5.5kW photovoltaic system, where any extra energy generated can be sent back to the power grid for a credit on their monthly bill.

Built It Green Home Tour Recap - Hicks Ave Brickwork
What stood out to me was how much of the home’s materials were reclaimed, that is to say came from other tear down remodeling projects.  Cross used ceiling beams from Eli Thomas store from the old Town and Country Village shopping center, bought two sinks for $15.00 from Whole House Salvage Yard and lockers from the "Robe Room" from the O’Connor Mansion from Notre Dame High School.  The side patio is made up of used bricks reclaimed from 15 different homes. 

Built It Green Home Tour Recap - Hicks Ave Dining Room
Overall, the home was absolutely spectacular.  The home was expansive, yet inviting.  I could easily see myself cooking Thanksgiving dinner in their large kitchen or hosting a dinner party that spilled out onto the brick terrace. 

Green can certainly be gorgeous and Villa Terra on Hicks Avenue certainly drove that point home.

Sheila - lookiloos.com

Space Solution – Modern Sheds

Monday, September 15th, 2008

Space Solution - Modern Sheds

Looking for a spot to house those gardening supplies or extra chairs?  Need a home office, artist’s loft or even a child’s play room?  Can’t afford to build a whole new wing to your household? Then you need to check out the solutions at Modern-Shed.

Space Solution - Modern Sheds with Patio

These are not the metal sheds that rust, sag and leak that sat idly in your father’s backyard.  These are luxury stuctures worthy of making them your home away from home or back yard BBQ annex.  There has been a lot written lately about the breadth of modular sheds that have hit the market.  Modern-Shed’s offerings range from $7,500 for a basic 6′ X 8′ shed to $69,000 for a 14′ x 34′ Dwelling Shed complete with bathroom, kitchen and sliding glass door.   Shipping is free and the company says that assembly is a snap.

Hailing from Seattle, WA, Modern Shed’s are built in one location with local builders.  There are many eco- friendly options including, wall insulation made of 85% post-industrial recycled natural fibers.   (Yes, your jeans can be reused!)  and a “Green Roof”.  Their Green Grid is a modular roof system that would allow you to plant the entire roof with vegetation which can reduce energy costs, keep the building cooler during the summer and help manage rainwater run off.

Sheila - lookiloos.com

Photos courtesy of Modern-Shed.