Green Interior Design is a lesser known branch of design that is  soon to become very important. Unlike interior design, green interior  design is concerned with matters far more important than creating  'stylish', 'contemporary', 'functional', 'minimal', 'traditional' or  'ethnic' living spaces for people. Green interior design is also about  pleasing the customer and pandering to the customers' notions of style  and beauty, but its primary concern is to be environmentally friendly.
The  leading authority on green interior design is the Leadership in Energy  and Environmental Design program set up by the US Green Building  Council. The program is an evolving effort that attempts to address 5  key areas: reduction of CO2 emissions, conservation of water, improving  indoor air quality, saving energy and husbanding natural resources.  Green interior design is about saving money, protecting the environment  and protecting people's health. These three goals aren't always mutually  compatible but it is the goal of the green interior designer to address  these key areas and three salient objectives rather than being  completely at the mercy of the whims of fashion.
  This article will make a short review of green interior design covering the 5 points mentioned above.
For  those not living 'off the grid' or purchasing electricity generated  from alternative energy sources the use of electricity equates to the  emission of green house gases produced by power plants burning fossil  fuels. The best way to reduce CO2 emissions is to reduce electricity use  in a building. A LEED certified designer will look at ways to achieve  this goal by considering insulation, installing a programmable  thermostat, planting trees next to east facing windows and buying Energy  Star rated appliances to name but a few strategies. This area of  concern overlaps with the stricture to save energy. Reducing heating  bills in the winter and cooling bills in the summer has the added bonus  of reducing carbon emissions.
The developed world wastes water and  green interior design seeks to stop this wastage through installing  such things as low-flow aerator faucets and shower heads with lower  gallons per minute flow rates of water.
A big part of being green  is finding materials, furniture and flooring that is free of dangerous  chemicals such as volatile organic chemicals (VOCs). VOCs such as  formaldehyde, benzene, toluene and methylene-chloride are present in  many household products such as paint, paint thinner, carpet backing,  wall coverings, cleaning products, copier ink and adhesives. The glue  used for many pieces of furniture contains VOCs as does the glue used  for flooring. The green interior designer suggests alternatives such as  antique furniture and flooring installed and made with VOC free  adhesive. Materials are also important renewable resources such as  bamboo, rattan, water hyacinth, cork and coconut are preferred to  hardwood that takes a long time to grow. Recycled glass counters and  reclaimed hardwood flooring and furniture is also obviously a good way  to use natural resources in an environmentally friendly fashion. Also  organic cotton soft furnishings and sheets are better than synthetic  materials made from petroleum derivatives.
As you can see from  this brief description, green interior design is holistic. It tries to  look at the big picture, to see how a house can be more efficient, save  money, be healthier for the inhabitants and make as small a carbon  footprint as possible. Many of these areas over-lap. Sustainability,  recycling, renewable resources, organic, non-toxic, energy efficiency -  these are all key ideas that positively impact on the economy, on  people's health and on the health of the environment. Once these  criteria are met, then the matter of being 'stylish' can be addressed.











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