# WordPress MySQL database backup # # Generated: Thursday 15. January 2009 17:56 MST # Hostname: localhost # Database: `humande1_wordpressECOBROOKLYN` # -------------------------------------------------------- # -------------------------------------------------------- # Table: `wp_comments` # -------------------------------------------------------- # # Delete any existing table `wp_comments` # DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `wp_comments`; # # Table structure of table `wp_comments` # CREATE TABLE `wp_comments` ( `comment_ID` bigint(20) unsigned NOT NULL auto_increment, `comment_post_ID` int(11) NOT NULL default '0', `comment_author` tinytext NOT NULL, `comment_author_email` varchar(100) NOT NULL default '', `comment_author_url` varchar(200) NOT NULL default '', `comment_author_IP` varchar(100) NOT NULL default '', `comment_date` datetime NOT NULL default '0000-00-00 00:00:00', `comment_date_gmt` datetime NOT NULL default '0000-00-00 00:00:00', `comment_content` text NOT NULL, `comment_karma` int(11) NOT NULL default '0', `comment_approved` varchar(20) NOT NULL default '1', `comment_agent` varchar(255) NOT NULL default '', `comment_type` varchar(20) NOT NULL default '', `comment_parent` bigint(20) NOT NULL default '0', `user_id` bigint(20) NOT NULL default '0', PRIMARY KEY (`comment_ID`), KEY `comment_approved` (`comment_approved`), KEY `comment_post_ID` (`comment_post_ID`), KEY `comment_approved_date_gmt` (`comment_approved`,`comment_date_gmt`), KEY `comment_date_gmt` (`comment_date_gmt`) ) ENGINE=MyISAM AUTO_INCREMENT=80 DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8 ; # # Data contents of table `wp_comments` # INSERT INTO `wp_comments` VALUES (2, 219, 'cassy', 'cassy1983@yahoo.com', '', '96.250.135.254', '2008-10-24 21:18:07', '2008-10-25 03:18:07', 'Can I try it with you? I need your guidance.', 0, '1', 'Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.1; en-US; rv:1.8.1.17) Gecko/20080829 Firefox/2.0.0.17', '', 0, 0) ; INSERT INTO `wp_comments` VALUES (3, 219, 'Gennaro Brooks-Church', 'gennaro@brookschurch.com', 'http://', '96.250.135.254', '2008-10-25 08:43:53', '2008-10-25 14:43:53', 'Sure. 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What is it that makes people so out of touch with their environment?', 0, '1', 'Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.1; en-US; rv:1.9.0.4) Gecko/2008102920 Firefox/3.0.4', '', 0, 1) ; INSERT INTO `wp_comments` VALUES (12, 288, 'GreenHomeNYC - We help NYC buildings go green. » Blog Archive » Reuse corner: R-9 Insulation for sale!', '', 'http://greenhomenyc.org/post/752', '38.108.101.117', '2008-11-23 19:59:47', '2008-11-24 01:59:47', '[...] Contact Gennaro via his blog at http://ecobrooklyn.com/insulation-arrived/. [...]', 0, '1', 'Incutio XML-RPC -- WordPress/2.6.3', 'pingback', 0, 0) ; INSERT INTO `wp_comments` VALUES (13, 288, 'Rebecca Johnson', 'rebeccajohnson2@yahoo.com', '', '70.107.17.208', '2008-11-24 10:06:48', '2008-11-24 16:06:48', 'Can you install it? I have a small extension (approx. 20X10) that is freezing.', 0, '1', 'Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.1; en-US; rv:1.8.1.18) Gecko/20081029 Firefox/2.0.0.18', '', 0, 0) ; INSERT INTO `wp_comments` VALUES (14, 281, 'Kate', 'kate.navarromckay@gmail.com', '', '63.110.65.254', '2008-11-24 10:23:16', '2008-11-24 16:23:16', 'Do you have any extra salvage? We\'re putting in just a few feet in a rental--probably all of 14\'x6\', half of which will be laid down in a closet. \r\n\r\nIf you had extra flooring salvage, we\'d love to come pick some of it up. I\'m at kate.navarromckay@gmail.com. Thanks!', 0, '1', 'Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.1; en-US; rv:1.8.1.12) Gecko/20080201 Firefox/2.0.0.12', '', 0, 0) ; INSERT INTO `wp_comments` VALUES (15, 49, 'xcihdzvgl', 'jkdrnz@tzukha.com', 'http://ipwdjfdxyxbk.com/', '94.102.60.182', '2008-11-24 19:24:45', '2008-11-25 01:24:45', 'SlVBkS prwinevhvouo, [url=http://bcumouhtcswa.com/]bcumouhtcswa[/url], [link=http://njkvjuzxjjyd.com/]njkvjuzxjjyd[/link], http://vuaxumbqwoje.com/', 0, 'spam', 'Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1; SV1)', '', 0, 0) ; INSERT INTO `wp_comments` VALUES (16, 288, 'John', 'househunternyc@gmail.com', '', '204.227.243.16', '2008-11-25 13:39:00', '2008-11-25 19:39:00', 'I have the same need for insulation for a smaller (10x10)extension that is cold. Could you contact me with terms and thoughts.\r\n\r\nthanks', 0, '1', 'Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1; SV1; .NET CLR 1.1.4322; InfoPath.1; .NET CLR 2.0.50727)', '', 0, 0) ; INSERT INTO `wp_comments` VALUES (17, 207, 'Rebekah Collins', 'sustainablefairfax@earthlink.net', '', '76.103.29.210', '2008-11-25 16:28:53', '2008-11-25 22:28:53', 'Hi - What about the \'blue jean insulation it is competitive with conventional rock wool now . . . Thank you so much for your post on recycled rigid -that\'s exciting and I agree that keeping materials out of the land fill is greener thatn new manufacture even if it is green ....', 0, '1', 'Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; U; PPC Mac OS X 10_4_11; en) AppleWebKit/525.18 (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/3.1.2 Safari/525.22', '', 0, 0) ; INSERT INTO `wp_comments` VALUES (18, 207, 'Gennaro Brooks-Church', 'gennaro@brookschurch.com', 'http://', '96.246.11.243', '2008-11-25 17:49:45', '2008-11-25 23:49:45', 'Rebekah,\r\nI think blue jean insulation is a total waste of money. You can get salvaged board like I have or blow in cellulose that does the job just as well (board is higher R value though) but is three or four times cheaper.\r\nHow come you chose it?', 0, '1', 'Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.1; en-US; rv:1.9.0.4) Gecko/2008102920 Firefox/3.0.4', '', 0, 1) ; INSERT INTO `wp_comments` VALUES (19, 288, 'Gennaro Brooks-Church', 'gennaro@brookschurch.com', 'http://', '96.246.11.243', '2008-11-25 17:52:20', '2008-11-25 23:52:20', 'John and Rebecca,\r\nGive me a call and I can advise you on the best way to install it. You can buy any amount you want, no order is too small. I would put a vapor barrier/radiant barrier between the insulation and sheet rock. It is cheap and makes it all the more tighter.', 0, '1', 'Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.1; en-US; rv:1.9.0.4) Gecko/2008102920 Firefox/3.0.4', '', 0, 1) ; INSERT INTO `wp_comments` VALUES (20, 207, 'Rebekah Collins', 'sustainablefairfax@earthlink.net', '', '76.103.29.210', '2008-11-25 20:00:05', '2008-11-26 02:00:05', 'Because where I live ( N Cal ) it is equal to or only very little more than a roll of the regular nasty fiber glass insulation - the contractors I worked with loved it because everyone hates getting fiber glass on their skin - they were impressed with the price and were not \'green contractors\'. I am happy to learn about the recycled rigid you have been using - I sent them an email for a price I will use it under the floor and spread the word - Thanks.', 0, '1', 'Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; U; PPC Mac OS X 10_4_11; en) AppleWebKit/525.18 (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/3.1.2 Safari/525.22', '', 0, 0) ; INSERT INTO `wp_comments` VALUES (21, 207, 'Gennaro Brooks-Church', 'gennaro@brookschurch.com', 'http://', '96.246.11.243', '2008-11-25 20:19:06', '2008-11-26 02:19:06', 'Hi,\r\nI wonder why it is so expensive here? I would use it if it were comparable to cellulose. It has the same sound attenuation capacity as cellulose, possibly better. But cellulose is just as good for R value and costs 25 cents a square foot. Last time I checked the cotton cost $1.50 a square foot.\r\nAnother reason I don\'t like the cotton insulation company is that they support child labor as seen on their advertising photo: http://www.bondedlogic.com/ultratouch-cotton.htm', 0, '1', 'Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.1; en-US; rv:1.9.0.4) Gecko/2008102920 Firefox/3.0.4', '', 0, 1) ; INSERT INTO `wp_comments` VALUES (22, 207, 'llsxcnauy', 'lsroks@iwofjp.com', 'http://pjpidkayvczp.com/', '24.46.143.9', '2008-12-06 02:33:10', '2008-12-06 08:33:10', 'ZZbhG3 ewiljrntbxwt, [url=http://wnmzcphgulos.com/]wnmzcphgulos[/url], [link=http://vilakogbcevr.com/]vilakogbcevr[/link], http://ifdxphkfdhwz.com/', 0, 'spam', 'Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1; SV1)', '', 0, 0) ; INSERT INTO `wp_comments` VALUES (23, 285, 'Kurt Will', 'kurtdwill@earthlink.net', '', '208.46.149.3', '2008-12-08 10:46:29', '2008-12-08 16:46:29', 'Gennaro,\r\nthe DOB also made me jump through this hoop, but apparently a photo sufficed for them in my case.\r\nKurt', 0, '1', 'Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; 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document.write(\'\') cheap auto insurance \nhttp://online-gambling-mo.lookera.net#1 \n[url=http://online-poker-mo.lookera.net#3]online poker[/url] \n[url]http://urlser.com/?IQpnn#4[/url] \n[http://free-poker-mo.lookera.net#5 free poker] \n"black jack":http://black-jack-mo.lookera.net#6 \n[LINK http://free-poker-mo.lookera.net#7]free poker[/LINK] \n[img]http://victor.freewebhostingpro.com/1.php[/img] \n', 0, 'spam', 'Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1; en) Opera 8.50', '', 0, 0) ; INSERT INTO `wp_comments` VALUES (29, 52, 'Prescription pills with overnight', 'blogs@myrxpill.com', 'http://myrxpill.com/', '201.205.208.138', '2008-12-11 19:59:19', '2008-12-12 01:59:19', 'Prescription pills http://MyRxPill.com', 0, 'spam', 'Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.1; rv:1.7.3) Gecko/20040913 Firefox/0.10', '', 0, 0) ; INSERT INTO `wp_comments` VALUES (30, 205, 'nudnuku', 'hjkhzk@gvbugu.com', 'http://hlrfglcrwlyv.com/', '64.22.118.42', '2008-12-14 13:52:18', '2008-12-14 19:52:18', 'qmYM3L verthwehmoqi, [url=http://gdwyzbmoofqj.com/]gdwyzbmoofqj[/url], [link=http://lhujmlwrrgon.com/]lhujmlwrrgon[/link], http://haduaokiiaho.com/', 0, 'spam', 'Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1; SV1)', '', 0, 0) ; INSERT INTO `wp_comments` VALUES (31, 385, 'Vinnie', 'Cangember@yahoo.com', '', '76.15.37.16', '2008-12-14 18:26:29', '2008-12-15 00:26:29', 'while one may or may not agree with the method you used to get there the end result is good. However to be code compliant wouldnt you need a new footing for the wall generally approxomately 2-4" wider on a side plus a new footing drain? Did you use regular grout/concrete or hydralic cement ro there would be no contracting in the wall as it drys?. I had once considered doing something like this to move a building abot 15 ft. My theory was puting a steel frame under the entire building and a c channel facing up in wich to slide it onto a new section of foundation. never did it but gave it some theoretical thought. In the city often the drain system runs under the floor into through large acess holes. Will your basement now be lower than the surrounding sewer system? If it your own building I might have considered putting in a whole new (in sections) insulated form foundation. It would have been very fuel efficent and lent itself to the green theme. And probably been only marginal in extra work except for material removal.', 0, '1', 'Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 7.0; Windows NT 5.1; .NET CLR 1.0.3705; .NET CLR 1.1.4322; .NET CLR 2.0.50727)', '', 0, 0) ; INSERT INTO `wp_comments` VALUES (32, 385, 'Gennaro Brooks-Church', 'gennaro@brookschurch.com', 'http://', '96.250.140.78', '2008-12-14 19:40:58', '2008-12-15 01:40:58', 'Hi,\r\nI actually forgot to mention it but there is a footing below the three feet. It comes six inches out from the foundation and is a foot to six inches deep. You can\'t see it in any of the pictures because the dirt covered it but you can see the guy building the form for it.\r\n\r\nI used Portland cement with 3/4 inch gravel and sand mix. I also put as many stones into the wall as possible. They are, uh, rock solid.\r\n\r\nThe sewer line from the house is exactly level with the new dug out basement, which means the mains are a couple feet lower. I\'m not sure how many. Based on road construction I saw on another street in the area they could be as much as sixteen feet under the street level!\r\n\r\nI didn\'t put a drain system....it wasn\'t specified by the engineer and the earth was so dry I didn\'t feel the need for one. It was parched.\r\n\r\nIn terms of insulation the whole structure (footing and slab) will have two inches of XEPS foam board. I guess I could do more but I feel that is good enough.\r\n\r\nYou plan to move the building is ambitious but definitely sounds like it would have worked.', 0, '1', 'Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.1; en-US; rv:1.9.0.4) Gecko/2008102920 Firefox/3.0.4', '', 0, 1) ; INSERT INTO `wp_comments` VALUES (33, 207, 'maypeLaxpep', 'dwepaymmesy@mainru.com', '', '202.44.4.85', '2008-12-17 18:03:56', '2008-12-18 00:03:56', '74411 , norco ooo6%% , cheap ultram bxgxg$ , buy ultracet 9510.8 , discount xenical 9510.8 , online oxycontin prescription kc54* , vicodin es mpwbnhj , buy vigrx cheap gfdfxrtr , buy vioxx wedvyuj , klonopin iuygy , cialis 7456 , tadalafil generic ', 0, 'spam', 'Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1; MRA 4.6 (build 01425))', '', 0, 0) ; INSERT INTO `wp_comments` VALUES (34, 36, 'fgvazfuykve', 'whiayc@hbakuz.com', 'http://eynqhpkslbwq.com/', '212.95.54.166', '2008-12-19 14:40:30', '2008-12-19 20:40:30', 'HKiNa5 lpwckajsowew, [url=http://mmasnqxiyepl.com/]mmasnqxiyepl[/url], [link=http://vrawcnloelrl.com/]vrawcnloelrl[/link], http://wfcnnwsomgex.com/', 0, 'spam', 'Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1; SV1)', '', 0, 0) ; INSERT INTO `wp_comments` VALUES (35, 207, 'Asydaybyday', 'evetleastessy@lvovs.com', '', '66.8.136.146', '2008-12-19 18:16:42', '2008-12-20 00:16:42', 'yyb!vbgjvj , [url=http://swik.net/User:buy0amoxil0online]amoxil 500mg[/url] 5115 kjj , [url=http://swik.net/User:buyamoxicillinonline]amoxicillin trihydrate[/url] 454 , [url=http://swik.net/User:BuyAlbuterol]albuterol[/url] gtuvnhj 84&^ , [url=http://swik.net/User:buyavandiaonline]avandia recall[/url] 0251 , [url=http://swik.net/User:BuyAsacol]asacol effects side[/url] kc54* , [url=http://swik.net/User:buygenericavodart]avodart medicine[/url] 33201 , [url=http://swik.net/User:BuyBactrim]bactrim ds side effects[/url] TT%$ , [url=http://swik.net/User:Buybiaxinxl500mg]biaxin 500mg[/url] 712* , [url=http://swik.net/User:buycelexadrug]antidepressant celexa[/url] gvfcdx, [url=http://swik.net/User:BuyCipro500mg]cipro side effects[/url] jhgtiop , [url=http://swik.net/User:Buy50cozaarmg]cozaar generic[/url] treomb , [url=http://swik.net/User:buy1clomid1online]clomid[/url]', 0, 'spam', 'Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1; FREE; .NET CLR 1.1.4322)', '', 0, 0) ; INSERT INTO `wp_comments` VALUES (36, 375, 'vinnie', 'cangember@yahoo.com', '', '76.15.53.101', '2008-12-19 18:58:25', '2008-12-20 00:58:25', 'I have been giving this avenue alot of thought. I have a 10/12 pitch attic truss roof to insulate. If I go with the ceiling insulation I plan a 2-3 inch spray foam and 12 unfaced fiberglass It gives about a real r50 but much more effective. However If I were to insulate under the actual roof deck I only have an 2x8 in member and am unsure as to airflow and deck temp issues. I have a ridge vent so there will be appropriate flow if i insulate the ceiling but If I were to follow your example I believe I would need a more airtight gap in order to replicate the spray in foams tightness and insulation value. In order to use your foam I would have to use a combination I think of both spray in and placing your panels inbetween as well as on top of the members to get the desired r value. Obviously I will not be getting a straight answer from the foam salesman. Any Ideas?\r\nthe ceiling surface is about 35x55 whereas the ceiling deck is in total about 55x55 (both sides) If it could be figured out I could put a major dent in your foam stockpile.', 0, '1', 'Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 7.0; Windows NT 5.1; .NET CLR 1.0.3705; .NET CLR 1.1.4322; .NET CLR 2.0.50727)', '', 0, 0) ; INSERT INTO `wp_comments` VALUES (37, 375, 'Gennaro Brooks-Church', 'gennaro@brookschurch.com', 'http://', '96.250.136.125', '2008-12-19 21:11:38', '2008-12-20 03:11:38', 'Hmmm....It also depends where you are since that will determine your shipping price. \r\n\r\nUnlike my situation, space is not an issue for you. I need to get the absolute most R value per inch because I have to go between the joists.\r\n\r\nAnother option you have is to use blown in cellulose. I like cellulose but it only works when you have space. It is more green than foam since foam uses petrochemicals and cellulose is just old paper. Combine that with a vapor barrier and you have a nice airtight setup.\r\n\r\nBut that is just another option if you are not close to Brooklyn. If you are near then using my panels with a radiant/vapor barrier makes a lot of sense. You get the same airtightness as spray foam but a lot more R value per inch and a lot greener setup.\r\n\r\nI\'ll send you an email.', 0, '1', 'Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.1; en-US; rv:1.9.0.5) Gecko/2008120122 Firefox/3.0.5', '', 0, 1) ; INSERT INTO `wp_comments` VALUES (38, 207, 'Asydaybyday', 'evetleastessy@lvovs.com', '', '202.44.4.85', '2008-12-22 12:56:47', '2008-12-22 18:56:47', 'gvfcdx, [url=http://swik.net/User:buy0amoxil0online]amoxil side effects[/url] jjbvc , [url=http://swik.net/User:buyamoxicillinonline]amoxicillin dosage[/url] ulod , [url=http://swik.net/User:BuyAlbuterol]albuterol inhalers[/url] 55 , [url=http://swik.net/User:buyavandiaonline]buy avandia[/url] mpwbnhj , [url=http://swik.net/User:BuyAsacol]asacol[/url] 33201 , [url=http://swik.net/User:buygenericavodart]avodart medication[/url] yyb!vbgjvj , [url=http://swik.net/User:BuyBactrim]buy Bactrim[/url] 261kjhj ku624, [url=http://swik.net/User:Buybiaxinxl500mg]biaxin xl 500 mg[/url] ljl578 , [url=http://swik.net/User:buycelexadrug]celexa overdose[/url] ljl578 , [url=http://swik.net/User:BuyCipro500mg]cipro hc[/url] #HGF *& , [url=http://swik.net/User:Buy50cozaarmg]Buy Cozaar[/url] jjhgyu5, [url=http://swik.net/User:buy1clomid1online]clomid ovulation[/url]', 0, 'spam', 'Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; 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INSERT INTO `wp_comments` VALUES (60, 207, 'Appemiscase', 'smurebirm@terbuny.net', '', '89.30.6.36', '2009-01-04 04:43:21', '2009-01-04 10:43:21', 'm,.kmj , buy vigrx cheap gfdfxrtr , drug vioxx 7456 , drug klonopin 00.254 , cialis online kfjvjodf , cheap tadalafil ', 0, 'spam', 'Opera/7.54 (Windows NT 5.1; U) [pl]', '', 0, 0) ; INSERT INTO `wp_comments` VALUES (61, 207, 'soyslerrurrix', 'dymnimpaime@terbuny.net', '', '59.61.88.193', '2009-01-06 06:06:18', '2009-01-06 12:06:18', 'qvg , cheap online tramadol 5115 kjj , drug valium 7456 , drug viagra tgeew , discount ultram tfggvg%$j**jk , buy cheapest online xenical treomb , purchase vicodin gy , online vigrx iygvfn , phentermine online 7854 , phentermine online diet pill 33201 , phentermine cheap no prescription htevkj , online prescription tramadol bygt433 , cialis generic viagra ', 0, 'spam', 'Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; MSIE 5.5; Windows NT 4.0) Opera 7.0 [en]', '', 0, 0) ; INSERT INTO `wp_comments` VALUES (62, 207, 'Bob Charron', 'bcharron@renewaire.com', '', '66.202.48.40', '2009-01-07 08:26:53', '2009-01-07 14:26:53', 'Gennaro,\r\n\r\nIn your above report you include the following bullet point:\r\n\r\n* Green - A manufacturing study showed that the energy required producing polystyrene foam insulation is 24 percent less than the energy required to make the equivalent R-value of fiberglass insulation.\r\n\r\nWould you be able to provide me with the source and title of that study? I\'d be very interested in seeing it.\r\n\r\nMany thanks!\r\n\r\nBob', 0, '1', 'Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1; SV1; .NET CLR 1.1.4322; .NET CLR 2.0.50727)', '', 0, 0) ; INSERT INTO `wp_comments` VALUES (63, 207, 'Gennaro Brooks-Church', 'gennaro@brookschurch.com', 'http://', '96.250.24.142', '2009-01-07 08:51:18', '2009-01-07 14:51:18', 'Hi,\r\nI think I got it from this site: http://insulation-board.com/\r\nBut they don\'t seem to say where they got it.\r\nApparently academics we are not :)\r\n\r\nTry asking them. Let me know!', 0, '1', 'Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.1; en-US; rv:1.9.0.5) Gecko/2008120122 Firefox/3.0.5', '', 0, 1) ; INSERT INTO `wp_comments` VALUES (64, 468, 'vinnie', 'cangember@yahoo.com', '', '76.15.37.242', '2009-01-07 17:26:22', '2009-01-07 23:26:22', 'It would seem that this would be on the top floor of your building. Perhaps since your pic shows upper openings in both the transparenent and the inner wall you could use it as a thermostatically controlled vent to draw cooler air in in the summer evenings and let excess warmer air out (an attic vent of sorts)', 0, '1', 'Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 7.0; Windows NT 5.1; .NET CLR 1.0.3705; .NET CLR 1.1.4322; .NET CLR 2.0.50727)', '', 0, 0) ; INSERT INTO `wp_comments` VALUES (65, 468, 'Gennaro Brooks-Church', 'gennaro@brookschurch.com', 'http://', '96.250.24.142', '2009-01-07 18:05:15', '2009-01-08 00:05:15', 'I\'m still getting my head around the physics. In the evening the house wall would still be warm so the air would also be warm, so it would not work to pass the air into the house in the summer evenings. The air would be warmer than the night air.\r\n\r\nWhat I am hoping is that during the summer if you pass the air up the side of the house and back out into the atmosphere that the cool air coming in from the bottom picks up some warmth from the house wall and takes it out into the atmosphere, thus cooling the house. But I\'ve not confirmed this with somebody more skilled at physics.', 0, '1', 'Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.1; en-US; rv:1.9.0.5) Gecko/2008120122 Firefox/3.0.5', '', 0, 1) ; INSERT INTO `wp_comments` VALUES (66, 288, 'ufeodiojv', 'ubhrrd@vhzbcs.com', 'http://snifioecmypa.com/', '85.91.64.219', '2009-01-08 12:22:30', '2009-01-08 18:22:30', '6tVyWE bwpvtwzfrnrg, [url=http://tzygfqvtznjn.com/]tzygfqvtznjn[/url], [link=http://chqcfyaiiquc.com/]chqcfyaiiquc[/link], http://vpnmufdgjfhr.com/', 0, 'spam', 'Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1; SV1)', '', 0, 0) ; INSERT INTO `wp_comments` VALUES (67, 385, 'klbajjegbxe', 'cwrccj@kqjrrr.com', 'http://wxuqteviuucu.com/', '62.212.95.45', '2009-01-08 12:22:37', '2009-01-08 18:22:37', 'OWNOl2 dvbkgrtyhwab, [url=http://iuqddenbuwuc.com/]iuqddenbuwuc[/url], [link=http://dqcakjijwsbc.com/]dqcakjijwsbc[/link], http://kkllnghyqozc.com/', 0, 'spam', 'Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1; SV1)', '', 0, 0) ; INSERT INTO `wp_comments` VALUES (68, 155, 'Merlin Cardenas', 'vsqym@kxkaxm.com', 'http://msrtezh.com/zvxjj.html', '74.130.177.63', '2009-01-08 18:09:01', '2009-01-09 00:09:01', 'hi\r\no0d0x9rf13iehogt\r\ngood luck', 0, 'spam', 'Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1; SV1)', '', 0, 0) ; INSERT INTO `wp_comments` VALUES (69, 419, 'H paul', 'hospitality_consaultant@yahoo.com', '', '98.116.33.18', '2009-01-08 19:53:09', '2009-01-09 01:53:09', 'Being a home repair specialist my self so many times i have to beg literally the home owner to refurbish the existing wood in the structure that\'s so beautiful its such a shame', 0, '1', 'Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 6.0; en-US; rv:1.9.0.5) Gecko/2008120122 Firefox/3.0.5', '', 0, 0) ; INSERT INTO `wp_comments` VALUES (70, 49, 'lxscrv', 'ddczgx@fayhqj.com', 'http://rdgsttisrfmo.com/', '92.48.203.116', '2009-01-08 23:00:21', '2009-01-09 05:00:21', 'L3JKbx lsoomzxnrtjm, [url=http://diuklfzsrmkx.com/]diuklfzsrmkx[/url], [link=http://nsjjlusmqlbx.com/]nsjjlusmqlbx[/link], http://aiugwelyzpps.com/', 0, 'spam', 'Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1; SV1)', '', 0, 0) ; INSERT INTO `wp_comments` VALUES (71, 207, 'Sydney Deleon', 'tngln@ehkvm.com', 'http://xsqsaxmc.com/hosmz.html', '24.163.53.91', '2009-01-09 02:54:28', '2009-01-09 08:54:28', 'hi\r\nvz08j30gz0bshe7k\r\ngood luck', 0, 'spam', 'Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1; SV1)', '', 0, 0) ; INSERT INTO `wp_comments` VALUES (72, 155, 'Amanda Kerr', 'spdold@kzdfj.com', 'http://kyvys.com/reujal.html', '24.12.244.5', '2009-01-10 06:57:03', '2009-01-10 12:57:03', 'hi\r\no0d0x9rf13iehogt\r\ngood luck', 0, '0', 'Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1; SV1)', '', 0, 0) ; INSERT INTO `wp_comments` VALUES (73, 207, 'Portia Nash', 'mekuim@piymmioy.com', 'http://eltchjjj.com/qacwfmw.html', '99.235.50.114', '2009-01-10 16:27:29', '2009-01-10 22:27:29', 'hi\r\nvz08j30gz0bshe7k\r\ngood luck', 0, '0', 'Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1; SV1)', '', 0, 0) ; INSERT INTO `wp_comments` VALUES (74, 468, 'vinnie', 'cangember@yahoo.com', '', '76.15.37.216', '2009-01-10 17:58:20', '2009-01-10 23:58:20', 'I didnt make myself clear. I would believe 2 things would be at work. Allowing cooler air in at the lower level of the house and opening the opening in the upper part of the house would allow the warmer air to rise out of the house creating a cooler draft drawing cooler evening air in. Also if both vents were open behind the outside panel the flow of air might tend to enhance the outward flow of the warm air by creating a constant air flowup and out for the house air to join with on its merry outward warm flow.', 0, '1', 'Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 7.0; Windows NT 5.1; .NET CLR 1.0.3705; .NET CLR 1.1.4322; .NET CLR 2.0.50727)', '', 0, 0) ; INSERT INTO `wp_comments` VALUES (75, 5, 'multiple avis to a dvd video', '387076456@gmail.com', 'http://dvdseries.info/multipleavistoadvdvideo/', '24.61.211.239', '2009-01-10 23:20:11', '2009-01-11 05:20:11', 'multiple avis to a dvd video\n Nice Site.', 0, '0', '', '', 0, 0) ; INSERT INTO `wp_comments` VALUES (76, 436, 'Steve', 'stephen.nallen@gmail.com', '', '96.246.46.42', '2009-01-12 00:21:15', '2009-01-12 06:21:15', 'Great Job. Looking to pour a 16x30 basement slab in my house. Like the idea of the plywood shout. Did you use a concrete contractor or just order cement on the meter? Great job.', 0, '1', 'Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; U; PPC Mac OS X Mach-O; en-US; rv:1.8.1.20) Gecko/20081217 Firefox/2.0.0.20', '', 0, 0) ; INSERT INTO `wp_comments` VALUES (77, 436, 'Gennaro Brooks-Church', 'gennaro@brookschurch.com', 'http://', '96.250.24.142', '2009-01-12 12:02:56', '2009-01-12 18:02:56', 'Hi,\r\nThanks. I ordered 7 yards of cement but the floor wasn\'t correctly leveled so I had to put a thicker layer of concrete than planned. It was 6 inches in some places instead of 4. So I had to order an extra 3 yards on the spot. This was a costly since two trips of 7 and 3 is a lot more expensive than one trip of 10 yards. 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Thanks for the feedback!\nWordPress 2.7 is currently in development and as some people already know, it features a revised layout with a left-hand navigation column that was designed in response to user feedback regarding the use of screen real estate. Because the navigation came straight from the Crazyhorse [...]";s:7:"content";a:1:{s:7:"encoded";s:1174:"
Note: Survey is closed as of 9/18/08. Thanks for the feedback!
\nWordPress 2.7 is currently in development and as some people already know, it features a revised layout with a left-hand navigation column that was designed in response to user feedback regarding the use of screen real estate. Because the navigation came straight from the Crazyhorse prototype that was developed quickly for usability testing, it is still a work in progress.
Navigation sections and labels are being decided now, and as usual there are lots of good ideas floating around. As part of the mission to increase user involvement in design decisions, we’ve created a survey intended to give WordPress users the ability to play a part in deciding how the navigation options should be grouped and labeled. If you use WordPress and want to add your opinion, take the survey.
\nWordPress 2.7 Navigation Options Survey
\n";}s:3:"wfw";a:1:{s:10:"commentrss";s:85:"http://wordpress.org/development/2008/09/wordpress-27-navigation-options-survey/feed/";}s:7:"summary";s:352:"Note: Survey is closed as of 9/18/08. Thanks for the feedback!\nWordPress 2.7 is currently in development and as some people already know, it features a revised layout with a left-hand navigation column that was designed in response to user feedback regarding the use of screen real estate. Because the navigation came straight from the Crazyhorse [...]";s:12:"atom_content";s:1174:"Note: Survey is closed as of 9/18/08. Thanks for the feedback!
\nWordPress 2.7 is currently in development and as some people already know, it features a revised layout with a left-hand navigation column that was designed in response to user feedback regarding the use of screen real estate. Because the navigation came straight from the Crazyhorse prototype that was developed quickly for usability testing, it is still a work in progress.
Navigation sections and labels are being decided now, and as usual there are lots of good ideas floating around. As part of the mission to increase user involvement in design decisions, we’ve created a survey intended to give WordPress users the ability to play a part in deciding how the navigation options should be grouped and labeled. If you use WordPress and want to add your opinion, take the survey.
\nWordPress 2.7 Navigation Options Survey
\n";}i:1;a:12:{s:5:"title";s:15:"WordPress 2.6.2";s:4:"link";s:55:"http://wordpress.org/development/2008/09/wordpress-262/";s:8:"comments";s:64:"http://wordpress.org/development/2008/09/wordpress-262/#comments";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Mon, 08 Sep 2008 18:30:47 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:4:"Ryan";}s:8:"category";s:16:"ReleasesSecurity";s:4:"guid";s:39:"http://wordpress.org/development/?p=299";s:11:"description";s:362:"Stefan Esser recently warned developers of the dangers of SQL Column Truncation and the weakness of mt_rand(). With his help we worked around these problems and are now releasing WordPress 2.6.2. If you allow open registration on your blog, you should definitely upgrade. With open registration enabled, it is possible in WordPress versions 2.6.1 and [...]";s:7:"content";a:1:{s:7:"encoded";s:1986:"Stefan Esser recently warned developers of the dangers of SQL Column Truncation and the weakness of mt_rand(). With his help we worked around these problems and are now releasing WordPress 2.6.2. If you allow open registration on your blog, you should definitely upgrade. With open registration enabled, it is possible in WordPress versions 2.6.1 and earlier to craft a username such that it will allow resetting another user’s password to a randomly generated password. The randomly generated password is not disclosed to the attacker, so this problem by itself is annoying but not a security exploit. However, this attack coupled with a weakness in the random number seeding in mt_rand() could be used to predict the randomly generated password. Stefan Esser will release details of the complete attack shortly. The attack is difficult to accomplish, but its mere possibility means we recommend upgrading to 2.6.2.
\nOther PHP apps are susceptible to this class of attack. To protect all of your apps, grab the latest version of Suhosin. If you’ve already updated Suhosin, your existing WordPress install is already protected from the full exploit. You should still upgrade to 2.6.2 if you allow open user registration so as to prevent the possibility of passwords being randomized.
\n2.6.2 also contains a handful of bug fixes. Check out the full changeset and list of changed files.
\n";}s:3:"wfw";a:1:{s:10:"commentrss";s:60:"http://wordpress.org/development/2008/09/wordpress-262/feed/";}s:7:"summary";s:362:"Stefan Esser recently warned developers of the dangers of SQL Column Truncation and the weakness of mt_rand(). With his help we worked around these problems and are now releasing WordPress 2.6.2. If you allow open registration on your blog, you should definitely upgrade. With open registration enabled, it is possible in WordPress versions 2.6.1 and [...]";s:12:"atom_content";s:1986:"Stefan Esser recently warned developers of the dangers of SQL Column Truncation and the weakness of mt_rand(). With his help we worked around these problems and are now releasing WordPress 2.6.2. If you allow open registration on your blog, you should definitely upgrade. With open registration enabled, it is possible in WordPress versions 2.6.1 and earlier to craft a username such that it will allow resetting another user’s password to a randomly generated password. The randomly generated password is not disclosed to the attacker, so this problem by itself is annoying but not a security exploit. However, this attack coupled with a weakness in the random number seeding in mt_rand() could be used to predict the randomly generated password. Stefan Esser will release details of the complete attack shortly. The attack is difficult to accomplish, but its mere possibility means we recommend upgrading to 2.6.2.
\nOther PHP apps are susceptible to this class of attack. To protect all of your apps, grab the latest version of Suhosin. If you’ve already updated Suhosin, your existing WordPress install is already protected from the full exploit. You should still upgrade to 2.6.2 if you allow open user registration so as to prevent the possibility of passwords being randomized.
\n2.6.2 also contains a handful of bug fixes. Check out the full changeset and list of changed files.
\n";}i:2;a:12:{s:5:"title";s:15:"WordPress 2.6.1";s:4:"link";s:55:"http://wordpress.org/development/2008/08/wordpress-261/";s:8:"comments";s:64:"http://wordpress.org/development/2008/08/wordpress-261/#comments";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Fri, 15 Aug 2008 04:00:16 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:4:"Ryan";}s:8:"category";s:8:"Releases";s:4:"guid";s:39:"http://wordpress.org/development/?p=297";s:11:"description";s:336:"With 2.6.1, we’re continuing our trend of releasing a maintenance release shortly after a major release in order to get fixes for the inevitable “dot zero” bugs into your hands without a long wait. If you’re happy with 2.6, however, keep on using it. You need not upgrade to 2.6.1 if 2.6 is getting the [...]";s:7:"content";a:1:{s:7:"encoded";s:1495:"With 2.6.1, we’re continuing our trend of releasing a maintenance release shortly after a major release in order to get fixes for the inevitable “dot zero” bugs into your hands without a long wait. If you’re happy with 2.6, however, keep on using it. You need not upgrade to 2.6.1 if 2.6 is getting the job done.
\n2.6.1 offers several improvements for international users. Styling of the admin for right-to-left languages is much improved thanks to the efforts of the Farsi and Hebrew translation teams, and a mysterious gettext bug caused by certain PHP configurations is now fixed. For IIS users, 2.6.1 fixes several permalink problems. Image insertion problems in the Press This feature experienced by IE users are also fixed. Of note to everyone is a fix for a performance bug in the admin where those with a lot of plugins would experience slowness on some pages.
\nCheck out the full list of over 60 fixes to see if 2.6.1 has something to offer you. A full diff and list of changed files is also available. Download 2.6.1 and enjoy.
\n";}s:3:"wfw";a:1:{s:10:"commentrss";s:60:"http://wordpress.org/development/2008/08/wordpress-261/feed/";}s:7:"summary";s:336:"With 2.6.1, we’re continuing our trend of releasing a maintenance release shortly after a major release in order to get fixes for the inevitable “dot zero” bugs into your hands without a long wait. If you’re happy with 2.6, however, keep on using it. You need not upgrade to 2.6.1 if 2.6 is getting the [...]";s:12:"atom_content";s:1495:"With 2.6.1, we’re continuing our trend of releasing a maintenance release shortly after a major release in order to get fixes for the inevitable “dot zero” bugs into your hands without a long wait. If you’re happy with 2.6, however, keep on using it. You need not upgrade to 2.6.1 if 2.6 is getting the job done.
\n2.6.1 offers several improvements for international users. Styling of the admin for right-to-left languages is much improved thanks to the efforts of the Farsi and Hebrew translation teams, and a mysterious gettext bug caused by certain PHP configurations is now fixed. For IIS users, 2.6.1 fixes several permalink problems. Image insertion problems in the Press This feature experienced by IE users are also fixed. Of note to everyone is a fix for a performance bug in the admin where those with a lot of plugins would experience slowness on some pages.
\nCheck out the full list of over 60 fixes to see if 2.6.1 has something to offer you. A full diff and list of changed files is also available. Download 2.6.1 and enjoy.
\n";}i:3;a:12:{s:5:"title";s:15:"Theme Directory";s:4:"link";s:57:"http://wordpress.org/development/2008/07/theme-directory/";s:8:"comments";s:66:"http://wordpress.org/development/2008/07/theme-directory/#comments";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Fri, 18 Jul 2008 06:11:13 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:12:"Joseph Scott";}s:8:"category";s:10:"Metathemes";s:4:"guid";s:39:"http://wordpress.org/development/?p=266";s:11:"description";s:353:"It’s been a long time since themes.wordpress.net stopped accepting new themes. Since then most theme authors have been distributing their themes from their own sites, without a good centralized place for people to browse, search, comment on, and rate themes. With the success of the plugins directory, we’ve wanted to have those same [...]";s:7:"content";a:1:{s:7:"encoded";s:2453:"It’s been a long time since themes.wordpress.net stopped accepting new themes. Since then most theme authors have been distributing their themes from their own sites, without a good centralized place for people to browse, search, comment on, and rate themes. With the success of the plugins directory, we’ve wanted to have those same benefits in a theme directory. Today is the day we start making that happen, with the introduction of wordpress.org/extend/themes/.
\nBringing the new theme directory under the WordPress “extend” umbrella allowed us to take advantage of all the infrastructure that has already been built up to support WordPress.org. If you’ve browsed through the plugin directory, you’ll feel right at home in the new theme directory.
\nWe’ve gone through great lengths to make this as painless as possible for theme authors. You don’t need to know anything about Subversion (our back end magic takes care of all that for you), just login with your WordPress.org username and password and go to the upload page. From there you upload your regular theme zip file and we take care of the rest.
\nOnce you upload your new theme we do a few automated checks for some of the requirements for each theme. If we find one that you missed we’ll provide you an error and description of what needs to be fixed. When a theme upload has been accepted we’ll send you an email and put it in the queue to be reviewed, to make sure we didn’t miss anything. After the theme has been approved you’ll get another email letting you know that the theme is now live.
\nThat catches you up to where we’re at today. When you finish that theme you’ve been slaving over, upload it to the new directory and let us know what you think. Since so much has changed since the old theme directory we’re starting fresh from zero. If you’ve got specific questions or suggestions contact us and we’ll do our best to get them answered.
\n";}s:3:"wfw";a:1:{s:10:"commentrss";s:62:"http://wordpress.org/development/2008/07/theme-directory/feed/";}s:7:"summary";s:353:"It’s been a long time since themes.wordpress.net stopped accepting new themes. Since then most theme authors have been distributing their themes from their own sites, without a good centralized place for people to browse, search, comment on, and rate themes. With the success of the plugins directory, we’ve wanted to have those same [...]";s:12:"atom_content";s:2453:"It’s been a long time since themes.wordpress.net stopped accepting new themes. Since then most theme authors have been distributing their themes from their own sites, without a good centralized place for people to browse, search, comment on, and rate themes. With the success of the plugins directory, we’ve wanted to have those same benefits in a theme directory. Today is the day we start making that happen, with the introduction of wordpress.org/extend/themes/.
\nBringing the new theme directory under the WordPress “extend” umbrella allowed us to take advantage of all the infrastructure that has already been built up to support WordPress.org. If you’ve browsed through the plugin directory, you’ll feel right at home in the new theme directory.
\nWe’ve gone through great lengths to make this as painless as possible for theme authors. You don’t need to know anything about Subversion (our back end magic takes care of all that for you), just login with your WordPress.org username and password and go to the upload page. From there you upload your regular theme zip file and we take care of the rest.
\nOnce you upload your new theme we do a few automated checks for some of the requirements for each theme. If we find one that you missed we’ll provide you an error and description of what needs to be fixed. When a theme upload has been accepted we’ll send you an email and put it in the queue to be reviewed, to make sure we didn’t miss anything. After the theme has been approved you’ll get another email letting you know that the theme is now live.
\nThat catches you up to where we’re at today. When you finish that theme you’ve been slaving over, upload it to the new directory and let us know what you think. Since so much has changed since the old theme directory we’re starting fresh from zero. If you’ve got specific questions or suggestions contact us and we’ll do our best to get them answered.
\n";}i:4;a:12:{s:5:"title";s:13:"WordPress 2.6";s:4:"link";s:60:"http://wordpress.org/development/2008/07/wordpress-26-tyner/";s:8:"comments";s:69:"http://wordpress.org/development/2008/07/wordpress-26-tyner/#comments";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Tue, 15 Jul 2008 03:38:42 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:4:"Matt";}s:8:"category";s:8:"Releases";s:4:"guid";s:39:"http://wordpress.org/development/?p=246";s:11:"description";s:340:" I’m happy to announce that version 2.6 of WordPress.org is now available, almost a month ahead schedule. Version 2.6 “Tyner,” named for jazz pianist McCoy Tyner, contains a number of new features that make WordPress a more powerful CMS: you can now track changes to every post and page and easily post from wherever [...]";s:7:"content";a:1:{s:7:"encoded";s:10270:"I’m happy to announce that version 2.6 of WordPress.org is now available, almost a month ahead schedule. Version 2.6 “Tyner,” named for jazz pianist McCoy Tyner, contains a number of new features that make WordPress a more powerful CMS: you can now track changes to every post and page and easily post from wherever you are on the web, plus there are dozens of incremental improvements to the features introduced in version 2.5.
\nWe’ve prepared a brief video tour of 2.6, if you have 3 minutes and 29 seconds to spare, it’s worth a watch:
\n\nIf you’d like to embed the tour video in your blog, copy and paste this code for the high quality version:
\n\n<embed src="http://v.wordpress.com/mARhRBcT/fmt_dvd" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="640" height="385" flashvars="blog_domain=http://wordpress.org/development/2008/07/wordpress-26/&width=640&height=385"> </embed>\n\n
And here’s a smaller version, 400 pixels wide:
\n\n<embed src="http://v.wordpress.com/mARhRBcT/fmt_std" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="400" height="250" flashvars="blog_domain=http://wordpress.org/development/2008/07/wordpress-26/&width=400&height=250"> </embed>\n\n
Here’s a more textual overview of what’s hawt in 2.6:
\nWith the power of modern computers, it’s silly that we still use save and editing metaphors from the time when the most common method of storage was floppy disks. WordPress has always respected the importance of your writing with auto-save, and now we’re taking that to another level by allowing you to view who made what changes when to any post or page through a super-easy interface, much like Wikipedia or a version control system.
\nThis is handy on any blog in case you make a mistake and want to go back to an older version of a post, and it’s super handy for multi-author blogs where you can see every change tracked by person.
\nA few months ago on my blog we started a conversation about the posting bookmarklet in WordPress and which systems we should look to for inspiration, like Flock, FriendFeed, Facebook, Tumblr, and Delicious. From these suggestions and the Quick Post plugin by Josh Kenzer, we developed a Press This bookmark you can add to your toolbar that provides a fast and smart popup to do posts to your WordPress blog:
\nFor example, if you click “Press This” from a Youtube page it’ll magically extract the video embed code, and if you do it from a Flickr page it’ll make it easy for you to put the image in your post. On my blog I’ve been experimenting with using different categories and the in_category()
function — such as video, quote, aside, et cetera — to create a more tumblelog-like format.
Gears is an open source browser extension project started by Google that developers like us can use to give you features we wouldn’t normally be able to. There are a lot of things we can do with Gears in the future, but in this release we’ve stuck to using what’s called a “Local Server” to cache or keep a copy of commonly-used Javascript and CSS files on your computer, which can speed up the loading of some pages by several seconds (they just pop right up!). You can install Gears for Firefox or Internet Explorer, with support for Safari and Opera pending. WordPress works just fine without it, you just get a little extra juice when you have it installed.
\nNow when you select a theme it pops up a window that shows the theme live with all your content, instead of immediately making it active on your site. This is great for just test driving themes before making a switch over publicly, and it is also helpful when you are developing a theme and need to test it but don’t want everybody to see your ongoing mistakes development.
Here are some of the smaller features and improvements in 2.6:
\nwp-config
file and wp-content
directories to a custom location, for “clean” SVN checkouts.WordPress.org had over 75 people contributing code to WordPress 2.6. In addition to the core commit team we had contributions from Dion Hulse, Austin Matzko, Otto42, Benedict Eastaugh, and pishmishy. AaronCampbell and Marco Zehe provided more than a few patches. Back among the top code contributors is Jacob Santos. Alex Concha continues to have WordPress’ back. Joining bug reporting and gardening elite are hakre, Simon Wheatley, mtekk, and Matty Rob. Finally, congratulations to our Peter Westwood on your recent wedding! I’m also proud to announce we’re adding a new core committer to the team: Andrew Ozz (azaozz) has been a huge help to the core team this year, particularly around TinyMCE and making the WYSIWYG something that works for you, not against you.
\nBecause of the new capabilities to make WordPress a clean SVN checkout, plugin and theme authors should do their best to handle forms and posts through WP rather than trying to post to their files directly, here’s a quick Codex article about how to do it using our forward-compatible APIs.
\n2.6 is pretty much identical to 2.5 from a plugin and theme compatibility point of view, so upgrades from 2.5 should be pretty painless. The 2.5 branch will no longer be maintain so everyone is encouraged to upgrade. Our standard 3-step upgrade instructions apply to this release. There were at least 1,984,047 downloads of the 2.5 series, the fastest growing release we’ve ever had, and I think all of those people will find 2.6 adds a level of polish that really makes WP a pleasure to use every day. (At least I do. :))
\nThere have been rumors and allegations that there was a so-called “easter egg” added to 2.6 early in its development. These rumors and allegations are completely false!
\nP.S. If you’re a fan of WordPress, consider joining our fan page on Facebook.
\n";}s:3:"wfw";a:1:{s:10:"commentrss";s:65:"http://wordpress.org/development/2008/07/wordpress-26-tyner/feed/";}s:7:"summary";s:340:" I’m happy to announce that version 2.6 of WordPress.org is now available, almost a month ahead schedule. Version 2.6 “Tyner,” named for jazz pianist McCoy Tyner, contains a number of new features that make WordPress a more powerful CMS: you can now track changes to every post and page and easily post from wherever [...]";s:12:"atom_content";s:10270:"I’m happy to announce that version 2.6 of WordPress.org is now available, almost a month ahead schedule. Version 2.6 “Tyner,” named for jazz pianist McCoy Tyner, contains a number of new features that make WordPress a more powerful CMS: you can now track changes to every post and page and easily post from wherever you are on the web, plus there are dozens of incremental improvements to the features introduced in version 2.5.
\nWe’ve prepared a brief video tour of 2.6, if you have 3 minutes and 29 seconds to spare, it’s worth a watch:
\n\nIf you’d like to embed the tour video in your blog, copy and paste this code for the high quality version:
\n\n<embed src="http://v.wordpress.com/mARhRBcT/fmt_dvd" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="640" height="385" flashvars="blog_domain=http://wordpress.org/development/2008/07/wordpress-26/&width=640&height=385"> </embed>\n\n
And here’s a smaller version, 400 pixels wide:
\n\n<embed src="http://v.wordpress.com/mARhRBcT/fmt_std" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="400" height="250" flashvars="blog_domain=http://wordpress.org/development/2008/07/wordpress-26/&width=400&height=250"> </embed>\n\n
Here’s a more textual overview of what’s hawt in 2.6:
\nWith the power of modern computers, it’s silly that we still use save and editing metaphors from the time when the most common method of storage was floppy disks. WordPress has always respected the importance of your writing with auto-save, and now we’re taking that to another level by allowing you to view who made what changes when to any post or page through a super-easy interface, much like Wikipedia or a version control system.
\nThis is handy on any blog in case you make a mistake and want to go back to an older version of a post, and it’s super handy for multi-author blogs where you can see every change tracked by person.
\nA few months ago on my blog we started a conversation about the posting bookmarklet in WordPress and which systems we should look to for inspiration, like Flock, FriendFeed, Facebook, Tumblr, and Delicious. From these suggestions and the Quick Post plugin by Josh Kenzer, we developed a Press This bookmark you can add to your toolbar that provides a fast and smart popup to do posts to your WordPress blog:
\nFor example, if you click “Press This” from a Youtube page it’ll magically extract the video embed code, and if you do it from a Flickr page it’ll make it easy for you to put the image in your post. On my blog I’ve been experimenting with using different categories and the in_category()
function — such as video, quote, aside, et cetera — to create a more tumblelog-like format.
Gears is an open source browser extension project started by Google that developers like us can use to give you features we wouldn’t normally be able to. There are a lot of things we can do with Gears in the future, but in this release we’ve stuck to using what’s called a “Local Server” to cache or keep a copy of commonly-used Javascript and CSS files on your computer, which can speed up the loading of some pages by several seconds (they just pop right up!). You can install Gears for Firefox or Internet Explorer, with support for Safari and Opera pending. WordPress works just fine without it, you just get a little extra juice when you have it installed.
\nNow when you select a theme it pops up a window that shows the theme live with all your content, instead of immediately making it active on your site. This is great for just test driving themes before making a switch over publicly, and it is also helpful when you are developing a theme and need to test it but don’t want everybody to see your ongoing mistakes development.
Here are some of the smaller features and improvements in 2.6:
\nwp-config
file and wp-content
directories to a custom location, for “clean” SVN checkouts.WordPress.org had over 75 people contributing code to WordPress 2.6. In addition to the core commit team we had contributions from Dion Hulse, Austin Matzko, Otto42, Benedict Eastaugh, and pishmishy. AaronCampbell and Marco Zehe provided more than a few patches. Back among the top code contributors is Jacob Santos. Alex Concha continues to have WordPress’ back. Joining bug reporting and gardening elite are hakre, Simon Wheatley, mtekk, and Matty Rob. Finally, congratulations to our Peter Westwood on your recent wedding! I’m also proud to announce we’re adding a new core committer to the team: Andrew Ozz (azaozz) has been a huge help to the core team this year, particularly around TinyMCE and making the WYSIWYG something that works for you, not against you.
\nBecause of the new capabilities to make WordPress a clean SVN checkout, plugin and theme authors should do their best to handle forms and posts through WP rather than trying to post to their files directly, here’s a quick Codex article about how to do it using our forward-compatible APIs.
\n2.6 is pretty much identical to 2.5 from a plugin and theme compatibility point of view, so upgrades from 2.5 should be pretty painless. The 2.5 branch will no longer be maintain so everyone is encouraged to upgrade. Our standard 3-step upgrade instructions apply to this release. There were at least 1,984,047 downloads of the 2.5 series, the fastest growing release we’ve ever had, and I think all of those people will find 2.6 adds a level of polish that really makes WP a pleasure to use every day. (At least I do. :))
\nThere have been rumors and allegations that there was a so-called “easter egg” added to 2.6 early in its development. These rumors and allegations are completely false!
\nP.S. If you’re a fan of WordPress, consider joining our fan page on Facebook.
\n";}i:5;a:12:{s:5:"title";s:24:"WordPress Birthday Party";s:4:"link";s:56:"http://wordpress.org/development/2008/05/birthday-party/";s:8:"comments";s:65:"http://wordpress.org/development/2008/05/birthday-party/#comments";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Sun, 25 May 2008 05:51:03 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:4:"Matt";}s:8:"category";s:6:"Events";s:4:"guid";s:39:"http://wordpress.org/development/?p=243";s:11:"description";s:321:"On Tuesday, May 27th, WordPress will turn 5 years old. We’ve come a long way from that original 0.7 release.\nTo celebrate we’re throwing a party in San Francisco at 111 Minna, starting at 9PM. You can get the full details and RSVP on Upcoming.org or on Facebook.\nI hope you see some of you there, should [...]";s:7:"content";a:1:{s:7:"encoded";s:874:"On Tuesday, May 27th, WordPress will turn 5 years old. We’ve come a long way from that original 0.7 release.
\nTo celebrate we’re throwing a party in San Francisco at 111 Minna, starting at 9PM. You can get the full details and RSVP on Upcoming.org or on Facebook.
\nI hope you see some of you there, should be a fun time.
\nIf you host a party in your area for WordPress’ 5th, let us know and we’ll post it here.
\nUpdate: Party in Sydney! Blog post, Facebook.
\n";}s:3:"wfw";a:1:{s:10:"commentrss";s:61:"http://wordpress.org/development/2008/05/birthday-party/feed/";}s:7:"summary";s:321:"On Tuesday, May 27th, WordPress will turn 5 years old. We’ve come a long way from that original 0.7 release.\nTo celebrate we’re throwing a party in San Francisco at 111 Minna, starting at 9PM. You can get the full details and RSVP on Upcoming.org or on Facebook.\nI hope you see some of you there, should [...]";s:12:"atom_content";s:874:"On Tuesday, May 27th, WordPress will turn 5 years old. We’ve come a long way from that original 0.7 release.
\nTo celebrate we’re throwing a party in San Francisco at 111 Minna, starting at 9PM. You can get the full details and RSVP on Upcoming.org or on Facebook.
\nI hope you see some of you there, should be a fun time.
\nIf you host a party in your area for WordPress’ 5th, let us know and we’ll post it here.
\nUpdate: Party in Sydney! Blog post, Facebook.
\n";}i:6;a:12:{s:5:"title";s:29:"Usability Testing in New York";s:4:"link";s:71:"http://wordpress.org/development/2008/05/usability-testing-in-new-york/";s:8:"comments";s:80:"http://wordpress.org/development/2008/05/usability-testing-in-new-york/#comments";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Tue, 20 May 2008 22:13:49 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:4:"Ryan";}s:8:"category";s:11:"Development";s:4:"guid";s:39:"http://wordpress.org/development/?p=241";s:11:"description";s:98:"We’re doing some usability testing in New York City. Join in if you’re in the area.\n";s:7:"content";a:1:{s:7:"encoded";s:187:"We’re doing some usability testing in New York City. Join in if you’re in the area.
\n";}s:3:"wfw";a:1:{s:10:"commentrss";s:76:"http://wordpress.org/development/2008/05/usability-testing-in-new-york/feed/";}s:7:"summary";s:98:"We’re doing some usability testing in New York City. Join in if you’re in the area.\n";s:12:"atom_content";s:187:"We’re doing some usability testing in New York City. Join in if you’re in the area.
\n";}i:7;a:12:{s:5:"title";s:18:"Upcoming WordCamps";s:4:"link";s:60:"http://wordpress.org/development/2008/04/upcoming-wordcamps/";s:8:"comments";s:69:"http://wordpress.org/development/2008/04/upcoming-wordcamps/#comments";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Wed, 30 Apr 2008 09:54:48 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:4:"Matt";}s:8:"category";s:6:"Events";s:4:"guid";s:39:"http://wordpress.org/development/?p=240";s:11:"description";s:343:"WordCamps are my favorite events to go to because there’s something about the core WordPress community that attracts smart folks with good philosophies that are fun to hang out with. In this post I’ve collated the upcoming WordCamps we know about, including the one in San Francisco. Hopefully there will be one nearby so you [...]";s:7:"content";a:1:{s:7:"encoded";s:1446:"WordCamps are my favorite events to go to because there’s something about the core WordPress community that attracts smart folks with good philosophies that are fun to hang out with. In this post I’ve collated the upcoming WordCamps we know about, including the one in San Francisco. Hopefully there will be one nearby so you can meet other WordPressers in your area.
\nWordCamp San Francisco will be August 16 at the Mission Bay Conference Center.
\nWordCamp Paris will be on May 3rd. Here’s their official site.
\nWordCamp Italy in Milan will be May 10th. (And I believe I’ll be there.)
\nWordCamp Birmingham UK will be July 19-20.
\nWordCamp Toronto will be October 4th.
\nThere are people in the planning stages in Australia, Philippines, Beijing, Utah, Hawaii, UK, NYC, and possibly others, so if you live in one of those areas and would like to help set up a WordCamp in your area Google around or connect with bloggers in your area.
\nYou can always find out more at WordCamp Central.
\n";}s:3:"wfw";a:1:{s:10:"commentrss";s:65:"http://wordpress.org/development/2008/04/upcoming-wordcamps/feed/";}s:7:"summary";s:343:"WordCamps are my favorite events to go to because there’s something about the core WordPress community that attracts smart folks with good philosophies that are fun to hang out with. In this post I’ve collated the upcoming WordCamps we know about, including the one in San Francisco. Hopefully there will be one nearby so you [...]";s:12:"atom_content";s:1446:"WordCamps are my favorite events to go to because there’s something about the core WordPress community that attracts smart folks with good philosophies that are fun to hang out with. In this post I’ve collated the upcoming WordCamps we know about, including the one in San Francisco. Hopefully there will be one nearby so you can meet other WordPressers in your area.
\nWordCamp San Francisco will be August 16 at the Mission Bay Conference Center.
\nWordCamp Paris will be on May 3rd. Here’s their official site.
\nWordCamp Italy in Milan will be May 10th. (And I believe I’ll be there.)
\nWordCamp Birmingham UK will be July 19-20.
\nWordCamp Toronto will be October 4th.
\nThere are people in the planning stages in Australia, Philippines, Beijing, Utah, Hawaii, UK, NYC, and possibly others, so if you live in one of those areas and would like to help set up a WordCamp in your area Google around or connect with bloggers in your area.
\nYou can always find out more at WordCamp Central.
\n";}i:8;a:12:{s:5:"title";s:15:"WordPress 2.5.1";s:4:"link";s:55:"http://wordpress.org/development/2008/04/wordpress-251/";s:8:"comments";s:64:"http://wordpress.org/development/2008/04/wordpress-251/#comments";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Fri, 25 Apr 2008 15:54:19 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:4:"Ryan";}s:8:"category";s:8:"Releases";s:4:"guid";s:39:"http://wordpress.org/development/?p=231";s:11:"description";s:360:"Version 2.5.1 of WordPress is now available. It includes a number of bug fixes, performance enhancements, and one very important security fix. We recommend everyone update immediately, particularly if your blog has open registration. The vulnerability is not public but it will be shortly.\nIn addition to the security fix, 2.5.1 contains many bug fixes. [...]";s:7:"content";a:1:{s:7:"encoded";s:2251:"Version 2.5.1 of WordPress is now available. It includes a number of bug fixes, performance enhancements, and one very important security fix. We recommend everyone update immediately, particularly if your blog has open registration. The vulnerability is not public but it will be shortly.
\nIn addition to the security fix, 2.5.1 contains many bug fixes. If you are interested only in the security fixes, you can download these corrected copies of wp-includes/pluggable.php, wp-admin/includes/media.php, and wp-admin/media.php. Replace your existing copies of these files with these new copies.
\nIf you download the entire 2.5.1 release, you will be getting over 70 other fixes. 2.5.1 focuses on fixing the most annoying bugs and improving performance. Here are some highlights:
\nSince 2.5 your wp-config.php
file allows a new constant called SECRET_KEY
which basically is meant to introduce a little permanent randomness into the cryptographic functions used for cookies in WordPress. You can visit this link we set up to get a unique secret key for your config file. (It’s unique and random on every page load.) Having this line in your config file helps secure your blog.
Many thanks to Steven Murdoch for responsibly reporting the security issue (CVE-2008-1930) and Alex Concha for reporting an XSS issue.
\n";}s:3:"wfw";a:1:{s:10:"commentrss";s:60:"http://wordpress.org/development/2008/04/wordpress-251/feed/";}s:7:"summary";s:360:"Version 2.5.1 of WordPress is now available. It includes a number of bug fixes, performance enhancements, and one very important security fix. We recommend everyone update immediately, particularly if your blog has open registration. The vulnerability is not public but it will be shortly.\nIn addition to the security fix, 2.5.1 contains many bug fixes. [...]";s:12:"atom_content";s:2251:"Version 2.5.1 of WordPress is now available. It includes a number of bug fixes, performance enhancements, and one very important security fix. We recommend everyone update immediately, particularly if your blog has open registration. The vulnerability is not public but it will be shortly.
\nIn addition to the security fix, 2.5.1 contains many bug fixes. If you are interested only in the security fixes, you can download these corrected copies of wp-includes/pluggable.php, wp-admin/includes/media.php, and wp-admin/media.php. Replace your existing copies of these files with these new copies.
\nIf you download the entire 2.5.1 release, you will be getting over 70 other fixes. 2.5.1 focuses on fixing the most annoying bugs and improving performance. Here are some highlights:
\nSince 2.5 your wp-config.php
file allows a new constant called SECRET_KEY
which basically is meant to introduce a little permanent randomness into the cryptographic functions used for cookies in WordPress. You can visit this link we set up to get a unique secret key for your config file. (It’s unique and random on every page load.) Having this line in your config file helps secure your blog.
Many thanks to Steven Murdoch for responsibly reporting the security issue (CVE-2008-1930) and Alex Concha for reporting an XSS issue.
\n";}i:9;a:12:{s:5:"title";s:23:"An Event Apart Discount";s:4:"link";s:65:"http://wordpress.org/development/2008/04/an-event-apart-discount/";s:8:"comments";s:74:"http://wordpress.org/development/2008/04/an-event-apart-discount/#comments";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Tue, 22 Apr 2008 22:33:19 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:4:"Matt";}s:8:"category";s:36:"Eventsan event aparthappy cogzeldman";s:4:"guid";s:65:"http://wordpress.org/development/2008/04/an-event-apart-discount/";s:11:"description";s:321:"An Event Apart is a web design and development conference which features some of the same fine folks who helped out with WordPress 2.5. (And many others.) I attended the one in Chicago a while back and was engaged the whole day in interesting talks on design, writing copy as interface, advanced CSS, and creativity [...]";s:7:"content";a:1:{s:7:"encoded";s:1194:"An Event Apart is a web design and development conference which features some of the same fine folks who helped out with WordPress 2.5. (And many others.) I attended the one in Chicago a while back and was engaged the whole day in interesting talks on design, writing copy as interface, advanced CSS, and creativity — each topic presented by the leading folks in the field.
\nThe conference normally costs just under a thousand dollars to attend, which is well worth it, but because of our association with the folks they’ve set up a discount for WordPress users.
\nIf you enter AEAWP on checkout the price drops to $795, or $200 below the regular registration fee. The coupon is unlimited, and can be used for one ticket or five. They have events coming up in New Orleans, Boston, San Francisco, and Chicago. You can learn more and register on their site at aneventapart.com.
\nWe’ll also have some final dates for WordCamp San Francisco coming up, I’ll be posting those soonish so people can start making vacation and travel plans. (Nothing like a blogging vacation.)
\n";}s:3:"wfw";a:1:{s:10:"commentrss";s:70:"http://wordpress.org/development/2008/04/an-event-apart-discount/feed/";}s:7:"summary";s:321:"An Event Apart is a web design and development conference which features some of the same fine folks who helped out with WordPress 2.5. (And many others.) I attended the one in Chicago a while back and was engaged the whole day in interesting talks on design, writing copy as interface, advanced CSS, and creativity [...]";s:12:"atom_content";s:1194:"An Event Apart is a web design and development conference which features some of the same fine folks who helped out with WordPress 2.5. (And many others.) I attended the one in Chicago a while back and was engaged the whole day in interesting talks on design, writing copy as interface, advanced CSS, and creativity — each topic presented by the leading folks in the field.
\nThe conference normally costs just under a thousand dollars to attend, which is well worth it, but because of our association with the folks they’ve set up a discount for WordPress users.
\nIf you enter AEAWP on checkout the price drops to $795, or $200 below the regular registration fee. The coupon is unlimited, and can be used for one ticket or five. They have events coming up in New Orleans, Boston, San Francisco, and Chicago. You can learn more and register on their site at aneventapart.com.
\nWe’ll also have some final dates for WordCamp San Francisco coming up, I’ll be posting those soonish so people can start making vacation and travel plans. (Nothing like a blogging vacation.)
\n";}}s:7:"channel";a:8:{s:5:"title";s:26:"WordPress Development Blog";s:4:"link";s:32:"http://wordpress.org/development";s:11:"description";s:33:"WordPress development and updates";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Thu, 18 Sep 2008 20:02:51 +0000";s:9:"generator";s:38:"http://wordpress.org/?v=2.7-hemorrhage";s:8:"language";s:2:"en";s:2:"sy";a:2:{s:12:"updateperiod";s:6:"hourly";s:15:"updatefrequency";s:1:"1";}s:7:"tagline";s:33:"WordPress development and updates";}s:9:"textinput";a:0:{}s:5:"image";a:0:{}s:9:"feed_type";s:3:"RSS";s:12:"feed_version";s:3:"2.0";s:5:"stack";a:0:{}s:9:"inchannel";b:0;s:6:"initem";b:0;s:9:"incontent";b:0;s:11:"intextinput";b:0;s:7:"inimage";b:0;s:13:"current_field";s:0:"";s:17:"current_namespace";b:0;s:19:"_CONTENT_CONSTRUCTS";a:6:{i:0;s:7:"content";i:1;s:7:"summary";i:2;s:4:"info";i:3;s:5:"title";i:4;s:7:"tagline";i:5;s:9:"copyright";}s:13:"last_modified";s:31:"Thu, 18 Sep 2008 20:02:51 GMT\r\n";s:4:"etag";s:36:""4caff7a24e63df703c59a7a0c2e75913"\r\n";}', 'no') ; INSERT INTO `wp_options` VALUES (90, 0, 'rss_0ff4b43bd116a9d8720d689c80e7dfd4_ts', '1222184413', 'no') ; INSERT INTO `wp_options` VALUES (91, 0, 'rss_867bd5c64f85878d03a060509cd2f92c', 'O:9:"MagpieRSS":19:{s:6:"parser";i:0;s:12:"current_item";a:0:{}s:5:"items";a:50:{i:0;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:27:"Donncha: WP Super Cache 0.8";s:4:"guid";s:29:"http://ocaoimh.ie/?p=89494030";s:4:"link";s:47:"http://ocaoimh.ie/2008/09/23/wp-super-cache-08/";s:11:"description";s:2816:"WP Super Cache is a page caching plugin for WordPress that will significantly speed up your website.
\nIf you’re not interested in the changes, simply grab the latest version of the plugin and copy the files into your plugin folder. It’ll work, but if you’re upgrading, you should read on.
\nMajor changes in this release:\n
Related Posts
";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Tue, 23 Sep 2008 14:46:50 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:7:"Donncha";}s:7:"summary";s:2816:"WP Super Cache is a page caching plugin for WordPress that will significantly speed up your website.
\nIf you’re not interested in the changes, simply grab the latest version of the plugin and copy the files into your plugin folder. It’ll work, but if you’re upgrading, you should read on.
\nMajor changes in this release:\n
Related Posts
";}i:1;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:23:"Matt: 18 on 30 Under 30";s:4:"guid";s:20:"http://ma.tt/?p=7725";s:4:"link";s:39:"http://ma.tt/2008/09/18-on-30-under-30/";s:11:"description";s:212:"Inc. just announced their Top 30 Entrepreneurs Under 30 and I came in at #18. Cool! Some really young ones on the list though — I’m getting old.
";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Mon, 22 Sep 2008 22:43:43 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:4:"Matt";}s:7:"summary";s:212:"Inc. just announced their Top 30 Entrepreneurs Under 30 and I came in at #18. Cool! Some really young ones on the list though — I’m getting old.
";}i:2;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:43:"Lloyd: Official WordPress Logos and Fan Art";s:4:"guid";s:30:"http://foolswisdom.com/?p=1577";s:4:"link";s:60:"http://foolswisdom.com/official-wordpress-logos-and-fan-art/";s:11:"description";s:4102:"I know that Matt Mullenweg and Matt Thomas die a little each time they see WordPress fan art that uses a faux logo. I only notice the chubby W because I’ve been edumacated.
\nMT (the real) has updated WordPress.org/about/buttons with official WordPress logos in pngs and vector image formats.
\n\nThere are also WordPress desktop wall paper in various official colors and sizes. The official WordPress colors are given in a variety of code systems. Pantone 7468 anyone?
\nFan Art
\nThe fan art page could use some fresh contributions.
\nThese naturalized WordPress logos would be nice additions:
\n\nOne or more of the WordPress Malaysia Independence Logos by Avijit Paul. My favorite are the one’s with the flower for the O:
\n\nI love the WordCamp Philippines logo:
\n\nWhat is your favorite WordPress art?
\nLorelle’s category icons are brilliant. For example, she uses this image for WordPress News:
\n\nAnyone know the creator of this popular images?
\n\nSame day correction: previously the article suggested the font is Dante, but both Matts have come to my rescue. It used to be the WordPress logo font. When Jason Santa Maria designed the new logo a few years ago, he chose the lovely Mrs. Eaves.
\nAdam Freetly identified the creator of the “lens flare” logo as being Dan Philibin.
\n";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Mon, 22 Sep 2008 21:30:16 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:5:"Lloyd";}s:7:"summary";s:4102:"I know that Matt Mullenweg and Matt Thomas die a little each time they see WordPress fan art that uses a faux logo. I only notice the chubby W because I’ve been edumacated.
\nMT (the real) has updated WordPress.org/about/buttons with official WordPress logos in pngs and vector image formats.
\n\nThere are also WordPress desktop wall paper in various official colors and sizes. The official WordPress colors are given in a variety of code systems. Pantone 7468 anyone?
\nFan Art
\nThe fan art page could use some fresh contributions.
\nThese naturalized WordPress logos would be nice additions:
\n\nOne or more of the WordPress Malaysia Independence Logos by Avijit Paul. My favorite are the one’s with the flower for the O:
\n\nI love the WordCamp Philippines logo:
\n\nWhat is your favorite WordPress art?
\nLorelle’s category icons are brilliant. For example, she uses this image for WordPress News:
\n\nAnyone know the creator of this popular images?
\n\nSame day correction: previously the article suggested the font is Dante, but both Matts have come to my rescue. It used to be the WordPress logo font. When Jason Santa Maria designed the new logo a few years ago, he chose the lovely Mrs. Eaves.
\nAdam Freetly identified the creator of the “lens flare” logo as being Dan Philibin.
\n";}i:3;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:70:"Dougal Campbell: WordCamp Birmingham Registration Deadline Approaching";s:4:"guid";s:33:"http://dougal.gunters.org/?p=1101";s:4:"link";s:95:"http://dougal.gunters.org/blog/2008/09/22/wordcamp-birmingham-registration-deadline-approaching";s:11:"description";s:582:"If you have been thinking about attending WordCamp Birmingham 2008, but haven’t committed yet, now is the time. There are only a couple of hours left to sign up. Registration is only $25, and that includes lunch and a tee shirt — talk about a bargain! Register now!
If you have been thinking about attending WordCamp Birmingham 2008, but haven’t committed yet, now is the time. There are only a couple of hours left to sign up. Registration is only $25, and that includes lunch and a tee shirt — talk about a bargain! Register now!
Simple two column WordPress theme
\n\n\nThree column, gravatar ready theme with two right sidebars
\n\n\nTwo Column widget enabled minimalist wordpres theme
\n\n\nInspired on Wired Magazine look, Clean News is a theme with a large content area, but it also has a wide sidebar that allows to display even a 300px width ad. Home and single sidebars are independent, both widgetized, so you can easily choose what and where to display. A lot of white space to make your content stand out, low weight and no plugins required. It will load in the blink of an eye.
";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Mon, 22 Sep 2008 14:24:14 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:4:"Ajay";}s:7:"summary";s:1850:"\nSimple two column WordPress theme
\n\n\nThree column, gravatar ready theme with two right sidebars
\n\n\nTwo Column widget enabled minimalist wordpres theme
\n\n\nInspired on Wired Magazine look, Clean News is a theme with a large content area, but it also has a wide sidebar that allows to display even a 300px width ad. Home and single sidebars are independent, both widgetized, so you can easily choose what and where to display. A lot of white space to make your content stand out, low weight and no plugins required. It will load in the blink of an eye.
";}i:5;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:49:"Weblog Tools Collection: WordPress Weekly Is Back";s:4:"guid";s:40:"http://weblogtoolscollection.com/?p=4197";s:4:"link";s:78:"http://weblogtoolscollection.com/archives/2008/09/21/wordpress-weekly-is-back/";s:11:"description";s:10824:"Many of you may or may not remember a WordPress podcast that was hosted and produced by yours truly called WordPress Weekly. The show made it through 22 episodes. Some of those included staple interviews with Matt Mullenweg, Lorelle Van Fossen, and Alex King. Because I took on more work, it became increasingly difficult to produce the show on a weekly basis for no pay. Don’t get me wrong, I had a blast doing it but I have to pay the bills. Therefor, I opted to concentrate on the work that would pay me versus doing the show for nothing. After I stopped producing the show, comments, emails and feedback through instant messaging started coming in, letting me know how much you enjoyed the show. Many people who had just discovered the show let me know that they were disappointed there would be no more episodes after 22.
\nI’ve taken all of your feedback to heart and have decided to bring the show back. Mark and I have decided to produce the show for WeblogToolsCollection as part of our content on this blog.
\nWordPress Weekly was a weekly podcast that discussed what happened within the past week within the world of WordPress. Generally every show was an open round table discussion. I had a number of people who would call in and chime in on stories I discussed during the show. Sometimes, this would be anywhere between 3-7 people on the phone at once, talking over each other but generally, having a good time. This time around, I plan on changing things up a bit. For starters, the show will now have a co-host. If there is anything I’ve learned while doing WordPress Weekly for 22 episodes, it is that having someone to talk to, to bounce stories off of is much better than facing the possibility of talking to myself, or a room of empty people. Two people engaging in a conversation is much better than what I can do single handedly. Also, I don’t have to worry if whether or not people will call in to the show to be part of the round table.
\nMy co host is more than qualified for the job. His name is Keith Murrary and resides in Canada. He has been working with WordPress for a little while now. He is the author of the Admin Links Sidebar Widget plugin. He works as a systems administrator at his place of employment and his role on the podcast will be to discuss the development side of WordPress. I take things from an end users perspective, so we should match up pretty well in discussions.
\nWordPress Weekly is a weekly oriented podcast that takes place every Friday evening at 8PM EST starting on October 3rd, 2008 on Talkshoe.com. The format of the show will remain close to what it has been in the past. The co-host and I will discuss the WordPress news of the week. This could be plugin updates, releases, themes, version releases, development updates, a tutorial written by someone in the community, could be anything as long as it relates to WordPress. At the end of each show, Keith and I will give out our plugin of the week. This plugin is picked individually by us and is tested prior to the show.
\nI am aiming for a relaxing atmosphere where WordPress Users can gather around for 1 hour every Friday evening and discuss the latest happenings with everything WordPress. You could almost consider the show a virtual WordCamp.
\nSo how can you be a part of the show? The easiest way is to create an account on Talkshoe.com. Then, download and install their client software (Talkshoe Pro). The Talkshoe software serves as a bridge of communication between the host, and his/her listeners. The software contains a chat room as well as phone number information to call into the show.
\nHowever, you do not need to install the software in order to listen to the show live. Friday October 3rd, at 8PM EST, look on the front page of Talkshoe.com or click on the LIVE NOW button and look for the Wordpress Weekly show. Instead of clicking on the JOIN IN button, click underneath where it says LISTEN ONLY. This will tune you into the live stream.
\nIf you want to call in to the show via telephone, Skype, payphone landline, etc, dial 724-444-7444 and follow the audio instructions. *Note* In one of the recent updates to Talkshoe, anonymous calling is now supported. This means you can call in and participate without the need to create a Talkshoe account. However, if you have a Talkshoe account, your registered name will show up within the Talkshoe client letting others know who is speaking. I also want to let you know that Talkshoe has had problems with people calling in anonymously, trying to crash peoples shows or prank call hosts. Having a registered user account will give you a better chance of being on the air. When you dial into the show and you want to speak on the air, press *8 on your dial pad. This is the request to talk feature and will let me know you want to chime in on the discussion.
\nYou can also use SIP clients such as ProjectGizmo or X-Lite. For example, when I use X-Lite to dial in, I type in 123@66.212.134.192 and then follow the audio directions. If you would like to use X-Lite but are unsure in how to configure the software, I highly advise you to check out my in depth tutorial (Installing And Configuring X-Lite)which explains everything you need to know.
\nRemember this information as it will be required when you want to dial into the show.
\nTalkcast Name: WordPress Weekly
\n\n
Talkcast ID: 34224
\n\n
Phone Number: 724-444-7444
\nThis would also be a good time to remind you that Talkshoe now has a web client that you can access without the need to download or install any software. The web client makes it as easy as pie to participate in the show.
\nThe first is by listening to the live stream. Every Friday at 8PM EST starting on October 3rd, a live stream of the show is enabled, allowing you to listen to the show LIVE as it is being recorded. You can listen to the live stream via the web application which allows you to chat, or you can listen to the stream only. It’s your choice.
\nThe second option is to wait until the final show notes are published on WeblogToolsCollection. When the show notes for WordPress Weekly are finalized, I always embed a talkshoe player at the end of the post which allows you to listen to the show on the website.
\nThe third option is to subscribe to the Talkcast RSS feed. Each Talkshoe player that is displayed on the website has a small RSS icon near the top right corner of the player. Clicking this icon will allow you to subscribe to the feed, and will download the latest episodes into your Feed Reader.
\nThe fourth option is to subscribe to the show via Itunes. Talkshoe provides a link you can use to subscribe to a Talkshoe show through Itunes. If you want to subscribe via Itunes or RSS, the best thing to do is to visit THIS PAGE and click on the Itunes button or the RSS button.
\nThe fifth option is to manually browse to the talkcast homepage and manually download each episode as an mp3 file. When you visit the homepage, click on the DOWNLOAD button and that will download the appropriate episode in an mp3 format that has no DRM attached to it.
\nLast but not least, if you would like to be reminded of the show via email, please create an account on Talkshoe.com and then visit my Talkcast page. After you create an account, you’ll be able to click on the FOLLOW THIS button, which will add your email automatically to the mailing list. Each time I send out a reminder of when the show will air, an email will be sent to the email address you configured when you created your Talkshoe account.
\nUnlike the other WordPress centric podcasts that are available, this one is not pre recorded and thus, the audio is not studio grade quality. With that said, my audio has always sounded great with my X-Lite/Talkshoe combination. But, I can only control the audio quality for myself and no one else. So while Keith and I may sound great, someone who calls into the show with a crappy cell phone may sound terrible and there will be nothing I can do about it. The show is produced as is. If you partake in the discussions, I prefer that you please refrain from using expletives during the show. I believe points can be made without using these types of words. I’d also like to keep the clean rating for the show on iTunes.
\nI have a renewed sense as to how I want the show to be from here on out but I am open to ideas and suggestions to improve the show. At this point, I’d like to know from you, what are you looking for out of a WordPress centric podcast? Do you want more interviews rather than commentary on news? Do you want to know about themes and plugins more than anything else? Would you like us to do a roundtable show once a month or more? Would you like us to cover WordPress only or should we sometimes branch out and discuss topics that are related to blogging and not just WordPress?
\nIf you can’t answer those, simply tell me in the comments what your expectations are for an excellent podcast centered on WordPress that you would listen to every week.
\nThank you for taking the time to read this mile long manual. Keith and I will see you on Friday, October 3rd at 8PM EST.
\nBy the way, if you would like a sample of WordPress Weekly before our relaunch, listen to some of my past episodes via the Talkshoe player. Pressing the play button will initiate episode 22 where I interviewed Alex King.
\n";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Sun, 21 Sep 2008 14:32:23 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:13:"Jeff Chandler";}s:7:"summary";s:10824:"Many of you may or may not remember a WordPress podcast that was hosted and produced by yours truly called WordPress Weekly. The show made it through 22 episodes. Some of those included staple interviews with Matt Mullenweg, Lorelle Van Fossen, and Alex King. Because I took on more work, it became increasingly difficult to produce the show on a weekly basis for no pay. Don’t get me wrong, I had a blast doing it but I have to pay the bills. Therefor, I opted to concentrate on the work that would pay me versus doing the show for nothing. After I stopped producing the show, comments, emails and feedback through instant messaging started coming in, letting me know how much you enjoyed the show. Many people who had just discovered the show let me know that they were disappointed there would be no more episodes after 22.
\nI’ve taken all of your feedback to heart and have decided to bring the show back. Mark and I have decided to produce the show for WeblogToolsCollection as part of our content on this blog.
\nWordPress Weekly was a weekly podcast that discussed what happened within the past week within the world of WordPress. Generally every show was an open round table discussion. I had a number of people who would call in and chime in on stories I discussed during the show. Sometimes, this would be anywhere between 3-7 people on the phone at once, talking over each other but generally, having a good time. This time around, I plan on changing things up a bit. For starters, the show will now have a co-host. If there is anything I’ve learned while doing WordPress Weekly for 22 episodes, it is that having someone to talk to, to bounce stories off of is much better than facing the possibility of talking to myself, or a room of empty people. Two people engaging in a conversation is much better than what I can do single handedly. Also, I don’t have to worry if whether or not people will call in to the show to be part of the round table.
\nMy co host is more than qualified for the job. His name is Keith Murrary and resides in Canada. He has been working with WordPress for a little while now. He is the author of the Admin Links Sidebar Widget plugin. He works as a systems administrator at his place of employment and his role on the podcast will be to discuss the development side of WordPress. I take things from an end users perspective, so we should match up pretty well in discussions.
\nWordPress Weekly is a weekly oriented podcast that takes place every Friday evening at 8PM EST starting on October 3rd, 2008 on Talkshoe.com. The format of the show will remain close to what it has been in the past. The co-host and I will discuss the WordPress news of the week. This could be plugin updates, releases, themes, version releases, development updates, a tutorial written by someone in the community, could be anything as long as it relates to WordPress. At the end of each show, Keith and I will give out our plugin of the week. This plugin is picked individually by us and is tested prior to the show.
\nI am aiming for a relaxing atmosphere where WordPress Users can gather around for 1 hour every Friday evening and discuss the latest happenings with everything WordPress. You could almost consider the show a virtual WordCamp.
\nSo how can you be a part of the show? The easiest way is to create an account on Talkshoe.com. Then, download and install their client software (Talkshoe Pro). The Talkshoe software serves as a bridge of communication between the host, and his/her listeners. The software contains a chat room as well as phone number information to call into the show.
\nHowever, you do not need to install the software in order to listen to the show live. Friday October 3rd, at 8PM EST, look on the front page of Talkshoe.com or click on the LIVE NOW button and look for the Wordpress Weekly show. Instead of clicking on the JOIN IN button, click underneath where it says LISTEN ONLY. This will tune you into the live stream.
\nIf you want to call in to the show via telephone, Skype, payphone landline, etc, dial 724-444-7444 and follow the audio instructions. *Note* In one of the recent updates to Talkshoe, anonymous calling is now supported. This means you can call in and participate without the need to create a Talkshoe account. However, if you have a Talkshoe account, your registered name will show up within the Talkshoe client letting others know who is speaking. I also want to let you know that Talkshoe has had problems with people calling in anonymously, trying to crash peoples shows or prank call hosts. Having a registered user account will give you a better chance of being on the air. When you dial into the show and you want to speak on the air, press *8 on your dial pad. This is the request to talk feature and will let me know you want to chime in on the discussion.
\nYou can also use SIP clients such as ProjectGizmo or X-Lite. For example, when I use X-Lite to dial in, I type in 123@66.212.134.192 and then follow the audio directions. If you would like to use X-Lite but are unsure in how to configure the software, I highly advise you to check out my in depth tutorial (Installing And Configuring X-Lite)which explains everything you need to know.
\nRemember this information as it will be required when you want to dial into the show.
\nTalkcast Name: WordPress Weekly
\n\n
Talkcast ID: 34224
\n\n
Phone Number: 724-444-7444
\nThis would also be a good time to remind you that Talkshoe now has a web client that you can access without the need to download or install any software. The web client makes it as easy as pie to participate in the show.
\nThe first is by listening to the live stream. Every Friday at 8PM EST starting on October 3rd, a live stream of the show is enabled, allowing you to listen to the show LIVE as it is being recorded. You can listen to the live stream via the web application which allows you to chat, or you can listen to the stream only. It’s your choice.
\nThe second option is to wait until the final show notes are published on WeblogToolsCollection. When the show notes for WordPress Weekly are finalized, I always embed a talkshoe player at the end of the post which allows you to listen to the show on the website.
\nThe third option is to subscribe to the Talkcast RSS feed. Each Talkshoe player that is displayed on the website has a small RSS icon near the top right corner of the player. Clicking this icon will allow you to subscribe to the feed, and will download the latest episodes into your Feed Reader.
\nThe fourth option is to subscribe to the show via Itunes. Talkshoe provides a link you can use to subscribe to a Talkshoe show through Itunes. If you want to subscribe via Itunes or RSS, the best thing to do is to visit THIS PAGE and click on the Itunes button or the RSS button.
\nThe fifth option is to manually browse to the talkcast homepage and manually download each episode as an mp3 file. When you visit the homepage, click on the DOWNLOAD button and that will download the appropriate episode in an mp3 format that has no DRM attached to it.
\nLast but not least, if you would like to be reminded of the show via email, please create an account on Talkshoe.com and then visit my Talkcast page. After you create an account, you’ll be able to click on the FOLLOW THIS button, which will add your email automatically to the mailing list. Each time I send out a reminder of when the show will air, an email will be sent to the email address you configured when you created your Talkshoe account.
\nUnlike the other WordPress centric podcasts that are available, this one is not pre recorded and thus, the audio is not studio grade quality. With that said, my audio has always sounded great with my X-Lite/Talkshoe combination. But, I can only control the audio quality for myself and no one else. So while Keith and I may sound great, someone who calls into the show with a crappy cell phone may sound terrible and there will be nothing I can do about it. The show is produced as is. If you partake in the discussions, I prefer that you please refrain from using expletives during the show. I believe points can be made without using these types of words. I’d also like to keep the clean rating for the show on iTunes.
\nI have a renewed sense as to how I want the show to be from here on out but I am open to ideas and suggestions to improve the show. At this point, I’d like to know from you, what are you looking for out of a WordPress centric podcast? Do you want more interviews rather than commentary on news? Do you want to know about themes and plugins more than anything else? Would you like us to do a roundtable show once a month or more? Would you like us to cover WordPress only or should we sometimes branch out and discuss topics that are related to blogging and not just WordPress?
\nIf you can’t answer those, simply tell me in the comments what your expectations are for an excellent podcast centered on WordPress that you would listen to every week.
\nThank you for taking the time to read this mile long manual. Keith and I will see you on Friday, October 3rd at 8PM EST.
\nBy the way, if you would like a sample of WordPress Weekly before our relaunch, listen to some of my past episodes via the Talkshoe player. Pressing the play button will initiate episode 22 where I interviewed Alex King.
\n";}i:6;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:60:"Weblog Tools Collection: WordPress Plugin Releases for 09/21";s:4:"guid";s:40:"http://weblogtoolscollection.com/?p=4201";s:4:"link";s:88:"http://weblogtoolscollection.com/archives/2008/09/21/wordpress-plugin-releases-for-0921/";s:11:"description";s:1747:"\nThis plugin renders inline sheet music fragments inside posts and comments into images. It supports ABC, GUIDO, Lilypond and Mup music notations
\n\nC4F Textarea Toolbar is a plugin for WordPress aimed at providing a simple yet very useful and precise tool to insert emoticons and markup in the comments’ textarea.
\nBlogWell’s Simple Image Link Widget
\nSimple Image Link lets you easily add images to your sidebar, be they advertisements, buttons of support or buttons of protest without the need for any HTML.
\n\nGenerate RSS feeds for category and tag archive pages.
\n\nDisable the ability for users to password protect certain posts.
\n\nIntranet / Extranet plugin for Wordpress that allows users to specify which users can access specific posts or pages.
\n\nMTR Podcast Recorder offers real-time recording that is saved on the same server where WordPress is installed. All recordings will be saved into the MP3 format using LAME encoder.
";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Sun, 21 Sep 2008 07:08:27 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:4:"Ajay";}s:7:"summary";s:1747:"\nThis plugin renders inline sheet music fragments inside posts and comments into images. It supports ABC, GUIDO, Lilypond and Mup music notations
\n\nC4F Textarea Toolbar is a plugin for WordPress aimed at providing a simple yet very useful and precise tool to insert emoticons and markup in the comments’ textarea.
\nBlogWell’s Simple Image Link Widget
\nSimple Image Link lets you easily add images to your sidebar, be they advertisements, buttons of support or buttons of protest without the need for any HTML.
\n\nGenerate RSS feeds for category and tag archive pages.
\n\nDisable the ability for users to password protect certain posts.
\n\nIntranet / Extranet plugin for Wordpress that allows users to specify which users can access specific posts or pages.
\n\nMTR Podcast Recorder offers real-time recording that is saved on the same server where WordPress is installed. All recordings will be saved into the MP3 format using LAME encoder.
";}i:7;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:59:"Weblog Tools Collection: WordPress Theme Releases for 09/19";s:4:"guid";s:40:"http://weblogtoolscollection.com/?p=4195";s:4:"link";s:87:"http://weblogtoolscollection.com/archives/2008/09/19/wordpress-theme-releases-for-0919/";s:11:"description";s:2731:"\n\nTwo column fixed-width WordPress theme, with lefthand sidebar, enabled for widgets…
\n\n\nWP Strict is a real Magazine/Blog/Webfolio hybrid with two different page templates, custom fields and four different widgetized areas.
\n\n\nOrange, black, and gray combined to create a clean, great-looking theme. Supports rotating 125×125 sidebar ads, widgets, gravatars, and microformats.
\n\n\nTwo column, fixed width, widget ready green, black and white theme.
\n\n\nRed Lite is a simple 2 column red and grey WordPress theme.
\n\n\nTwo column, black and grey theme with gravatar functionality with an exteremely small size.
";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Fri, 19 Sep 2008 18:47:40 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:4:"Ajay";}s:7:"summary";s:2731:"\n\nTwo column fixed-width WordPress theme, with lefthand sidebar, enabled for widgets…
\n\n\nWP Strict is a real Magazine/Blog/Webfolio hybrid with two different page templates, custom fields and four different widgetized areas.
\n\n\nOrange, black, and gray combined to create a clean, great-looking theme. Supports rotating 125×125 sidebar ads, widgets, gravatars, and microformats.
\n\n\nTwo column, fixed width, widget ready green, black and white theme.
\n\n\nRed Lite is a simple 2 column red and grey WordPress theme.
\n\n\nTwo column, black and grey theme with gravatar functionality with an exteremely small size.
";}i:8;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:77:"Weblog Tools Collection: News: WordPress.com Ad-Free and WordPress for iPhone";s:4:"guid";s:40:"http://weblogtoolscollection.com/?p=4187";s:4:"link";s:104:"http://weblogtoolscollection.com/archives/2008/09/19/news-wordpresscom-ad-free-and-wordpress-for-iphone/";s:11:"description";s:1193:"For those that are on WordPress.com, Matt and the Automattic team introduced their new Ad-Free version of WordPress.com for a modest fee of 30 credits per year or $0.08 per day. Matt explains the reasoning behind the existence of the ads on WordPress.com and Lorelle writes up us a nice tutorial on how to activate this feature and some information on the ads themselves.
\nIn other cool WordPress news, the WordPress for iPhone app has been downloaded over 100,000 times! Ranaan, who I met for the first time in SF this year and is BBQ averse :), provides a breakdown of the downloads across countries and then runs down a list of new features that are being worked on for version 1.2 including landscape mode, comment moderation and enhanced image options.
";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Fri, 19 Sep 2008 13:53:43 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:10:"Mark Ghosh";}s:7:"summary";s:1193:"For those that are on WordPress.com, Matt and the Automattic team introduced their new Ad-Free version of WordPress.com for a modest fee of 30 credits per year or $0.08 per day. Matt explains the reasoning behind the existence of the ads on WordPress.com and Lorelle writes up us a nice tutorial on how to activate this feature and some information on the ads themselves.
\nIn other cool WordPress news, the WordPress for iPhone app has been downloaded over 100,000 times! Ranaan, who I met for the first time in SF this year and is BBQ averse :), provides a breakdown of the downloads across countries and then runs down a list of new features that are being worked on for version 1.2 including landscape mode, comment moderation and enhanced image options.
";}i:9;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:54:"Dougal Campbell: Yarrr! It’s Talk Like a Pirate Day!";s:4:"guid";s:33:"http://dougal.gunters.org/?p=1085";s:4:"link";s:74:"http://dougal.gunters.org/blog/2008/09/19/yarrr-its-talk-like-a-pirate-day";s:11:"description";s:1032:"Once again, we have arrived on Talk Like a Pirate Day. I had been hoping that I would be able to find time to upgrade my Text Filter Suite plugin for WordPress (which includes my Pirate filter for posts and comments), but I’ve just been too busy. Maybe I can get it re-worked for next year. I already know what I want to do with it: Consolidate all of the filter code, maybe re-do things in an OOP style, add the concept of ‘registering’ a filter with the system, and add a back-end user interface to make it easier to use.
Anyways, enjoy all the piratey goodness today!
";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Fri, 19 Sep 2008 11:30:03 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:6:"Dougal";}s:7:"summary";s:1032:"Once again, we have arrived on Talk Like a Pirate Day. I had been hoping that I would be able to find time to upgrade my Text Filter Suite plugin for WordPress (which includes my Pirate filter for posts and comments), but I’ve just been too busy. Maybe I can get it re-worked for next year. I already know what I want to do with it: Consolidate all of the filter code, maybe re-do things in an OOP style, add the concept of ‘registering’ a filter with the system, and add a back-end user interface to make it easier to use.
Anyways, enjoy all the piratey goodness today!
";}i:10;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:26:"Matt: First day in Beijing";s:4:"guid";s:20:"http://ma.tt/?p=7661";s:4:"link";s:42:"http://ma.tt/2008/09/first-day-in-beijing/";s:11:"description";s:12849:"Flying to Beijing, dinner, walking around Tienanmen Square.
\n\n\n
Flying to Beijing, dinner, walking around Tienanmen Square.
\n\n\n
Matt Mullenweg has just announced that you can go “ad-free” on your WordPress.com blog.
While you may have never noticed, those who are not logged into WordPress.com will see ads on blogs across the WordPress.com network. two years ago, WordPress.com started experimenting with Google ads to help support the cost of the experimental and state-of-the-art multiple user free blog service. The intent was not to cover your blogs with ads, like many free blogging services do, but to show an occasional ad discretely within your WordPress Theme.
\nSince few complained or noticed, the experiment continued, helping to keep WordPress.com free and add a lot of free features that might have been paid upgrades.
\nThese ads were so rare, I never saw them. So I forgot about them. I’ve written a lot about the WordPress.com Terms of Service policy that prohibits adding ads to your WordPress.com blogs, so I was dismayed a few months ago when I got a few emails accusing me of special favors from WordPress.com because I had ads on my blog. They were seeing the WordPress.com experimental ads. Unfortunately, one of the ads was - shall we say - inappropriate, a problem many have with Google’s ad program.
\n
\nStill, this bothered me. I talked to the WordPress team about this and they agreed that users should have the right to determine whether or not to have WordPress.com ads on their blogs. As Matt explains:
\nAt the same time it’s easy to imagine blogs that would never want ads on them: businesses, startups, non-profits, political activist sites, the list goes on. Google Adsense analyzes the content to show contextually relevant ads, but that might mean a link to a competitor. Because of this we’ve introduced a premium option that gives you control: the No-ads upgrade.
They’ve been working on this new feature for a while, trying to come up with a secure and affordable way for users to continue to support WordPress.com by permitting ads on their blogs, while allowing those with sensitive or special interests to not host ads. They’ve finally done it, and I applaud their foresight and integrity.
\nBefore you start jumping to remove ads from your WordPress.com blog, remember that those ads, most of which you will rarely ever see, help bring in income to keep WordPress.com going. If they don’t bother you or your readers, leave them alone. Why not?
\nYou are using one of the most powerful, state-of-the-art blogging platforms, a service that will survive the Digg-effect and high traffic surges without charging you; a service that keeps bringing you options and features without charge; a service that gives you a platform upon which to express yourself proudly - and is incredibly SEO friendly. Why not help them continue to keep this service free for everyone?
\nIf you do feel a compelling need to remove ads from your WordPress.com blog, go to Upgrades.
\nScroll down to No-ads and select the option.
\nThe cost to remove ads from your WordPress.com blog is 30 credits annually (USD $30 if you haven’t earned any credits) which comes to eight cents a day.
\nWhether you keep or remove ads from your WordPress.com blog, why not take a little time to give back to WordPress.com and other WordPress.com users by browsing the WordPress blog network and get to know your fellow WordPress.com members. You can use the Random Post feature in the gray dashboard bar at the top of your WordPress.com blog when you are logged in, or visit the WordPress.com Blogs of the Day which lists the most popular blogs by language, or the WordPress.com Tags list.
\nIf you are familiar with how WordPress.com works, then why not help out in the WordPress.com forums and get to know the volunteers and staff there as well as your other fellow WordPress.com members. It’s a simple way to say thank you for this powerful free blog service.
\nA lot of WordPress.com bloggers want to put ads on their blogs to make money for themselves. While some free blog hosts permit that, don’t forget that WordPress.com is also a testing site for many of the latest features of WordPress development.
\nWhile the world has to wait for the release of WordPress 2.7, WordPress.com users are already using the new sticky post feature and will soon be playing with other new features as part of the new WordPress Administration interface redesign, a continuation of user interface improvements from the previous version of WordPress - long before anyone else.
\nThis means that WordPress.com has to stay clean of code that will screw up not just one blog but all the blogs on the WordPress.com network powered by WordPressMU. While most ad code is harmless, opening up WordPress.com to Javascript and other code languages opens the door up to malicious code, too. It’s a security risk WordPress.com isn’t willing to take, and I support that policy.
\nIf you want to monetize your blog, get the free version of WordPress and pay for cheap hosting. Some hosts are offering web hosting for under USD $10 a month. With the full version of WordPress, you can not only add ads, but customize the whole look, add all kinds of cool WordPress Plugins, and really tweak your whole site to maximize its revenue potential.
\nWordPress.com has always been about blogging, about freedom of expression and creativity. It’s not about the code. It’s about the words. WordPress.com is working overtime to make sure we have a place to share our words with others around the world - no holds barred.
\n
\n
Site Search Tags: wordpress news, wordpressdotcom, wordpress.com, wordpresscom, ads, ads on blogs, blog ads, advertising, blog advertising, monetization, advertising on WordPress.com, WordPress.com ads, make money, make money with blogging
\n Subscribe
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Copyright Lorelle VanFossen, the author of Blogging Tips, What Bloggers Won\'t Tell You About Blogging.
Matt Mullenweg has just announced that you can go “ad-free” on your WordPress.com blog.
While you may have never noticed, those who are not logged into WordPress.com will see ads on blogs across the WordPress.com network. two years ago, WordPress.com started experimenting with Google ads to help support the cost of the experimental and state-of-the-art multiple user free blog service. The intent was not to cover your blogs with ads, like many free blogging services do, but to show an occasional ad discretely within your WordPress Theme.
\nSince few complained or noticed, the experiment continued, helping to keep WordPress.com free and add a lot of free features that might have been paid upgrades.
\nThese ads were so rare, I never saw them. So I forgot about them. I’ve written a lot about the WordPress.com Terms of Service policy that prohibits adding ads to your WordPress.com blogs, so I was dismayed a few months ago when I got a few emails accusing me of special favors from WordPress.com because I had ads on my blog. They were seeing the WordPress.com experimental ads. Unfortunately, one of the ads was - shall we say - inappropriate, a problem many have with Google’s ad program.
\n
\nStill, this bothered me. I talked to the WordPress team about this and they agreed that users should have the right to determine whether or not to have WordPress.com ads on their blogs. As Matt explains:
\nAt the same time it’s easy to imagine blogs that would never want ads on them: businesses, startups, non-profits, political activist sites, the list goes on. Google Adsense analyzes the content to show contextually relevant ads, but that might mean a link to a competitor. Because of this we’ve introduced a premium option that gives you control: the No-ads upgrade.
They’ve been working on this new feature for a while, trying to come up with a secure and affordable way for users to continue to support WordPress.com by permitting ads on their blogs, while allowing those with sensitive or special interests to not host ads. They’ve finally done it, and I applaud their foresight and integrity.
\nBefore you start jumping to remove ads from your WordPress.com blog, remember that those ads, most of which you will rarely ever see, help bring in income to keep WordPress.com going. If they don’t bother you or your readers, leave them alone. Why not?
\nYou are using one of the most powerful, state-of-the-art blogging platforms, a service that will survive the Digg-effect and high traffic surges without charging you; a service that keeps bringing you options and features without charge; a service that gives you a platform upon which to express yourself proudly - and is incredibly SEO friendly. Why not help them continue to keep this service free for everyone?
\nIf you do feel a compelling need to remove ads from your WordPress.com blog, go to Upgrades.
\nScroll down to No-ads and select the option.
\nThe cost to remove ads from your WordPress.com blog is 30 credits annually (USD $30 if you haven’t earned any credits) which comes to eight cents a day.
\nWhether you keep or remove ads from your WordPress.com blog, why not take a little time to give back to WordPress.com and other WordPress.com users by browsing the WordPress blog network and get to know your fellow WordPress.com members. You can use the Random Post feature in the gray dashboard bar at the top of your WordPress.com blog when you are logged in, or visit the WordPress.com Blogs of the Day which lists the most popular blogs by language, or the WordPress.com Tags list.
\nIf you are familiar with how WordPress.com works, then why not help out in the WordPress.com forums and get to know the volunteers and staff there as well as your other fellow WordPress.com members. It’s a simple way to say thank you for this powerful free blog service.
\nA lot of WordPress.com bloggers want to put ads on their blogs to make money for themselves. While some free blog hosts permit that, don’t forget that WordPress.com is also a testing site for many of the latest features of WordPress development.
\nWhile the world has to wait for the release of WordPress 2.7, WordPress.com users are already using the new sticky post feature and will soon be playing with other new features as part of the new WordPress Administration interface redesign, a continuation of user interface improvements from the previous version of WordPress - long before anyone else.
\nThis means that WordPress.com has to stay clean of code that will screw up not just one blog but all the blogs on the WordPress.com network powered by WordPressMU. While most ad code is harmless, opening up WordPress.com to Javascript and other code languages opens the door up to malicious code, too. It’s a security risk WordPress.com isn’t willing to take, and I support that policy.
\nIf you want to monetize your blog, get the free version of WordPress and pay for cheap hosting. Some hosts are offering web hosting for under USD $10 a month. With the full version of WordPress, you can not only add ads, but customize the whole look, add all kinds of cool WordPress Plugins, and really tweak your whole site to maximize its revenue potential.
\nWordPress.com has always been about blogging, about freedom of expression and creativity. It’s not about the code. It’s about the words. WordPress.com is working overtime to make sure we have a place to share our words with others around the world - no holds barred.
\n
\n
Site Search Tags: wordpress news, wordpressdotcom, wordpress.com, wordpresscom, ads, ads on blogs, blog ads, advertising, blog advertising, monetization, advertising on WordPress.com, WordPress.com ads, make money, make money with blogging
\n Subscribe
Via Feedburner
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Visit
Copyright Lorelle VanFossen, the author of Blogging Tips, What Bloggers Won\'t Tell You About Blogging.
My co-worker Noel Jackson, tired of hearing me whine about the Six Apart TypePad Trap, has created a WordPress importer mashing together the MT formatted export file (missing permalinks) and the broken TypePad AtomPub (missing comments and trackbacks). We are currently testing this on WordPress.com before polishing the code up and sharing it. We are looking for some TypePad customers to help us test it — it’s completely harmless, read-only.
\nIf you are interested, let me know and we can set up a private blog on WordPress.com for you to import into. Bonus is that you will have a backup of your blog ready to go live if anything ever befalls TypePad.
\nThis importer wouldn’t be possible without the heroic effort Ronald Heft Jr put into creating a TypePad AtomPub importer for WordPress — it’s not his fault TypePad still doesn’t have a way to export your full blog.
\nWhat’s an AtomPub? While working on this importer Noel contacted TypePad support only to have them tell him they don’t know what AtomPub is, and that they don’t support it.
\n\nAnyway, as I said, if you are a TypePad customer, and want to participate in open source development by testing this exporter, or would just like a backup of your blog ready to launch on WordPress.com, leave a comment or send me an email.
";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Thu, 18 Sep 2008 18:49:37 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:5:"Lloyd";}s:7:"summary";s:1760:"My co-worker Noel Jackson, tired of hearing me whine about the Six Apart TypePad Trap, has created a WordPress importer mashing together the MT formatted export file (missing permalinks) and the broken TypePad AtomPub (missing comments and trackbacks). We are currently testing this on WordPress.com before polishing the code up and sharing it. We are looking for some TypePad customers to help us test it — it’s completely harmless, read-only.
\nIf you are interested, let me know and we can set up a private blog on WordPress.com for you to import into. Bonus is that you will have a backup of your blog ready to go live if anything ever befalls TypePad.
\nThis importer wouldn’t be possible without the heroic effort Ronald Heft Jr put into creating a TypePad AtomPub importer for WordPress — it’s not his fault TypePad still doesn’t have a way to export your full blog.
\nWhat’s an AtomPub? While working on this importer Noel contacted TypePad support only to have them tell him they don’t know what AtomPub is, and that they don’t support it.
\n\nAnyway, as I said, if you are a TypePad customer, and want to participate in open source development by testing this exporter, or would just like a backup of your blog ready to launch on WordPress.com, leave a comment or send me an email.
";}i:13;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:60:"Weblog Tools Collection: WordPress Plugin Releases for 09/18";s:4:"guid";s:40:"http://weblogtoolscollection.com/?p=4185";s:4:"link";s:88:"http://weblogtoolscollection.com/archives/2008/09/18/wordpress-plugin-releases-for-0918/";s:11:"description";s:2542:"\nFeed Pauser is a plugin I wrote to address a issue I have been facing for a long time, the option to delay publishing a post to a feed. Feed pauser, pauses a post from being made available through RSS.
\nAuto-Close Comments, Pingbacks and Trackbacks
\nAutomatically close comments, pingbacks and trackbacks on your blog. This helps reduce the amount of spam aimed at old posts. Now you can keep comments / pingbacks / trackbacks on certain posts open.
\n\nThe web host Servage allows it’s users through a link to their website/coupon code to refer it’s users to their services.
\n\nThis plugin allows you to notify your readers on their Instant Messaging (AIM, MSN, GTalk, ICQ…), Email or SMS when you publish new posts! It also adds a widget to your blog to allow your users to choose on which channel they want to be notified!
\n\nThis plugin allows you to manage WordPress users via Google Apps accounts. The Authentication use Google Apps Gmail.
\n\nThe world clock widget is a javascript clock. It can be easily set to display date and time of different timezone.
\n\nAdds a little javascript and css to the header, and then a “Send to Facebook” link at the bottom of the blog post.
\n\nAlter the output of the wp_list_pages() function’s HTML. Add in your own classes, insert text into link title, add additional tags surrounding title. Parents and Children are set seperately for greater flexibility.
\n\nObfuscates your email. You need to enter the shortcode in your post.
";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Thu, 18 Sep 2008 18:20:22 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:4:"Ajay";}s:7:"summary";s:2542:"\nFeed Pauser is a plugin I wrote to address a issue I have been facing for a long time, the option to delay publishing a post to a feed. Feed pauser, pauses a post from being made available through RSS.
\nAuto-Close Comments, Pingbacks and Trackbacks
\nAutomatically close comments, pingbacks and trackbacks on your blog. This helps reduce the amount of spam aimed at old posts. Now you can keep comments / pingbacks / trackbacks on certain posts open.
\n\nThe web host Servage allows it’s users through a link to their website/coupon code to refer it’s users to their services.
\n\nThis plugin allows you to notify your readers on their Instant Messaging (AIM, MSN, GTalk, ICQ…), Email or SMS when you publish new posts! It also adds a widget to your blog to allow your users to choose on which channel they want to be notified!
\n\nThis plugin allows you to manage WordPress users via Google Apps accounts. The Authentication use Google Apps Gmail.
\n\nThe world clock widget is a javascript clock. It can be easily set to display date and time of different timezone.
\n\nAdds a little javascript and css to the header, and then a “Send to Facebook” link at the bottom of the blog post.
\n\nAlter the output of the wp_list_pages() function’s HTML. Add in your own classes, insert text into link title, add additional tags surrounding title. Parents and Children are set seperately for greater flexibility.
\n\nObfuscates your email. You need to enter the shortcode in your post.
";}i:14;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:73:"Lorelle on WP: WordPress News and Announcements on WordPress 2.7 and More";s:4:"guid";s:36:"http://lorelle.wordpress.com/?p=3027";s:4:"link";s:98:"http://lorelle.wordpress.com/2008/09/17/wordpress-news-and-announcements-on-wordpress-27-and-more/";s:11:"description";s:14295:"I’ve just released the latest Blog Herald WordPress Wednesday News on WordPress Wednesday News: WordPress 2.7 Final Features, WTC Plugin Contest Winners, WordCamps, Surveys, and More, and there are some WordPress news tidbits I’d like to call your attention to.
Ryan Boren has announced the final WordPress 2.7 features to prepare us all for the upcoming release.
\nThey include the new “crazyhorse” WordPress Administration Panels interface, a new Write Post Panel that allows dragging and dropping of meta boxes so you can rearrange your writing surface, the ability to hide columns on the content index pages, inline editing of posts and Pages on the new content index pages, comments XMLRPC API, sticky posts, automatic WordPress Plugin installation and integrated Plugin browser, HTTPOnly auth cookies, and much more.
\nAfter all the kvetching I’ve done about the Comments Panel in the WordPress Administration Panels (okay, I’m not the only one), they have finally overhauled it and have added the ability to automatically upgrade WordPress and the total revamping of the Comments Panel to include replying to comments, keyboard shortcuts (hot keys) for managing comments, and threaded comments to help you keep track of the conversation.
\nI’m waiting to try it out as it may soon be added to WordPress.com as part of the testing. I do hope it will be as user-friendly as WordPress Comment Ninja Greasemonkey Script by Engtech of Internet Duct Tape. I’ll hate to part with my favorite non-WordPress Plugin toy.
\nIn announcements on the WordPress Development Blog and on WordPress.com, WordPress users are invited to participate in a survey to have your say on how the navigation options on the WordPress 2.7 Administration Panels interface (UI) should look and work.
\nAt WordCamp 2008, Liz Danzico and Jane Wells presented Riding The Crazyhorse: Future Generation WordPress, an inside look at how the new interface was developed and the amazing technology they use to test the results and make improvements.
\nIf you want your say in how it looks, you better speak up and take the survey.
\nWhile WordPress 2.7 is rewiring the whole Comments Panel, it is telling that the grand prize winner of the Weblog Tools Collection WordPress Plugin Competition was WP Comment Remix WordPress Plugin by Pressography. It will be interesting how this incredible WordPress Plugin survives the next release of WordPress. I’m sure the creative Plugin author will come up with something even more interesting.
\nSecond prize went to the author of the Manageable WordPress Plugin, followed by third prize, WP Easy Uploader. Consolation prize goes to Prelovac for his amazing work on WordPress Plugins recently.
\nAll the Plugins in the contest are amazing. Check them out and see how creative the WordPress Community continues to be.
\nSmashing Magazine published the WordPress Developers’ Toolbox, a huge collection of tips, tricks, resources, WordPress Themes, WordPress Theme design help, documentation, and tutorials for WordPress users. It’s overwhelming but there is a ton of great information in there.
\nPlease make sure that the article you are reading covers the version of WordPress you are using as some of the information is version-specific.
\nI continue to report on the many WordCamps and WordPress Meetups that are popping up everywhere. If you want your event covered, make sure to email me so I can cover it on the Blog Herald WordPress Wednesday News and The WordCamp Report.
\nIn case you didn’t hear, The WordCamp Report is looking for volunteers to live blog or report on WordCamp and WordPress events around the world. The site is covering WordCamp news, events, and WordPress events, and includes tips for those who want to bring a WordCamp to their area.
\nIf you have been a part of a WordCamp event and would like to submit an article on your experience and lessons learned, just let me know.
\nI also covered a lot of other WordPress news including these recent announcements on WordPress.com:
\nSSL Now Available for WordPress.com Bloggers: WordPress.com announced the ability for their bloggers to protect blogs with SSL. If you are blogging on a public access point, “blogjackers” can prey on security vulnerabilities and possibly collect sensitive information. By adding SSL protection, you will automatically be logged onto your blog with an HTTPS connection (secure). You’ve always had the option, but few WordPress.com bloggers understood how it worked.
\nTo activate this new feature, go to My Account > Edit Profile in the WordPress Administration Panels and check of “Always use HTTPS when visiting Administration pages” under Browser Connection.
\nWordPress.com FAQ Gets Screencasts: The WordPress.com FAQ now has screencasts on their guide posts helping WordPress.com users learn more about how to use specific WordPress.com features.
\nWordPress.com August 2008 Stats: The August Wrap-Up for statistics on WordPress.com included 286,860 blogs created, 298,655 new users, 3,442,638 file uploads, 439 terabytes of content transferred from our datacenters, 6,750,960 comments, and 1,196,661 active blogs and 14,056,683 active posts. WordPress.com also crossed four million blogs this past week.
\nNew Themes for WordPress.com Members: WordPress.com announced two new WordPress Themes recently. The Albeo Theme for WordPress.com bloggers is designed by Elena at Design Disease. The DePo Masthead WordPress Theme by Derek Powazek features a minimalist magazine design with dynamic features such as header font size changes depending upon the length of the blog title, column heights for front page articles will always be equal, interesting navigation options, and hidden, unfolding comments.
\n
\n
Site Search Tags: wordpress news, wordcamp, wordpress events, wordpress 2.7, weblog tools collection wordpress plugin, wordpress plugins, wordpress plugin news, wordpress announcements, wordpress help, wordpress tips
\n Subscribe
Via Feedburner
Subscribe by Email
Visit
Copyright Lorelle VanFossen, the author of Blogging Tips, What Bloggers Won\'t Tell You About Blogging.
I’ve just released the latest Blog Herald WordPress Wednesday News on WordPress Wednesday News: WordPress 2.7 Final Features, WTC Plugin Contest Winners, WordCamps, Surveys, and More, and there are some WordPress news tidbits I’d like to call your attention to.
Ryan Boren has announced the final WordPress 2.7 features to prepare us all for the upcoming release.
\nThey include the new “crazyhorse” WordPress Administration Panels interface, a new Write Post Panel that allows dragging and dropping of meta boxes so you can rearrange your writing surface, the ability to hide columns on the content index pages, inline editing of posts and Pages on the new content index pages, comments XMLRPC API, sticky posts, automatic WordPress Plugin installation and integrated Plugin browser, HTTPOnly auth cookies, and much more.
\nAfter all the kvetching I’ve done about the Comments Panel in the WordPress Administration Panels (okay, I’m not the only one), they have finally overhauled it and have added the ability to automatically upgrade WordPress and the total revamping of the Comments Panel to include replying to comments, keyboard shortcuts (hot keys) for managing comments, and threaded comments to help you keep track of the conversation.
\nI’m waiting to try it out as it may soon be added to WordPress.com as part of the testing. I do hope it will be as user-friendly as WordPress Comment Ninja Greasemonkey Script by Engtech of Internet Duct Tape. I’ll hate to part with my favorite non-WordPress Plugin toy.
\nIn announcements on the WordPress Development Blog and on WordPress.com, WordPress users are invited to participate in a survey to have your say on how the navigation options on the WordPress 2.7 Administration Panels interface (UI) should look and work.
\nAt WordCamp 2008, Liz Danzico and Jane Wells presented Riding The Crazyhorse: Future Generation WordPress, an inside look at how the new interface was developed and the amazing technology they use to test the results and make improvements.
\nIf you want your say in how it looks, you better speak up and take the survey.
\nWhile WordPress 2.7 is rewiring the whole Comments Panel, it is telling that the grand prize winner of the Weblog Tools Collection WordPress Plugin Competition was WP Comment Remix WordPress Plugin by Pressography. It will be interesting how this incredible WordPress Plugin survives the next release of WordPress. I’m sure the creative Plugin author will come up with something even more interesting.
\nSecond prize went to the author of the Manageable WordPress Plugin, followed by third prize, WP Easy Uploader. Consolation prize goes to Prelovac for his amazing work on WordPress Plugins recently.
\nAll the Plugins in the contest are amazing. Check them out and see how creative the WordPress Community continues to be.
\nSmashing Magazine published the WordPress Developers’ Toolbox, a huge collection of tips, tricks, resources, WordPress Themes, WordPress Theme design help, documentation, and tutorials for WordPress users. It’s overwhelming but there is a ton of great information in there.
\nPlease make sure that the article you are reading covers the version of WordPress you are using as some of the information is version-specific.
\nI continue to report on the many WordCamps and WordPress Meetups that are popping up everywhere. If you want your event covered, make sure to email me so I can cover it on the Blog Herald WordPress Wednesday News and The WordCamp Report.
\nIn case you didn’t hear, The WordCamp Report is looking for volunteers to live blog or report on WordCamp and WordPress events around the world. The site is covering WordCamp news, events, and WordPress events, and includes tips for those who want to bring a WordCamp to their area.
\nIf you have been a part of a WordCamp event and would like to submit an article on your experience and lessons learned, just let me know.
\nI also covered a lot of other WordPress news including these recent announcements on WordPress.com:
\nSSL Now Available for WordPress.com Bloggers: WordPress.com announced the ability for their bloggers to protect blogs with SSL. If you are blogging on a public access point, “blogjackers” can prey on security vulnerabilities and possibly collect sensitive information. By adding SSL protection, you will automatically be logged onto your blog with an HTTPS connection (secure). You’ve always had the option, but few WordPress.com bloggers understood how it worked.
\nTo activate this new feature, go to My Account > Edit Profile in the WordPress Administration Panels and check of “Always use HTTPS when visiting Administration pages” under Browser Connection.
\nWordPress.com FAQ Gets Screencasts: The WordPress.com FAQ now has screencasts on their guide posts helping WordPress.com users learn more about how to use specific WordPress.com features.
\nWordPress.com August 2008 Stats: The August Wrap-Up for statistics on WordPress.com included 286,860 blogs created, 298,655 new users, 3,442,638 file uploads, 439 terabytes of content transferred from our datacenters, 6,750,960 comments, and 1,196,661 active blogs and 14,056,683 active posts. WordPress.com also crossed four million blogs this past week.
\nNew Themes for WordPress.com Members: WordPress.com announced two new WordPress Themes recently. The Albeo Theme for WordPress.com bloggers is designed by Elena at Design Disease. The DePo Masthead WordPress Theme by Derek Powazek features a minimalist magazine design with dynamic features such as header font size changes depending upon the length of the blog title, column heights for front page articles will always be equal, interesting navigation options, and hidden, unfolding comments.
\n
\n
Site Search Tags: wordpress news, wordcamp, wordpress events, wordpress 2.7, weblog tools collection wordpress plugin, wordpress plugins, wordpress plugin news, wordpress announcements, wordpress help, wordpress tips
\n Subscribe
Via Feedburner
Subscribe by Email
Visit
Copyright Lorelle VanFossen, the author of Blogging Tips, What Bloggers Won\'t Tell You About Blogging.
I’m going to be joining everyone in the blogosphere at Blog World Expo in Las Vegas this weekend, September 20-21, 2008. Not going to be there? You are missing out on what could be a record breaking event.
I will be there with Woopra, Layered Tech, and WordPress.
\nI’ve peeked at the Conference Schedule and there is so much going on, I don’t even know where to begin.
\nIn addition to the Blog World Expo Exhibitors in the Exhibition Hall at the Las Vegas Convention Center, the incredible collection of speakers and workshops, and the crème de la crème of the blogosphers attending, there are also events within the main event, including:
\nThese specialty meetings and workshops cover niche areas and specific issues that confront bloggers within those specific areas. So much of it crosses borders, though, I’m having a tough time deciding which to attend.
\nI do know where I will be Sunday, September 21, from 3:00PM - 4:00PM. I will be on a panel with my buddies, John Pozadzides and Liz Strauss, covering The Stats of High Performance Content and Marketing.
\nI will also be occasionally found in the Exhibition Hall in booth 220 with Layered Tech, Woopra, and WordPress. If you want to talk about servers, web hosting, and the grid, I’ll let you talk to the other guys there, but if you want to talk WordPress or Woopra, I’m ready!
\nI hope to see you there!
\nNEXT: Next weekend, September 27, 2008, is WordCamp Portland, Oregon - September 27, 2008, where I will also be making noise. The event is sold out and there is a waiting list. It’s going to be great!
\nOther upcoming events where I will be speaking and attending include:
\n
\n
Site Search Tags: lorelle, lorelle speaks, converences, events, woopra, blog world expo, wordcamp portland, blogworldexpo, blogworldexpo2008, wordcampportlland, hawaii, blog events, blog conferences, blog news, conference news
\n Subscribe
Via Feedburner
Subscribe by Email
Visit
Copyright Lorelle VanFossen, the author of Blogging Tips, What Bloggers Won\'t Tell You About Blogging.
I’m going to be joining everyone in the blogosphere at Blog World Expo in Las Vegas this weekend, September 20-21, 2008. Not going to be there? You are missing out on what could be a record breaking event.
I will be there with Woopra, Layered Tech, and WordPress.
\nI’ve peeked at the Conference Schedule and there is so much going on, I don’t even know where to begin.
\nIn addition to the Blog World Expo Exhibitors in the Exhibition Hall at the Las Vegas Convention Center, the incredible collection of speakers and workshops, and the crème de la crème of the blogosphers attending, there are also events within the main event, including:
\nThese specialty meetings and workshops cover niche areas and specific issues that confront bloggers within those specific areas. So much of it crosses borders, though, I’m having a tough time deciding which to attend.
\nI do know where I will be Sunday, September 21, from 3:00PM - 4:00PM. I will be on a panel with my buddies, John Pozadzides and Liz Strauss, covering The Stats of High Performance Content and Marketing.
\nI will also be occasionally found in the Exhibition Hall in booth 220 with Layered Tech, Woopra, and WordPress. If you want to talk about servers, web hosting, and the grid, I’ll let you talk to the other guys there, but if you want to talk WordPress or Woopra, I’m ready!
\nI hope to see you there!
\nNEXT: Next weekend, September 27, 2008, is WordCamp Portland, Oregon - September 27, 2008, where I will also be making noise. The event is sold out and there is a waiting list. It’s going to be great!
\nOther upcoming events where I will be speaking and attending include:
\n
\n
Site Search Tags: lorelle, lorelle speaks, converences, events, woopra, blog world expo, wordcamp portland, blogworldexpo, blogworldexpo2008, wordcampportlland, hawaii, blog events, blog conferences, blog news, conference news
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Copyright Lorelle VanFossen, the author of Blogging Tips, What Bloggers Won\'t Tell You About Blogging.
Otomot Garaj Theme is a simple video theme. You can watch own videos in your website.
\n\n\nIt’s a 3 column, fixed width, widget ready theme.
\n\nSimple, three column, white, widget and gravatar ready theme
\n\n\nWidget ready, 2 columns, fixed width, clean theme with right sidebar.
";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Wed, 17 Sep 2008 19:19:53 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:4:"Ajay";}s:7:"summary";s:1382:"\nOtomot Garaj Theme is a simple video theme. You can watch own videos in your website.
\n\n\nIt’s a 3 column, fixed width, widget ready theme.
\n\nSimple, three column, white, widget and gravatar ready theme
\n\n\nWidget ready, 2 columns, fixed width, clean theme with right sidebar.
";}i:17;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:56:"Weblog Tools Collection: WordPress Developers’ Toolbox";s:4:"guid";s:40:"http://weblogtoolscollection.com/?p=4171";s:4:"link";s:82:"http://weblogtoolscollection.com/archives/2008/09/17/wordpress-developers-toolbox/";s:11:"description";s:652:"WordPress Developers’ Toolbox: Smashing Magazine has put together a quite large list of various tips, tricks, tutorials, documentation, resources, themes, design help and everything else in between for WordPress. As a matter of fact, I am surprised that it was not released as an “eBook”. I do wish that the data was organized better, with better linking within the article, better headings, smaller and fewer pictures and a better way to navigate. But the collection is quite large and there is lots of information there to browse through.
";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Wed, 17 Sep 2008 17:53:31 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:10:"Mark Ghosh";}s:7:"summary";s:652:"WordPress Developers’ Toolbox: Smashing Magazine has put together a quite large list of various tips, tricks, tutorials, documentation, resources, themes, design help and everything else in between for WordPress. As a matter of fact, I am surprised that it was not released as an “eBook”. I do wish that the data was organized better, with better linking within the article, better headings, smaller and fewer pictures and a better way to navigate. But the collection is quite large and there is lots of information there to browse through.
";}i:18;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:60:"Weblog Tools Collection: WordPress Plugin Releases for 09/16";s:4:"guid";s:40:"http://weblogtoolscollection.com/?p=4173";s:4:"link";s:88:"http://weblogtoolscollection.com/archives/2008/09/16/wordpress-plugin-releases-for-0916/";s:11:"description";s:1335:"\nThe wpSEO plugin helps you optimize your blog for SEO purposes by eliminating issues with duplicate content and specifying meta tags and page titles for the different pages of your blog. Page in German
\n\nWineX is a lightweight script that will import the listing contents of your CellarTracker wine cellar into your WordPress website.
\n\nCalendar is an events calendar for WordPress that allows you to publish a monthly breakdown of your appointments and important dates for your blog readers to view.
\n\nFilter Email Notifications is a simple plugin that stops WordPress from sending email notifications for comments that have been manually approved.
\n\nThis plugin is built to manage the excellent flShow Photo Carousel within the comfort of the WordPress dashboard
";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Tue, 16 Sep 2008 18:54:20 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:4:"Ajay";}s:7:"summary";s:1335:"\nThe wpSEO plugin helps you optimize your blog for SEO purposes by eliminating issues with duplicate content and specifying meta tags and page titles for the different pages of your blog. Page in German
\n\nWineX is a lightweight script that will import the listing contents of your CellarTracker wine cellar into your WordPress website.
\n\nCalendar is an events calendar for WordPress that allows you to publish a monthly breakdown of your appointments and important dates for your blog readers to view.
\n\nFilter Email Notifications is a simple plugin that stops WordPress from sending email notifications for comments that have been manually approved.
\n\nThis plugin is built to manage the excellent flShow Photo Carousel within the comfort of the WordPress dashboard
";}i:19;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:40:"bbPress: bbPress 1.0 alpha series update";s:4:"guid";s:24:"http://bbpress.org/?p=97";s:4:"link";s:63:"http://bbpress.org/blog/2008/09/bbpress-10-alpha-series-update/";s:11:"description";s:1889:"It’s about time everyone was let in on the progress we have made towards version 1.0 of bbPress.
\nI expect the next alpha release to be made sometime in the next two weeks. This release will include our first implementation of Pingbacks both to and from your bbPress installation. The first draft implementation of this is now in trunk.
\nAlso to be included in the next release is an implementation of the pseudo cron feature from WordPress. This will allow plugin developers to schedule jobs in the future or on a regular basis. It is 100% compatible with the WordPress implementation, so the existing documentation is all you need to get started with using it.
\nTo enable cron I’ve included the very new WP_Http class in BackPress. This new class is a robust HTTP fetcher which is meant to replace the Snoopy class in WordPress. This will allow all sorts of RESTFUL services to be utilised within bbPress plugins, like fetching data from other pages, embedding search APIs and even pulling data from WordPress via RSS or XML-RPC.
\nOn the drawing board is the beginnings of an XML-RPC publishing interface. This will make it easier to use bbPress as a data store for more exotic clients like custom flash applications and XML-RPC desktop clients. It also opens the door to creating an iPhone app for bbPress much like the existing WordPress iPhone app.
\nAn alpha version of bbPress’ new export/import format and tools has also landed in trunk thanks to our Google Summer of Code student Dan Larkin. You can read a little more about that at the BBXF website.
\nThere will also be several fixes for bugs found by our courageous alpha testers.
";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Tue, 16 Sep 2008 13:56:26 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:10:"Sam Bauers";}s:7:"summary";s:1889:"It’s about time everyone was let in on the progress we have made towards version 1.0 of bbPress.
\nI expect the next alpha release to be made sometime in the next two weeks. This release will include our first implementation of Pingbacks both to and from your bbPress installation. The first draft implementation of this is now in trunk.
\nAlso to be included in the next release is an implementation of the pseudo cron feature from WordPress. This will allow plugin developers to schedule jobs in the future or on a regular basis. It is 100% compatible with the WordPress implementation, so the existing documentation is all you need to get started with using it.
\nTo enable cron I’ve included the very new WP_Http class in BackPress. This new class is a robust HTTP fetcher which is meant to replace the Snoopy class in WordPress. This will allow all sorts of RESTFUL services to be utilised within bbPress plugins, like fetching data from other pages, embedding search APIs and even pulling data from WordPress via RSS or XML-RPC.
\nOn the drawing board is the beginnings of an XML-RPC publishing interface. This will make it easier to use bbPress as a data store for more exotic clients like custom flash applications and XML-RPC desktop clients. It also opens the door to creating an iPhone app for bbPress much like the existing WordPress iPhone app.
\nAn alpha version of bbPress’ new export/import format and tools has also landed in trunk thanks to our Google Summer of Code student Dan Larkin. You can read a little more about that at the BBXF website.
\nThere will also be several fixes for bugs found by our courageous alpha testers.
";}i:20;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:64:"Weblog Tools Collection: WordPress 2.7 Navigation Options Survey";s:4:"guid";s:92:"http://weblogtoolscollection.com/archives/2008/09/15/wordpress-27-navigation-options-survey/";s:4:"link";s:92:"http://weblogtoolscollection.com/archives/2008/09/15/wordpress-27-navigation-options-survey/";s:11:"description";s:413:"WordPress 2.7 Navigation Options Survey: As design decisions are being made for the new WordPress 2.7 admin interface, the WordPress team would like your input in deciding how the navigation options should be grouped and labeled. Please take the survey.
";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Tue, 16 Sep 2008 00:15:11 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:10:"Mark Ghosh";}s:7:"summary";s:413:"WordPress 2.7 Navigation Options Survey: As design decisions are being made for the new WordPress 2.7 admin interface, the WordPress team would like your input in deciding how the navigation options should be grouped and labeled. Please take the survey.
";}i:21;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:27:"Akismet: Akismet for Django";s:4:"guid";s:34:"http://akismet.wordpress.com/?p=98";s:4:"link";s:54:"http://blog.akismet.com/2008/09/15/akismet-for-django/";s:11:"description";s:1760:"Aydin Mirzaee, an undergraduate student at McGill University, has whipped up some handy code to incorporate Akismet with Django’s new comments framework. Python geeks, enjoy
Aydin Mirzaee, an undergraduate student at McGill University, has whipped up some handy code to incorporate Akismet with Django’s new comments framework. Python geeks, enjoy
You know that “Turbo” button in the upper-right corner of WordPress 2.6 (and WordPress.com)? That button uses Google Gears to store static WordPress admin files locally, speeding up your WordPress admin experience. Until now, Gears was only available to people running Firefox or Internet Explorer. As of today, people using Safari on OS X can also play. I just activated it for this blog, and it worked without a hitch!
\nYou know that “Turbo” button in the upper-right corner of WordPress 2.6 (and WordPress.com)? That button uses Google Gears to store static WordPress admin files locally, speeding up your WordPress admin experience. Until now, Gears was only available to people running Firefox or Internet Explorer. As of today, people using Safari on OS X can also play. I just activated it for this blog, and it worked without a hitch!
\nI’m going to be in China later this week for WordCamp Shanghai and Beijing. Really looking forward to meeting all the WordPress users there.
";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Mon, 15 Sep 2008 21:42:51 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:4:"Matt";}s:7:"summary";s:194:"I’m going to be in China later this week for WordCamp Shanghai and Beijing. Really looking forward to meeting all the WordPress users there.
";}i:24;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:49:"Dev Blog: WordPress 2.7 Navigation Options Survey";s:4:"guid";s:39:"http://wordpress.org/development/?p=317";s:4:"link";s:80:"http://wordpress.org/development/2008/09/wordpress-27-navigation-options-survey/";s:11:"description";s:1173:"Note: Survey is closed as of 9/18/08. Thanks for the feedback!
\nWordPress 2.7 is currently in development and as some people already know, it features a revised layout with a left-hand navigation column that was designed in response to user feedback regarding the use of screen real estate. Because the navigation came straight from the Crazyhorse prototype that was developed quickly for usability testing, it is still a work in progress.
Navigation sections and labels are being decided now, and as usual there are lots of good ideas floating around. As part of the mission to increase user involvement in design decisions, we’ve created a survey intended to give WordPress users the ability to play a part in deciding how the navigation options should be grouped and labeled. If you use WordPress and want to add your opinion, take the survey.
\nWordPress 2.7 Navigation Options Survey
";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Mon, 15 Sep 2008 18:53:00 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:4:"jane";}s:7:"summary";s:1173:"Note: Survey is closed as of 9/18/08. Thanks for the feedback!
\nWordPress 2.7 is currently in development and as some people already know, it features a revised layout with a left-hand navigation column that was designed in response to user feedback regarding the use of screen real estate. Because the navigation came straight from the Crazyhorse prototype that was developed quickly for usability testing, it is still a work in progress.
Navigation sections and labels are being decided now, and as usual there are lots of good ideas floating around. As part of the mission to increase user involvement in design decisions, we’ve created a survey intended to give WordPress users the ability to play a part in deciding how the navigation options should be grouped and labeled. If you use WordPress and want to add your opinion, take the survey.
\nWordPress 2.7 Navigation Options Survey
";}i:25;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:59:"Weblog Tools Collection: WordPress Theme Releases for 09/15";s:4:"guid";s:40:"http://weblogtoolscollection.com/?p=4165";s:4:"link";s:87:"http://weblogtoolscollection.com/archives/2008/09/15/wordpress-theme-releases-for-0915/";s:11:"description";s:2679:"\nTwo column theme optimized for for SEO with a flexible top banner image, with options for Google Analytics integration.
\n\n\nTwo column, widget-ready, gravatar-ready and SEO-friendly themes
\n\n\nA fixed-width 2-column, free WordPress theme, with a right hand-sidebar, enabled for widgets and gravatars
\n\n\nMidnight-Blue-Plus is a dark blue, right sidebar, widget ready theme designed for WordPress.
\n\n\nTwo column theme with flower bordered big header
\n\n\nBrown, grey and green, three column theme
";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Mon, 15 Sep 2008 13:16:34 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:4:"Ajay";}s:7:"summary";s:2679:"\nTwo column theme optimized for for SEO with a flexible top banner image, with options for Google Analytics integration.
\n\n\nTwo column, widget-ready, gravatar-ready and SEO-friendly themes
\n\n\nA fixed-width 2-column, free WordPress theme, with a right hand-sidebar, enabled for widgets and gravatars
\n\n\nMidnight-Blue-Plus is a dark blue, right sidebar, widget ready theme designed for WordPress.
\n\n\nTwo column theme with flower bordered big header
\n\n\nBrown, grey and green, three column theme
";}i:26;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:66:"Weblog Tools Collection: WordPress Plugin Competition 2.5 Winners!";s:4:"guid";s:40:"http://weblogtoolscollection.com/?p=4144";s:4:"link";s:93:"http://weblogtoolscollection.com/archives/2008/09/13/wordpress-plugin-competition-25-winners/";s:11:"description";s:2427:"Thank you for your patience. The judges have been corralled for their results, the results have been tallied, public votes have been added in and tallied and we are finally ready to announce the winners of the WordPress Plugin Competition 2.5
\nMay we have a drum roll please?
\nThank you prizes:
\n$250 prize from WPMU
\nThank you for your patience. The judges have been corralled for their results, the results have been tallied, public votes have been added in and tallied and we are finally ready to announce the winners of the WordPress Plugin Competition 2.5
\nMay we have a drum roll please?
\nThank you prizes:
\n$250 prize from WPMU
\nMy wife Sarah and I were in Wal-Mart last night, when we saw someone walking around with a shirt that said “Girl’s go’in wild.” We had a good chuckle over the atrocious and arbitrary punctuation. Then I thought “hey, this might make for a good blog.”
\n4 hours later, Wordsplosion was online. It’s pretty amazing that you can go from idea to execution in a matter of hours using WordPress. Wordsplosion showcases “the best of the worst of the wide world of words.” It contains (and will continue to contain) all manner of grammatical errors, punctuation gaffes, misspellings, horrible typography, etc. It’s LOL cats for smart people.
\nI used the amazing Journalist theme as a base. Go check it out!
\nMy wife Sarah and I were in Wal-Mart last night, when we saw someone walking around with a shirt that said “Girl’s go’in wild.” We had a good chuckle over the atrocious and arbitrary punctuation. Then I thought “hey, this might make for a good blog.”
\n4 hours later, Wordsplosion was online. It’s pretty amazing that you can go from idea to execution in a matter of hours using WordPress. Wordsplosion showcases “the best of the worst of the wide world of words.” It contains (and will continue to contain) all manner of grammatical errors, punctuation gaffes, misspellings, horrible typography, etc. It’s LOL cats for smart people.
\nI used the amazing Journalist theme as a base. Go check it out!
\nGives you the ability to add multiple widgets which will display one or more random item(s) from your Amazon wishlist, baby registry and/or wedding registry.
\n\nThe WP125 plugin can help you manage your ads more efficiently, leaving you with more time to write new posts.
\n\nThis little plugin will output a bookmarks.html file with your entire WordPress Dashboard in folders, just as they appear on your panel.
\n\nThis plugin allows the user to embed Google Document/Spreadsheet content in posts and pages using shortcode.
\n\nThis plugin creates a dynamic gallery of images for latest and/or featured posts. Using JonDesign’s excellent SmoothGallery script, this plugin makes the gallery truly dynamic so that it automatically creates the gallery from your latest and/or featured posts.
\n\nWP-Universe creates a blog universe based on categories of a WordPress blog.
\n\nWith this plugin you can choose a smiley pack from the settings / options in admin or simply choose your own smiley pack directory.
\n\nAlways deliver the latest version of your CSS stylesheet to browsers. All caching problems solved.
";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Sat, 13 Sep 2008 14:40:17 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:4:"Ajay";}s:7:"summary";s:2057:"\nGives you the ability to add multiple widgets which will display one or more random item(s) from your Amazon wishlist, baby registry and/or wedding registry.
\n\nThe WP125 plugin can help you manage your ads more efficiently, leaving you with more time to write new posts.
\n\nThis little plugin will output a bookmarks.html file with your entire WordPress Dashboard in folders, just as they appear on your panel.
\n\nThis plugin allows the user to embed Google Document/Spreadsheet content in posts and pages using shortcode.
\n\nThis plugin creates a dynamic gallery of images for latest and/or featured posts. Using JonDesign’s excellent SmoothGallery script, this plugin makes the gallery truly dynamic so that it automatically creates the gallery from your latest and/or featured posts.
\n\nWP-Universe creates a blog universe based on categories of a WordPress blog.
\n\nWith this plugin you can choose a smiley pack from the settings / options in admin or simply choose your own smiley pack directory.
\n\nAlways deliver the latest version of your CSS stylesheet to browsers. All caching problems solved.
";}i:29;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:13:"Matt: Dropbox";s:4:"guid";s:29:"http://ma.tt/2008/09/dropbox/";s:4:"link";s:29:"http://ma.tt/2008/09/dropbox/";s:11:"description";s:160:"Dropbox is open to the public now. I’d love something like this I could use with my own Subversion server.
";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Sat, 13 Sep 2008 04:44:29 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:4:"Matt";}s:7:"summary";s:160:"Dropbox is open to the public now. I’d love something like this I could use with my own Subversion server.
";}i:30;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:59:"Weblog Tools Collection: WordPress Theme Releases for 09/12";s:4:"guid";s:40:"http://weblogtoolscollection.com/?p=4140";s:4:"link";s:87:"http://weblogtoolscollection.com/archives/2008/09/12/wordpress-theme-releases-for-0912/";s:11:"description";s:3628:"\nJalan Lurus is my first single columns and black edition. You will found a lot of usable area on this themes, such as top commenters, latest comments, tag cloud, caption image, popularity post, nicely random post, nice looking archives page and 404 error page and many more.
\nThis themes also support widget, custom image header and Flickr RSS.
\n\n\n2 columns, light, blue, green, transparent, rounded borders, valid xhtml, widgets
\n\n\nA simple dark black and blue WordPress theme.
\n\n\nBT Ex consists of a fluid five (!) column outfit with a js clock/calendar built in: widgetized sidebar and footer columns, built in are recent comments with gravatars, related posts, social bookmarking enabled. Flickr is enabled in the themes options panel. The frontpage shows the eleven latest posts, followed by footer action.
\n\n\nFleur de lys consists of a fluid three column outfit with a header rotator built in: widgetized sidebars and footer columns, built in are recent comments with gravatars, related posts, social bookmarking enabled. Flickr is enabled in the themes options panel. The frontpage shows the latest posts followed by footer action.
\n\nClean and simple three column theme with a boxed CSS layout and an AJAX sidebar.
\n\n\nCryBook is a 3 Column simple theme base with the popular Facebook. It contain 2 widget-ready sidebar, live theme swistcher and custom admin panel. It’s compatible with up to WordPress 2.6.2 and has been tested with in Firefox3, Internet Explorer 6 & 7, Opera, and Safari. This is a very simple theme, you may notice that it is only a few files included. The key is, it is not only tabless but also imageless! There is no a single image used in layout!
";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Fri, 12 Sep 2008 18:24:15 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:4:"Ajay";}s:7:"summary";s:3628:"\nJalan Lurus is my first single columns and black edition. You will found a lot of usable area on this themes, such as top commenters, latest comments, tag cloud, caption image, popularity post, nicely random post, nice looking archives page and 404 error page and many more.
\nThis themes also support widget, custom image header and Flickr RSS.
\n\n\n2 columns, light, blue, green, transparent, rounded borders, valid xhtml, widgets
\n\n\nA simple dark black and blue WordPress theme.
\n\n\nBT Ex consists of a fluid five (!) column outfit with a js clock/calendar built in: widgetized sidebar and footer columns, built in are recent comments with gravatars, related posts, social bookmarking enabled. Flickr is enabled in the themes options panel. The frontpage shows the eleven latest posts, followed by footer action.
\n\n\nFleur de lys consists of a fluid three column outfit with a header rotator built in: widgetized sidebars and footer columns, built in are recent comments with gravatars, related posts, social bookmarking enabled. Flickr is enabled in the themes options panel. The frontpage shows the latest posts followed by footer action.
\n\nClean and simple three column theme with a boxed CSS layout and an AJAX sidebar.
\n\n\nCryBook is a 3 Column simple theme base with the popular Facebook. It contain 2 widget-ready sidebar, live theme swistcher and custom admin panel. It’s compatible with up to WordPress 2.6.2 and has been tested with in Firefox3, Internet Explorer 6 & 7, Opera, and Safari. This is a very simple theme, you may notice that it is only a few files included. The key is, it is not only tabless but also imageless! There is no a single image used in layout!
";}i:31;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:74:"Weblog Tools Collection: Smart cache-busting for your Wordpress stylesheet";s:4:"guid";s:40:"http://weblogtoolscollection.com/?p=4130";s:4:"link";s:103:"http://weblogtoolscollection.com/archives/2008/09/12/smart-cache-busting-for-your-wordpress-stylesheet/";s:11:"description";s:744:"Smart cache-busting for your Wordpress stylesheet.: If you frequently change your WordPress stylesheet or are working on it and would like your readers to pull the new stylesheet every time instead of using a cached version (which might display a borked page), this tutorial and the subsequent plugin might be for you. Alister explains the issue in detail, provides a tutorial on how to acheive the results and then with some prodding from Matt, comes up with a plugin the get the same result which does not require any modification of code.
";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Fri, 12 Sep 2008 17:52:09 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:10:"Mark Ghosh";}s:7:"summary";s:744:"Smart cache-busting for your Wordpress stylesheet.: If you frequently change your WordPress stylesheet or are working on it and would like your readers to pull the new stylesheet every time instead of using a cached version (which might display a borked page), this tutorial and the subsequent plugin might be for you. Alister explains the issue in detail, provides a tutorial on how to acheive the results and then with some prodding from Matt, comes up with a plugin the get the same result which does not require any modification of code.
";}i:32;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:33:"Ryan Boren: Stalking the Wild 2.7";s:4:"guid";s:23:"http://boren.nu/?p=1613";s:4:"link";s:57:"http://boren.nu/archives/2008/09/04/stalking-the-wild-27/";s:11:"description";s:1456:"To track the day-to-day happenings of WordPress 2.7 development, head over to the Development Updates blog. We’ll be discussing the ongoing admin UI changes and the new features slated for 2.7. Add your comments and join in.
\nHere’s a quick rundown of some of the features that have already gone into 2.7.
\nNot all of those features are complete yet, but they are getting close. We’re hoping to get a few more features like Theme update, install, and browsing done in time for 2.7.
";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Fri, 12 Sep 2008 07:00:13 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:4:"Ryan";}s:7:"summary";s:1456:"To track the day-to-day happenings of WordPress 2.7 development, head over to the Development Updates blog. We’ll be discussing the ongoing admin UI changes and the new features slated for 2.7. Add your comments and join in.
\nHere’s a quick rundown of some of the features that have already gone into 2.7.
\nNot all of those features are complete yet, but they are getting close. We’re hoping to get a few more features like Theme update, install, and browsing done in time for 2.7.
";}i:33;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:60:"Weblog Tools Collection: WordPress Plugin Releases for 09/11";s:4:"guid";s:40:"http://weblogtoolscollection.com/?p=4128";s:4:"link";s:88:"http://weblogtoolscollection.com/archives/2008/09/11/wordpress-plugin-releases-for-0911/";s:11:"description";s:2286:"\nThumbnail For Excerpts search the post for the first image. If exists, than it will search for the thumbnail created by default by WordPress for the image, if it was uploaded from WP administration area.
\n\nEnhance your blog with both basic and advanced video capabilities. Upload/ record/import videos directly to your post, edit and remix video content, enable video responses, manage and track your video content and much more…
\n\nProgressive license is a plugin that gives authors an opportunity to put Creative Commons or Custom Licenses on their content.
\n\nTxtVox connects mobile subscribers with blogs, newsletters, podcasts and other information sources through an innovative combination of advertising-supported text messaging and personalized mobile pages.
\n\nEmbed 3D Flick Photo Galleries in the WordPress sidebar. Enjoy the same 3D immersive FotoViewr experience in your WordPress blog.
\n\nIntegrate TwitterCounter.com badges on your blog to display the number of followers you have on Twitter
\n\nAdd a “Digg This” button to your post.
\n\nRedirect WordPress users to different locations after they log in.
\nPlugin authors might like to take a look at Hit a Moving Target in your WordPress Plugin
";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Thu, 11 Sep 2008 17:32:32 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:4:"Ajay";}s:7:"summary";s:2286:"\nThumbnail For Excerpts search the post for the first image. If exists, than it will search for the thumbnail created by default by WordPress for the image, if it was uploaded from WP administration area.
\n\nEnhance your blog with both basic and advanced video capabilities. Upload/ record/import videos directly to your post, edit and remix video content, enable video responses, manage and track your video content and much more…
\n\nProgressive license is a plugin that gives authors an opportunity to put Creative Commons or Custom Licenses on their content.
\n\nTxtVox connects mobile subscribers with blogs, newsletters, podcasts and other information sources through an innovative combination of advertising-supported text messaging and personalized mobile pages.
\n\nEmbed 3D Flick Photo Galleries in the WordPress sidebar. Enjoy the same 3D immersive FotoViewr experience in your WordPress blog.
\n\nIntegrate TwitterCounter.com badges on your blog to display the number of followers you have on Twitter
\n\nAdd a “Digg This” button to your post.
\n\nRedirect WordPress users to different locations after they log in.
\nPlugin authors might like to take a look at Hit a Moving Target in your WordPress Plugin
";}i:34;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:34:"Alex King: Progressive License 1.0";s:4:"guid";s:58:"http://alexking.org/blog/2008/09/10/progressive-license-10";s:4:"link";s:58:"http://alexking.org/blog/2008/09/10/progressive-license-10";s:11:"description";s:3812:"Steve O’Grady of RedMonk announced the Progressive License WordPress plugin at WordCamp San Francisco.
\nProgressive License is similar to other plugins that allow you to easily put a license on your content, but it brings a little twist: the ability to change the license applied to the content as the content ages.
\nSteve explains:
\n\nIn my case, as an example, it applies a Creative Commons noncommercial license for the first 60 days - this one - and then retires the noncommercial provision after that time period, applying this license on everything older than 60 days.
This is the sort of thing that would have been really simple to build as a one-off custom plugin, but RedMonk instead chose to have my company, Crowd Favorite, build a solution that could be distributed back to the community.
\nThis was an interesting user interaction challenge. We did our best to make this definition of the license time windows as user friendly as possible.
\n\nYou can see we created a JavaScript based configuration page that does some date calculation to show when licenses would be applied to a post published today. Hopefully this does a good job communicating how the various licenses will be applied.
\nProgressive License ships with seven Creative Commons licenses included out of the box, but also gives you an interface to add additional licenses you would like to use.
\n\nMany thanks to RedMonk for bringing us in to build this plugin, and kudos to them for choosing to sponsor the creation of a robust solution for the rest of the WordPress community.
\n\n ";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Thu, 11 Sep 2008 04:46:44 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:4:"Alex";}s:7:"summary";s:3812:"Steve O’Grady of RedMonk announced the Progressive License WordPress plugin at WordCamp San Francisco.
\nProgressive License is similar to other plugins that allow you to easily put a license on your content, but it brings a little twist: the ability to change the license applied to the content as the content ages.
\nSteve explains:
\n\nIn my case, as an example, it applies a Creative Commons noncommercial license for the first 60 days - this one - and then retires the noncommercial provision after that time period, applying this license on everything older than 60 days.
This is the sort of thing that would have been really simple to build as a one-off custom plugin, but RedMonk instead chose to have my company, Crowd Favorite, build a solution that could be distributed back to the community.
\nThis was an interesting user interaction challenge. We did our best to make this definition of the license time windows as user friendly as possible.
\n\nYou can see we created a JavaScript based configuration page that does some date calculation to show when licenses would be applied to a post published today. Hopefully this does a good job communicating how the various licenses will be applied.
\nProgressive License ships with seven Creative Commons licenses included out of the box, but also gives you an interface to add additional licenses you would like to use.
\n\nMany thanks to RedMonk for bringing us in to build this plugin, and kudos to them for choosing to sponsor the creation of a robust solution for the rest of the WordPress community.
\n\n ";}i:35;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:26:"Matt: CMS Critic Interview";s:4:"guid";s:42:"http://ma.tt/2008/09/cms-critic-interview/";s:4:"link";s:42:"http://ma.tt/2008/09/cms-critic-interview/";s:11:"description";s:133:"There’s a new interview up at CMS Critic.
";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Wed, 10 Sep 2008 23:51:16 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:4:"Matt";}s:7:"summary";s:133:"There’s a new interview up at CMS Critic.
";}i:36;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:59:"Weblog Tools Collection: WordPress Theme Releases for 09/10";s:4:"guid";s:40:"http://weblogtoolscollection.com/?p=4126";s:4:"link";s:87:"http://weblogtoolscollection.com/archives/2008/09/10/wordpress-theme-releases-for-0910/";s:11:"description";s:1959:"\n\nTwo column theme with custom archives page, animated JavaScript dropdown menu, widgetized sidebar and bottom bar and several other features
\n\n\nConverts WordPress into a photo gallery
\n\nA light weight two column, fixed width, widget and gravatar ready theme
\nBusiness Class and Beautiful Blue
\n\nTwo column, widget ready themes
\nOn the topic of themes, take a look at The Normal Person’s Guide to WordPress Themes
";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Wed, 10 Sep 2008 18:04:14 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:4:"Ajay";}s:7:"summary";s:1959:"\n\nTwo column theme with custom archives page, animated JavaScript dropdown menu, widgetized sidebar and bottom bar and several other features
\n\n\nConverts WordPress into a photo gallery
\n\nA light weight two column, fixed width, widget and gravatar ready theme
\nBusiness Class and Beautiful Blue
\n\nTwo column, widget ready themes
\nOn the topic of themes, take a look at The Normal Person’s Guide to WordPress Themes
";}i:37;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:63:"Lorelle on WP: Attend a WordCamp and Meet Your WordPress Family";s:4:"guid";s:36:"http://lorelle.wordpress.com/?p=2969";s:4:"link";s:89:"http://lorelle.wordpress.com/2008/09/10/attend-a-wordcamp-and-meet-your-wordpress-family/";s:11:"description";s:23491:"Last year at WordCamp 2007 in San Francisco, I got a chance to meet up with my long time online buddy and WordPress guru, Andy Skelton. Living on the road myself, I was thrilled when Andy announced he was riding his motorcycle to WordCamp - but not from Texas to San Francisco. He road from Texas to the East Coast of the United States and then across it to San Francisco then back to Texas.
\nI traced much of his travels in the WordPress Wednesday news reports on the Blog Herald as he made his way through all kinds of terrain and weather that very hot summer.
\nI drove from Oregon to San Francisco in my father’s old Class C motor home to get to WordCamp 2007. So both of us crossed a few miles to get to our first in-person meeting, sleeping when and wherever we could along the way.
\nWhen he arrived in San Francisco, we had a joyous meeting and he even escorted me back to where I was staying in San Francisco. Donncha O’Caoimh caught the momentous occasion on Andy’s new bright red Gold Wing motorcycle and uploaded the image to flickr - and I couldn’t find it. Andy finally found it for me and here it is.
\n\nJust as Andy and I traveled across the country, one of us the long way, it’s your turn. I challenge you all to attend a WordCamp event and meet an old, or new, friend.
\n
I bring it to your attention because I want to share with you the special magic that is a WordCamp adventure. I will be speaking and attending some WordCamps over the next few months, including WordCamp Portland, Oregon, on September 27, 2008, Podcamp and WordCamp Hawaii on Oct 24, 2008, WordCamp Israel (hopefully), and WordCamp Las Vegas 2009, in Las Vegas, Nevada, January 10-11, 2009.
I urge you all to be a part of a WordCamp experience. It doesn’t matter if you just attend or you are part of the team that brings a WordCamp to your area.
\nWordCamp is a chance to meet other WordPress and blog enthusiasts, but also a chance to learn more about WordPress and how others are using WordPress for their blogs and CMS sites. It’s a chance to meet WordPress developers, experts, and Plugin and Theme authors. It’s a chance to learn how to push WordPress to the limit and find out what’s hot on the WordPress horizon.
\nMost importantly, it is great fun. It’s a chance to leave the virtual world behind and get real, honest hugs and face-to-face meetings with creative and innovative folks who understand the power behind a blog is not just WordPress but the blogger and their hard work.
\nI’ve been to many WordCamps over the past year and a half. I attend and speak at a lot of conferences on blogging, social media, web technology, and education every year, and I look forward most to WordCamp events. No one is selling me anything, there is no pressure, no force, no stress. It’s like a reunion without the old politics and back biting history. It’s relaxing, education, but most of all friendly. The WordPress Community is the best.
\nI’ve started contributing to the The WordCamp Report on WordCamp news and events, and we’re looking for WordCamp attendees to live blog or report on the WordCamp events they are attending. If you are interested, email me or use the WordCamp Report Contact Page.
\nYou can learn more about WordCamps near you at WordCamp Central, The WordCamp Report, and my weekly WordPress Wednesday News on the Blog Herald.
\nHere are a listing of upcoming WordCamps and blog events:
\nUpcoming WordCamps not scheduled or confirmed:
\nAttend, volunteer, sponsor, speak, or allow someone to sleep over who is attending - be a part of a WordCamp near you or fly to one anywhere in the world. You will be welcome. As a WordPress fan, you are part of something bigger than WordPress. You are part of the WordPress Community family.
\n\n
\n
Site Search Tags: wordcamp, wordpress event, conference, wordpress news, wordpress conferences, wordpress community
\n Subscribe
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Copyright Lorelle VanFossen, the author of Blogging Tips, What Bloggers Won\'t Tell You About Blogging.
Last year at WordCamp 2007 in San Francisco, I got a chance to meet up with my long time online buddy and WordPress guru, Andy Skelton. Living on the road myself, I was thrilled when Andy announced he was riding his motorcycle to WordCamp - but not from Texas to San Francisco. He road from Texas to the East Coast of the United States and then across it to San Francisco then back to Texas.
\nI traced much of his travels in the WordPress Wednesday news reports on the Blog Herald as he made his way through all kinds of terrain and weather that very hot summer.
\nI drove from Oregon to San Francisco in my father’s old Class C motor home to get to WordCamp 2007. So both of us crossed a few miles to get to our first in-person meeting, sleeping when and wherever we could along the way.
\nWhen he arrived in San Francisco, we had a joyous meeting and he even escorted me back to where I was staying in San Francisco. Donncha O’Caoimh caught the momentous occasion on Andy’s new bright red Gold Wing motorcycle and uploaded the image to flickr - and I couldn’t find it. Andy finally found it for me and here it is.
\n\nJust as Andy and I traveled across the country, one of us the long way, it’s your turn. I challenge you all to attend a WordCamp event and meet an old, or new, friend.
\n
I bring it to your attention because I want to share with you the special magic that is a WordCamp adventure. I will be speaking and attending some WordCamps over the next few months, including WordCamp Portland, Oregon, on September 27, 2008, Podcamp and WordCamp Hawaii on Oct 24, 2008, WordCamp Israel (hopefully), and WordCamp Las Vegas 2009, in Las Vegas, Nevada, January 10-11, 2009.
I urge you all to be a part of a WordCamp experience. It doesn’t matter if you just attend or you are part of the team that brings a WordCamp to your area.
\nWordCamp is a chance to meet other WordPress and blog enthusiasts, but also a chance to learn more about WordPress and how others are using WordPress for their blogs and CMS sites. It’s a chance to meet WordPress developers, experts, and Plugin and Theme authors. It’s a chance to learn how to push WordPress to the limit and find out what’s hot on the WordPress horizon.
\nMost importantly, it is great fun. It’s a chance to leave the virtual world behind and get real, honest hugs and face-to-face meetings with creative and innovative folks who understand the power behind a blog is not just WordPress but the blogger and their hard work.
\nI’ve been to many WordCamps over the past year and a half. I attend and speak at a lot of conferences on blogging, social media, web technology, and education every year, and I look forward most to WordCamp events. No one is selling me anything, there is no pressure, no force, no stress. It’s like a reunion without the old politics and back biting history. It’s relaxing, education, but most of all friendly. The WordPress Community is the best.
\nI’ve started contributing to the The WordCamp Report on WordCamp news and events, and we’re looking for WordCamp attendees to live blog or report on the WordCamp events they are attending. If you are interested, email me or use the WordCamp Report Contact Page.
\nYou can learn more about WordCamps near you at WordCamp Central, The WordCamp Report, and my weekly WordPress Wednesday News on the Blog Herald.
\nHere are a listing of upcoming WordCamps and blog events:
\nUpcoming WordCamps not scheduled or confirmed:
\nAttend, volunteer, sponsor, speak, or allow someone to sleep over who is attending - be a part of a WordCamp near you or fly to one anywhere in the world. You will be welcome. As a WordPress fan, you are part of something bigger than WordPress. You are part of the WordPress Community family.
\n\n
\n
Site Search Tags: wordcamp, wordpress event, conference, wordpress news, wordpress conferences, wordpress community
\n Subscribe
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Subscribe by Email
Visit
Copyright Lorelle VanFossen, the author of Blogging Tips, What Bloggers Won\'t Tell You About Blogging.
Yahoo’s Hack Day is coming up this Friday and Saturday. I’m going to be a judge at the event. The other judges are David Filo, Ash Patel, Cheryl Ainoa, Jeff Clavier, Rashmi Sinha, and Om Malik. Fun group!
";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Tue, 09 Sep 2008 20:05:18 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:4:"Matt";}s:7:"summary";s:257:"Yahoo’s Hack Day is coming up this Friday and Saturday. I’m going to be a judge at the event. The other judges are David Filo, Ash Patel, Cheryl Ainoa, Jeff Clavier, Rashmi Sinha, and Om Malik. Fun group!
";}i:39;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:40:"Dougal Campbell: WordPress 2.6.2 Release";s:4:"guid";s:33:"http://dougal.gunters.org/?p=1079";s:4:"link";s:63:"http://dougal.gunters.org/blog/2008/09/09/wordpress-262-release";s:11:"description";s:2331:"As most of you have probably already seen in your Dashboard, yesterday afternoon saw the official WordPress 2.6.2 Release. And as mentioned in the comments on my intitial news break on the 2.6.2 Beta, the focus is on two security patches to cover weaknesses in PHP’s random number generation (which affects password encryption strength), and in MySQL’s field length checking. These weren’t (technically) security bugs in WordPress, per se, but in the underlying PHP/MySQL stack. Fortunately, we’re able to route around them. This is mainly a problem if your site allows users to register for a user login, however, I would still recommend this upgrade for all users, just to be on the safe side.
\nFor those of you who are PHP/MySQL developers yourselves, I highly recommend reading Stefan Esser’s explanation of the PHP mt_srand() bug and the MySQL SQL Column Truncation issue. He provides some really good detail of the problems. Stefan is also the developer of the PHP Suhosin module, which provides extra security-related features and protections to PHP.
\nIt’s also important to note that these problems don’t just affect WordPress — many other PHP/MySQL applications could be vulnerable to future problems if they don’t examine and patch their code.
";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Tue, 09 Sep 2008 19:35:50 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:6:"Dougal";}s:7:"summary";s:2331:"As most of you have probably already seen in your Dashboard, yesterday afternoon saw the official WordPress 2.6.2 Release. And as mentioned in the comments on my intitial news break on the 2.6.2 Beta, the focus is on two security patches to cover weaknesses in PHP’s random number generation (which affects password encryption strength), and in MySQL’s field length checking. These weren’t (technically) security bugs in WordPress, per se, but in the underlying PHP/MySQL stack. Fortunately, we’re able to route around them. This is mainly a problem if your site allows users to register for a user login, however, I would still recommend this upgrade for all users, just to be on the safe side.
\nFor those of you who are PHP/MySQL developers yourselves, I highly recommend reading Stefan Esser’s explanation of the PHP mt_srand() bug and the MySQL SQL Column Truncation issue. He provides some really good detail of the problems. Stefan is also the developer of the PHP Suhosin module, which provides extra security-related features and protections to PHP.
\nIt’s also important to note that these problems don’t just affect WordPress — many other PHP/MySQL applications could be vulnerable to future problems if they don’t examine and patch their code.
";}i:40;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:24:"Matt: SEO Book Interview";s:4:"guid";s:40:"http://ma.tt/2008/09/seo-book-interview/";s:4:"link";s:40:"http://ma.tt/2008/09/seo-book-interview/";s:11:"description";s:261:"A new interview with Aaron Wall of SEO Book up. Also did a short one with Blueverse.
";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Tue, 09 Sep 2008 18:15:49 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:4:"Matt";}s:7:"summary";s:261:"A new interview with Aaron Wall of SEO Book up. Also did a short one with Blueverse.
";}i:41;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:23:"Matt: 10 PHP Principles";s:4:"guid";s:39:"http://ma.tt/2008/09/10-php-principles/";s:4:"link";s:39:"http://ma.tt/2008/09/10-php-principles/";s:11:"description";s:116:"10 Principles of the PHP Masters.
";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Tue, 09 Sep 2008 18:14:24 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:4:"Matt";}s:7:"summary";s:116:"10 Principles of the PHP Masters.
";}i:42;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:48:"Lorelle on WP: WordPress 2.6.2 Mandatory Upgrade";s:4:"guid";s:36:"http://lorelle.wordpress.com/?p=3005";s:4:"link";s:72:"http://lorelle.wordpress.com/2008/09/09/wordpress-262-mandatory-upgrade/";s:11:"description";s:6656:"Ryan Boren has announced the mandatory WordPress 2.6.2 upgrade has been released and WordPress users are required to download WordPress 2.6.2 and upgrade immediately.
This mandatory security upgrade adds protection for a SQL Column Truncation and other security and bug fixes. There is a full changeset and list of changed files to help you find the differences, and a specific changeset for downloading will be available soon.
\nThe vulnerability impacts all PHP applications, not just WordPress, specifically open registration on WordPress blogs. Boren says the attack is difficult to accomplish, but WordPress would rather be safer than sorrier if this is manipulated in the future. If you allow open registration on your WordPress blog, upgrade immediately and follow the instructions in the announcement.
\nWordPress 2.7 is due later this fall. If you are interested in following the development of WordPress and WordPress related applications, here is a list:
\n
\n
Site Search Tags: wordpress, wordpress news, wordpress versions, wordpress upgrade, wordpress update, wordpress 2.6, wordpress 2.6.2, security, security update, mandatory update, upgrade, download, download wordpress
\n Subscribe
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Copyright Lorelle VanFossen, the author of Blogging Tips, What Bloggers Won\'t Tell You About Blogging.
Ryan Boren has announced the mandatory WordPress 2.6.2 upgrade has been released and WordPress users are required to download WordPress 2.6.2 and upgrade immediately.
This mandatory security upgrade adds protection for a SQL Column Truncation and other security and bug fixes. There is a full changeset and list of changed files to help you find the differences, and a specific changeset for downloading will be available soon.
\nThe vulnerability impacts all PHP applications, not just WordPress, specifically open registration on WordPress blogs. Boren says the attack is difficult to accomplish, but WordPress would rather be safer than sorrier if this is manipulated in the future. If you allow open registration on your WordPress blog, upgrade immediately and follow the instructions in the announcement.
\nWordPress 2.7 is due later this fall. If you are interested in following the development of WordPress and WordPress related applications, here is a list:
\n
\n
Site Search Tags: wordpress, wordpress news, wordpress versions, wordpress upgrade, wordpress update, wordpress 2.6, wordpress 2.6.2, security, security update, mandatory update, upgrade, download, download wordpress
\n Subscribe
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Copyright Lorelle VanFossen, the author of Blogging Tips, What Bloggers Won\'t Tell You About Blogging.
Add a Sudoku game to your blog with this WordPress widget. (Page in French)
\n\nWordbook is Wordpress plugin designed to integrate Facebook in your blog and your blog into Facebook.
\n\nWP Figlet allows you to draw ASCII art in your posts and page source.
\nAuto-Close Comments, Pingbacks and Trackbacks
\nAutomatically close comments, pingbacks and trackbacks on your blog. This helps reduce the amount of spam aimed at old posts.
\n\nInsights brings a powerful new way to write your blog posts. It increases productivity and at the same time the appeal of your posts.
\n\nMake your gallery more glamorous with a flipping engine
";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Tue, 09 Sep 2008 13:50:08 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:4:"Ajay";}s:7:"summary";s:1278:"\nAdd a Sudoku game to your blog with this WordPress widget. (Page in French)
\n\nWordbook is Wordpress plugin designed to integrate Facebook in your blog and your blog into Facebook.
\n\nWP Figlet allows you to draw ASCII art in your posts and page source.
\nAuto-Close Comments, Pingbacks and Trackbacks
\nAutomatically close comments, pingbacks and trackbacks on your blog. This helps reduce the amount of spam aimed at old posts.
\n\nInsights brings a powerful new way to write your blog posts. It increases productivity and at the same time the appeal of your posts.
\n\nMake your gallery more glamorous with a flipping engine
";}i:44;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:60:"Mark Jaquith: Preview: Advanced WordPress @ BlogOrlando 2008";s:4:"guid";s:39:"http://markjaquith.wordpress.com/?p=181";s:4:"link";s:88:"http://markjaquith.wordpress.com/2008/09/09/preview-advanced-wordpress-blogorlando-2008/";s:11:"description";s:2798:"I’ll be at BlogOrlando on September 27th leading a session on Advanced WordPress. Here’s a quick preview of the topics I’d like to cover:
\nScaling
\nAn overview of the best ways to scale WordPress to withstand any Digg onslaught. We’ll talk about WP-Super-Cache, Batcache and PHP opcode caches. We’ll identify common performance bottlenecks. For more detailed and generally applicable information, you’ll want to stick around for Alex Rudloff’s session on scaling!
\nUpgrades
\nStill using FTP to upgrade your WordPress blog? FTP is for your grandmother. We’ll talk about using Subversion to make upgrades happen in a flash.
\nAdvanced URLs
\nWant a feed of all posts by guest authors on your blog that are in the “Florida” category and also mention “Disney” ? Pfft, that’s nothing. Learn how to use WordPress URL tricks to offer extremely customized feeds to your readers.
\nMultiple loops
\nLet’s use the tricks you learned above to create a secondary loop in your theme, without disrupting the main posts loop.
\nBring Your Questions!
\nThe format will be conversational, so please bring your Advanced WordPress questions!
\nI’ll be at BlogOrlando on September 27th leading a session on Advanced WordPress. Here’s a quick preview of the topics I’d like to cover:
\nScaling
\nAn overview of the best ways to scale WordPress to withstand any Digg onslaught. We’ll talk about WP-Super-Cache, Batcache and PHP opcode caches. We’ll identify common performance bottlenecks. For more detailed and generally applicable information, you’ll want to stick around for Alex Rudloff’s session on scaling!
\nUpgrades
\nStill using FTP to upgrade your WordPress blog? FTP is for your grandmother. We’ll talk about using Subversion to make upgrades happen in a flash.
\nAdvanced URLs
\nWant a feed of all posts by guest authors on your blog that are in the “Florida” category and also mention “Disney” ? Pfft, that’s nothing. Learn how to use WordPress URL tricks to offer extremely customized feeds to your readers.
\nMultiple loops
\nLet’s use the tricks you learned above to create a secondary loop in your theme, without disrupting the main posts loop.
\nBring Your Questions!
\nThe format will be conversational, so please bring your Advanced WordPress questions!
\nWordPress 2.6.2.: This release is in response to a recent warning to developers from Stefan Esser about the dangers of SQL Column Truncation and weaknesses of mt_rand(). The issue at hand that forced the release is discussed in detail on the WordPress.org blog post linked above. Basically the attack is complex, is dependent on open registration being turned on in your blog, but can be executed in theory and turns out to be more of an annoyance than an actual exploit.
\nIf you have open registration on your blog, the WordPress.org team recommends that you upgrade your install to WordPress 2.6.2 A handful of other fixes are also included in this upgrade. Here is a list of changed files.
";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Tue, 09 Sep 2008 04:03:00 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:10:"Mark Ghosh";}s:7:"summary";s:1337:"WordPress 2.6.2.: This release is in response to a recent warning to developers from Stefan Esser about the dangers of SQL Column Truncation and weaknesses of mt_rand(). The issue at hand that forced the release is discussed in detail on the WordPress.org blog post linked above. Basically the attack is complex, is dependent on open registration being turned on in your blog, but can be executed in theory and turns out to be more of an annoyance than an actual exploit.
\nIf you have open registration on your blog, the WordPress.org team recommends that you upgrade your install to WordPress 2.6.2 A handful of other fixes are also included in this upgrade. Here is a list of changed files.
";}i:46;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:25:"Dev Blog: WordPress 2.6.2";s:4:"guid";s:39:"http://wordpress.org/development/?p=299";s:4:"link";s:55:"http://wordpress.org/development/2008/09/wordpress-262/";s:11:"description";s:1985:"Stefan Esser recently warned developers of the dangers of SQL Column Truncation and the weakness of mt_rand(). With his help we worked around these problems and are now releasing WordPress 2.6.2. If you allow open registration on your blog, you should definitely upgrade. With open registration enabled, it is possible in WordPress versions 2.6.1 and earlier to craft a username such that it will allow resetting another user’s password to a randomly generated password. The randomly generated password is not disclosed to the attacker, so this problem by itself is annoying but not a security exploit. However, this attack coupled with a weakness in the random number seeding in mt_rand() could be used to predict the randomly generated password. Stefan Esser will release details of the complete attack shortly. The attack is difficult to accomplish, but its mere possibility means we recommend upgrading to 2.6.2.
\nOther PHP apps are susceptible to this class of attack. To protect all of your apps, grab the latest version of Suhosin. If you’ve already updated Suhosin, your existing WordPress install is already protected from the full exploit. You should still upgrade to 2.6.2 if you allow open user registration so as to prevent the possibility of passwords being randomized.
\n2.6.2 also contains a handful of bug fixes. Check out the full changeset and list of changed files.
";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Mon, 08 Sep 2008 18:30:47 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:4:"Ryan";}s:7:"summary";s:1985:"Stefan Esser recently warned developers of the dangers of SQL Column Truncation and the weakness of mt_rand(). With his help we worked around these problems and are now releasing WordPress 2.6.2. If you allow open registration on your blog, you should definitely upgrade. With open registration enabled, it is possible in WordPress versions 2.6.1 and earlier to craft a username such that it will allow resetting another user’s password to a randomly generated password. The randomly generated password is not disclosed to the attacker, so this problem by itself is annoying but not a security exploit. However, this attack coupled with a weakness in the random number seeding in mt_rand() could be used to predict the randomly generated password. Stefan Esser will release details of the complete attack shortly. The attack is difficult to accomplish, but its mere possibility means we recommend upgrading to 2.6.2.
\nOther PHP apps are susceptible to this class of attack. To protect all of your apps, grab the latest version of Suhosin. If you’ve already updated Suhosin, your existing WordPress install is already protected from the full exploit. You should still upgrade to 2.6.2 if you allow open user registration so as to prevent the possibility of passwords being randomized.
\n2.6.2 also contains a handful of bug fixes. Check out the full changeset and list of changed files.
";}i:47;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:85:"Lorelle on WP: What WordPress Plugins and Features Do You Want on the Comments Panel?";s:4:"guid";s:36:"http://lorelle.wordpress.com/?p=2960";s:4:"link";s:110:"http://lorelle.wordpress.com/2008/09/08/what-wordpress-plugins-and-features-do-you-want-on-the-comments-panel/";s:11:"description";s:7284:"WordPress is working on seriously improving the WordPress Comments Panel in the Administration Panels interface. They are including the ability for the Administrator to reply directly from the Comments Panel, adding keyboard shortcuts for improved accessibility and efficiency, restoring the Edit Comment link, and more features to make handling comments easier.
The WordPress email comments feature also needs a serious rework. Right now, you are given the options to delete, respond, moderate, and mark as spam, but these open links that require switching to your browser or browser tab to deal with later. I’d love to see the emails have the ability to interact directly with the database to speed things up for the blogger. So I keep a browser tab open for just monitoring blog comments and have email turned off, so I can increase my reaction times.
\nMark Jaquith brought up a lot of issues about the WordPress Comment “inbox” which might also make its way into WordPress 2.7 or a future version, and there are a lot of great WordPress Plugins which help improve how WordPress handles comments such as those found in:
\nI’m a huge fan of the indespensible WordPress Comment Ninja Greasemonkey Script works for any WordPress blog including WordPress.com blogs, and I’d love to see those features added to the WordPress Comment Panel.
\nI’ve long said that the number one flaw in WordPress is the poor comments handling features, so I’m looking forward to what the development team is working on.
\nBut what about you? There are a ton of WordPress Plugins out there that handle comments, comment spam, moderation, and response. If you were designing the perfect WordPress Comment Panel, which Plugins and features would you love to see included? What can’t you live without?
\n
\n
Site Search Tags: blog comments, wordpress plugins, wordpress, wordpress 2.7, comments panel, comment WordPress Plugins
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Copyright Lorelle VanFossen, the author of Blogging Tips, What Bloggers Won\'t Tell You About Blogging.
WordPress is working on seriously improving the WordPress Comments Panel in the Administration Panels interface. They are including the ability for the Administrator to reply directly from the Comments Panel, adding keyboard shortcuts for improved accessibility and efficiency, restoring the Edit Comment link, and more features to make handling comments easier.
The WordPress email comments feature also needs a serious rework. Right now, you are given the options to delete, respond, moderate, and mark as spam, but these open links that require switching to your browser or browser tab to deal with later. I’d love to see the emails have the ability to interact directly with the database to speed things up for the blogger. So I keep a browser tab open for just monitoring blog comments and have email turned off, so I can increase my reaction times.
\nMark Jaquith brought up a lot of issues about the WordPress Comment “inbox” which might also make its way into WordPress 2.7 or a future version, and there are a lot of great WordPress Plugins which help improve how WordPress handles comments such as those found in:
\nI’m a huge fan of the indespensible WordPress Comment Ninja Greasemonkey Script works for any WordPress blog including WordPress.com blogs, and I’d love to see those features added to the WordPress Comment Panel.
\nI’ve long said that the number one flaw in WordPress is the poor comments handling features, so I’m looking forward to what the development team is working on.
\nBut what about you? There are a ton of WordPress Plugins out there that handle comments, comment spam, moderation, and response. If you were designing the perfect WordPress Comment Panel, which Plugins and features would you love to see included? What can’t you live without?
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Site Search Tags: blog comments, wordpress plugins, wordpress, wordpress 2.7, comments panel, comment WordPress Plugins
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Copyright Lorelle VanFossen, the author of Blogging Tips, What Bloggers Won\'t Tell You About Blogging.
It’s a fixed-width, 3 column theme with a content management system look
\n\n\nRetromania is 2 columns green-yellow-red, widget ready wordpress theme.
\n\n\n3 columns theme, using only grey series of colors, widget ready, tested in Wordpress 2.6.1.
\n\nThree column, widget and gravatar ready blue theme that uses SIFR for headlines.
\n\n\n2 column fixed-width, free WordPress theme, with righthand sidebar, enabled for widgets.
";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Mon, 08 Sep 2008 11:33:40 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:4:"Ajay";}s:7:"summary";s:1978:"\n\nIt’s a fixed-width, 3 column theme with a content management system look
\n\n\nRetromania is 2 columns green-yellow-red, widget ready wordpress theme.
\n\n\n3 columns theme, using only grey series of colors, widget ready, tested in Wordpress 2.6.1.
\n\nThree column, widget and gravatar ready blue theme that uses SIFR for headlines.
\n\n\n2 column fixed-width, free WordPress theme, with righthand sidebar, enabled for widgets.
";}i:49;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:47:"Weblog Tools Collection: The Road To Automation";s:4:"guid";s:40:"http://weblogtoolscollection.com/?p=4100";s:4:"link";s:76:"http://weblogtoolscollection.com/archives/2008/09/07/the-road-to-automation/";s:11:"description";s:4563:"\nWhen WordPress 2.3 was released into the wild, one of the new features was an update notification which told you when there was a new version of WordPress or a plugin available for download. This was possible thanks to the API service called api.wordpress.org. Earlier this year, I had the privilege of attending WordCamp Dallas where WordPress 2.5 was unveiled to the world. I’ll personally never forget that day, but when Matt showcased the automatic plugin upgrader, it confirmed my suspicions back when 2.3 was released as to where at least some aspects of WordPress were headed.
\nDuring some downtime at the event, I pulled Matt aside and asked if him if the team was going to end up heavily using the API to not only upgrade plugins, but upgrade the core and also install themes. I don’t remember exactly what he said, but never the less, that is indeed where WordPress is heading. Thanks to this API, the future of WordPress from an end users point of view looks great.
\nWordPress 2.5 introduced automatic plugin upgrades. A time saving feature that the masses have loved. WordPress 2.7 is poised to really take advantage of the plugin API that the WordPress team has built thus far, allowing for the browsing and installation of plugins right from your administration panel. Another feature which may or may not be finalized in time for 2.7 is the core upgrade functionality. Again, thanks to the API for WordPress.org, upgrading WordPress could be as simple as a click of a button. The next item to incorporate into WordPress is the theme repository.
\nAlthough no definitive proof showcases the theme repository being integrated into the WordPress back end, I feel that it is only natural to incorporate it much like the plugin repository. What I say here is speculative, but based on the discussions that I have read, the plan is to allow users to browse around the theme repository and if they come across a theme they like, you’ll be able to click an install button which will unpack the theme automatically leaving only the step of activating the theme. I’ve mentioned this idea to others and they bring up the subject of theme upgrades. Because themes can be edited with the addition or subtraction of functions, I don’t believe upgrading themes will be as user friendly as upgrading plugins. However, unless a theme author completely revamps a theme, I don’t see the need to have an upgrade theme feature added to WordPress. Instead, the theme author should update the theme, change the version number and then, the theme repository API should notify the end user within the WordPress administration panel that a new version of their theme is available. A link within the message would direct the user to that themes entry within the repository from which they could read the change log. It would then be up to the end user on whether they want to apply the updates or not.
\nBased on my experience in dealing with WordPress end users, the three most difficult tasks when operating a WordPress powered site is upgrading WordPress, browsing and then installing themes, and last but not least, installing or upgrading plugins. Thanks to the hard work of the WordPress developers and associated volunteers, the API has provided us with the opportunity to use a piece of software where the three most difficult tasks to perform when using WordPress are practically automated. At the click of a button, you’ll be able to install a plugin, upgrade a plugin, upgrade to a new version of WordPress or install a theme. I may be wrong, but WordPress may be the first publishing system to provide this type of functionality to its user base.
\nI’ve had this feeling for quite a long time that WordPress was eventually going to provide these features as a means of making it as easy as possible to keep everything up to date. I suppose I may have a WordPress instinct built into me? At any rate, this is the road that the development team has decided to travel and I am happy to be part of the ride.
\nAre you looking forward to these three mundane tasks (possibly) being turned into simple mouse clicks?
";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Sun, 07 Sep 2008 20:31:19 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:13:"Jeff Chandler";}s:7:"summary";s:4563:"\nWhen WordPress 2.3 was released into the wild, one of the new features was an update notification which told you when there was a new version of WordPress or a plugin available for download. This was possible thanks to the API service called api.wordpress.org. Earlier this year, I had the privilege of attending WordCamp Dallas where WordPress 2.5 was unveiled to the world. I’ll personally never forget that day, but when Matt showcased the automatic plugin upgrader, it confirmed my suspicions back when 2.3 was released as to where at least some aspects of WordPress were headed.
\nDuring some downtime at the event, I pulled Matt aside and asked if him if the team was going to end up heavily using the API to not only upgrade plugins, but upgrade the core and also install themes. I don’t remember exactly what he said, but never the less, that is indeed where WordPress is heading. Thanks to this API, the future of WordPress from an end users point of view looks great.
\nWordPress 2.5 introduced automatic plugin upgrades. A time saving feature that the masses have loved. WordPress 2.7 is poised to really take advantage of the plugin API that the WordPress team has built thus far, allowing for the browsing and installation of plugins right from your administration panel. Another feature which may or may not be finalized in time for 2.7 is the core upgrade functionality. Again, thanks to the API for WordPress.org, upgrading WordPress could be as simple as a click of a button. The next item to incorporate into WordPress is the theme repository.
\nAlthough no definitive proof showcases the theme repository being integrated into the WordPress back end, I feel that it is only natural to incorporate it much like the plugin repository. What I say here is speculative, but based on the discussions that I have read, the plan is to allow users to browse around the theme repository and if they come across a theme they like, you’ll be able to click an install button which will unpack the theme automatically leaving only the step of activating the theme. I’ve mentioned this idea to others and they bring up the subject of theme upgrades. Because themes can be edited with the addition or subtraction of functions, I don’t believe upgrading themes will be as user friendly as upgrading plugins. However, unless a theme author completely revamps a theme, I don’t see the need to have an upgrade theme feature added to WordPress. Instead, the theme author should update the theme, change the version number and then, the theme repository API should notify the end user within the WordPress administration panel that a new version of their theme is available. A link within the message would direct the user to that themes entry within the repository from which they could read the change log. It would then be up to the end user on whether they want to apply the updates or not.
\nBased on my experience in dealing with WordPress end users, the three most difficult tasks when operating a WordPress powered site is upgrading WordPress, browsing and then installing themes, and last but not least, installing or upgrading plugins. Thanks to the hard work of the WordPress developers and associated volunteers, the API has provided us with the opportunity to use a piece of software where the three most difficult tasks to perform when using WordPress are practically automated. At the click of a button, you’ll be able to install a plugin, upgrade a plugin, upgrade to a new version of WordPress or install a theme. I may be wrong, but WordPress may be the first publishing system to provide this type of functionality to its user base.
\nI’ve had this feeling for quite a long time that WordPress was eventually going to provide these features as a means of making it as easy as possible to keep everything up to date. I suppose I may have a WordPress instinct built into me? At any rate, this is the road that the development team has decided to travel and I am happy to be part of the ride.
\nAre you looking forward to these three mundane tasks (possibly) being turned into simple mouse clicks?
";}}s:7:"channel";a:5:{s:5:"title";s:16:"WordPress Planet";s:4:"link";s:28:"http://planet.wordpress.org/";s:8:"language";s:2:"en";s:11:"description";s:47:"WordPress Planet - http://planet.wordpress.org/";s:7:"tagline";s:47:"WordPress Planet - http://planet.wordpress.org/";}s:9:"textinput";a:0:{}s:5:"image";a:0:{}s:9:"feed_type";s:3:"RSS";s:12:"feed_version";s:3:"2.0";s:5:"stack";a:0:{}s:9:"inchannel";b:0;s:6:"initem";b:0;s:9:"incontent";b:0;s:11:"intextinput";b:0;s:7:"inimage";b:0;s:13:"current_field";s:0:"";s:17:"current_namespace";b:0;s:19:"_CONTENT_CONSTRUCTS";a:6:{i:0;s:7:"content";i:1;s:7:"summary";i:2;s:4:"info";i:3;s:5:"title";i:4;s:7:"tagline";i:5;s:9:"copyright";}s:4:"etag";s:26:""37713-48d90b8e-1174596"\r\n";s:13:"last_modified";s:31:"Tue, 23 Sep 2008 15:30:22 GMT\r\n";}', 'no') ; INSERT INTO `wp_options` VALUES (92, 0, 'rss_867bd5c64f85878d03a060509cd2f92c_ts', '1222184414', 'no') ; INSERT INTO `wp_options` VALUES (93, 0, 'rss_a5420c83891a9c88ad2a4f04584a5efc', 'O:9:"MagpieRSS":19:{s:6:"parser";i:0;s:12:"current_item";a:0:{}s:5:"items";a:15:{i:0;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:33:"uberdose on "All in One SEO Pack"";s:4:"link";s:65:"http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/all-in-one-seo-pack/#post-753";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Fri, 30 Mar 2007 20:08:18 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:8:"uberdose";}s:4:"guid";s:40:"753@http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/";s:11:"description";s:92:"Automatically optimizes your Wordpress blog for Search Engines (Search Engine Optimization).";s:7:"summary";s:92:"Automatically optimizes your Wordpress blog for Search Engines (Search Engine Optimization).";}i:1;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:17:"matt on "Akismet"";s:4:"link";s:52:"http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/akismet/#post-15";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Fri, 09 Mar 2007 22:11:30 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:4:"matt";}s:4:"guid";s:39:"15@http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/";s:11:"description";s:98:"Akismet checks your comments against the Akismet web service to see if they look like spam or not.";s:7:"summary";s:98:"Akismet checks your comments against the Akismet web service to see if they look like spam or not.";}i:2;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:30:"arnee on "Google XML Sitemaps"";s:4:"link";s:70:"http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/google-sitemap-generator/#post-132";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Fri, 09 Mar 2007 22:31:32 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:5:"arnee";}s:4:"guid";s:40:"132@http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/";s:11:"description";s:87:"This plugin will create a Google sitemaps compliant XML-Sitemap of your WordPress blog.";s:7:"summary";s:87:"This plugin will create a Google sitemaps compliant XML-Sitemap of your WordPress blog.";}i:3;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:44:"keithdsouza on "Wordpress Automatic upgrade"";s:4:"link";s:74:"http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/wordpress-automatic-upgrade/#post-2560";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Sat, 27 Oct 2007 20:55:05 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:11:"keithdsouza";}s:4:"guid";s:41:"2560@http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/";s:11:"description";s:112:"Wordpress automatic upgrade allows a user to automatically upgrade the wordpress installation to the latest one.";s:7:"summary";s:112:"Wordpress automatic upgrade allows a user to automatically upgrade the wordpress installation to the latest one.";}i:4;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:36:"olivers on "cformsII - contact form"";s:4:"link";s:52:"http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/cforms/#post-925";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Mon, 09 Apr 2007 22:12:26 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:7:"olivers";}s:4:"guid";s:40:"925@http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/";s:11:"description";s:119:"cforms II is the most customizable, flexible & powerful ajax supporting contact form plugin (& comment form)!";s:7:"summary";s:119:"cforms II is the most customizable, flexible & powerful ajax supporting contact form plugin (& comment form)!";}i:5;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:33:"RobMarsh on "Post-Plugin Library"";s:4:"link";s:66:"http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/post-plugin-library/#post-4893";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Wed, 19 Mar 2008 10:33:16 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:8:"RobMarsh";}s:4:"guid";s:41:"4893@http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/";s:11:"description";s:105:"The shared code library for Similar posts, Recent Posts, Random Posts, Popular Posts and Recent Comments.";s:7:"summary";s:105:"The shared code library for Similar posts, Recent Posts, Random Posts, Popular Posts and Recent Comments.";}i:6;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:29:"alexrabe on "NextGEN Gallery"";s:4:"link";s:62:"http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/nextgen-gallery/#post-1169";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Mon, 23 Apr 2007 20:08:06 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:8:"alexrabe";}s:4:"guid";s:41:"1169@http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/";s:11:"description";s:102:"NextGEN Gallery is a full integrated Image Gallery plugin for WordPress with a Flash slideshow option.";s:7:"summary";s:102:"NextGEN Gallery is a full integrated Image Gallery plugin for WordPress with a Flash slideshow option.";}i:7;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:29:"andy on "WordPress.com Stats"";s:4:"link";s:52:"http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/stats/#post-1355";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Sun, 06 May 2007 02:15:03 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:4:"andy";}s:4:"guid";s:41:"1355@http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/";s:11:"description";s:119:"You can have simple, concise stats with no additional load on your server by plugging into WordPress.com\'s stat system.";s:7:"summary";s:119:"You can have simple, concise stats with no additional load on your server by plugging into WordPress.com\'s stat system.";}i:8;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:30:"joetan on "Flickr Photo Album"";s:4:"link";s:60:"http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/tantan-flickr/#post-6300";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Wed, 16 Jul 2008 14:13:57 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:6:"joetan";}s:4:"guid";s:41:"6300@http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/";s:11:"description";s:131:"This Flickr plugin for WordPress will allow you to pull in your Flickr photosets and display them as albums on your WordPress site.";s:7:"summary";s:131:"This Flickr plugin for WordPress will allow you to pull in your Flickr photosets and display them as albums on your WordPress site.";}i:9;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:28:"ringmaster on "WP-DB-Backup"";s:4:"link";s:58:"http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/wp-db-backup/#post-472";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Sat, 17 Mar 2007 04:41:26 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:10:"ringmaster";}s:4:"guid";s:40:"472@http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/";s:11:"description";s:44:"On-demand backup of your WordPress database.";s:7:"summary";s:44:"On-demand backup of your WordPress database.";}i:10;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:37:"cavemonkey50 on "Google Analyticator"";s:4:"link";s:65:"http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/google-analyticator/#post-130";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Fri, 09 Mar 2007 22:31:18 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:12:"cavemonkey50";}s:4:"guid";s:40:"130@http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/";s:11:"description";s:62:"Adds the necessary JavaScript code to enable Google Analytics.";s:7:"summary";s:62:"Adds the necessary JavaScript code to enable Google Analytics.";}i:11;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:32:"takayukister on "Contact Form 7"";s:4:"link";s:61:"http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/contact-form-7/#post-2141";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Thu, 02 Aug 2007 12:45:03 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:12:"takayukister";}s:4:"guid";s:41:"2141@http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/";s:11:"description";s:54:"Just another contact form plugin. Simple but flexible.";s:7:"summary";s:54:"Just another contact form plugin. Simple but flexible.";}i:12;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:27:"donncha on "WP Super Cache"";s:4:"link";s:61:"http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/wp-super-cache/#post-2572";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Mon, 05 Nov 2007 11:40:04 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:7:"donncha";}s:4:"guid";s:41:"2572@http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/";s:11:"description";s:73:"A very fast caching engine for WordPress that produces static html files.";s:7:"summary";s:73:"A very fast caching engine for WordPress that produces static html files.";}i:13;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:48:"Dagon Design on "Dagon Design Sitemap Generator"";s:4:"link";s:64:"http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/sitemap-generator/#post-5403";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Sun, 27 Apr 2008 18:52:10 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:12:"Dagon Design";}s:4:"guid";s:41:"5403@http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/";s:11:"description";s:79:"A highly customizable sitemap generator plugin for your WordPress powered site.";s:7:"summary";s:79:"A highly customizable sitemap generator plugin for your WordPress powered site.";}i:14;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:23:"johnny5 on "HeadSpace2"";s:4:"link";s:57:"http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/headspace2/#post-2255";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Fri, 07 Sep 2007 05:45:11 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:7:"johnny5";}s:4:"guid";s:41:"2255@http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/";s:11:"description";s:133:"A meta-data manager that controls almost every aspect of your site\'s meta-data, including full tag/keyword support. Perfect for SEO!";s:7:"summary";s:133:"A meta-data manager that controls almost every aspect of your site\'s meta-data, including full tag/keyword support. Perfect for SEO!";}}s:7:"channel";a:6:{s:5:"title";s:12:"Most Popular";s:4:"link";s:36:"http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/";s:11:"description";s:12:"Most Popular";s:8:"language";s:2:"en";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Tue, 23 Sep 2008 15:40:14 +0000";s:7:"tagline";s:12:"Most Popular";}s:9:"textinput";a:0:{}s:5:"image";a:0:{}s:9:"feed_type";s:3:"RSS";s:12:"feed_version";s:3:"2.0";s:5:"stack";a:0:{}s:9:"inchannel";b:0;s:6:"initem";b:0;s:9:"incontent";b:0;s:11:"intextinput";b:0;s:7:"inimage";b:0;s:13:"current_field";s:0:"";s:17:"current_namespace";b:0;s:19:"_CONTENT_CONSTRUCTS";a:6:{i:0;s:7:"content";i:1;s:7:"summary";i:2;s:4:"info";i:3;s:5:"title";i:4;s:7:"tagline";i:5;s:9:"copyright";}s:13:"last_modified";s:21:"2007-03-30 20:08:18\r\n";s:4:"etag";s:36:""a8894f3af502f182fd4e92b6405bade8"\r\n";}', 'no') ; INSERT INTO `wp_options` VALUES (94, 0, 'rss_a5420c83891a9c88ad2a4f04584a5efc_ts', '1222184413', 'no') ; INSERT INTO `wp_options` VALUES (95, 0, 'rss_57bc725ad6568758915363af670fd8bc', 'O:9:"MagpieRSS":19:{s:6:"parser";i:0;s:12:"current_item";a:0:{}s:5:"items";a:15:{i:0;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:28:"Kitahara on "WP Google Apps"";s:4:"link";s:61:"http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/wp-google-apps/#post-7061";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Wed, 17 Sep 2008 10:40:29 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:8:"Kitahara";}s:4:"guid";s:41:"7061@http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/";s:11:"description";s:67:"With this plugin you can manage of WordPress users via Google Apps.";s:7:"summary";s:67:"With this plugin you can manage of WordPress users via Google Apps.";}i:1;a:7:{s:5:"title";s:33:"xandertan on "World Clock Widget"";s:4:"link";s:65:"http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/world-clock-widget/#post-7060";s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Wed, 17 Sep 2008 04:38:19 +0000";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:9:"xandertan";}s:4:"guid";s:41:"7060@http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/";s:11:"description";s:114:"The world clock widget is a javascript clock. It can be easily set to display date and time of different timezone.";s:7:"summary";s:114:"The world clock widget is a javascript clock. 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# # Data contents of table `wp_posts` # INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (5, 1, '2008-11-27 14:13:09', '2008-11-27 20:13:09', '\r\nContact us for details and purchase. To read more, click here.
\r\n \r\n\r\nWe are a Proud Member of:
\r\n\nContact us for details and purchase. To read more, click here.
\n \n\nWe are a Proud Member of:
\n\r\n\r\n
\r\nEco Brooklyn Inc. is an alternative real estate development company offering services in GREEN CONSTRUCTION and REAL ESTATE.\r\n\r\nEco Brooklyn\'s Director is Gennaro Brooks-Church, a Licensed Real Estate Broker and Contractor. He can be reached at 347-244-3016. \r\n\r\nWe work in the following mediums:\r\nRecycled Flooring and Timber\r\nRadiant Heat\r\nFiberglass Windows\r\nFoam Insulation\r\nSolar Water Heating\r\nSolar Electricity\r\nGreen Roofs\r\nEnergy Audits\r\nHigh Efficiency Boilers\r\nHeat On Demand Boilers\r\nEcological Counters\r\nSoapstone Fireplaces\r\nArchitectural Plans\r\nJob Expediting\r\nJob Management\r\nReal Estate Sales and Rentals (Green Only)', 'Green Real Estate Development', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '8-revision-17', '', '', '2008-09-28 09:08:43', '2008-09-28 15:08:43', '', 8, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/8-revision-17/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (141, 1, '2008-09-28 10:12:04', '2008-09-28 16:12:04', ' \n | \n\n
\n\n | ![]() \n \n West 181st. Street & University Ave., GML-104 \n Bronx, New York 10453 | \n
\r\n | \r\n\r\n
\r\n\r\n | ![]() \r\n \r\n West 181st. Street & University Ave., GML-104 \r\n Bronx, New York 10453 | \r\n
3 R Living | \r\n
Alive Structures | \r\n
American Clay | \r\n
angies list | \r\n
Asthma Free Zone School | \r\n
BEST PEX Radiant Heating,- Radiant Direct | \r\n
Bettencourt Collection | \r\n
Bettencourt Green Building Supplies | \r\n
BlueHost.Com - FTP | \r\n
BodyBalance Solutions for Healthy Living | \r\n
bonneville windows | \r\n
BP Certified Installer Program | \r\n
Brooklyn Botanic Garden | \r\n
Brooklyn Center for the Urban Environment | \r\n
Brooklyn Children\'s Museum | \r\n
Build It Green! NYC | Non-profit Low Cost Salvage | \r\n
Building Materials Reuse Association - | \r\n
BuildingGreen.com - Home | \r\n
CeleBriTay NYC | \r\n
Center for the Urban Environment | \r\n
Clean Air NY | \r\n
Common Fire Foundation | \r\n
Community Education Center | \r\n
Community Energy | \r\n
Community Environmental Center | \r\n
Commuter Link | \r\n
contractor rules | \r\n
Co-op America Business Network - | \r\n
Council on the Environment of New York City | \r\n
Cradle to Cradle MBDC | \r\n
Creative Commons Deed | \r\n
D.I.Y. Services | Northeast Radiant Technology, L.L.C. | \r\n
Demilec Foam spray isenine alternative | \r\n
DEMILEC | HEATLOK SOYA Spray Polyurethane Foam | \r\n
Doyle\'s Thornless Blackberry - Home Page | \r\n
Drosera, Native Plant Botany | \r\n
Durapalm | \r\n
Earthbound Farm | \r\n
East New York Farms! | \r\n
Eat Well Guide | \r\n
ECOBROKER : Home | \r\n
ECOBROWNSTONE: The Art of Brownstone Greenovation | \r\n
Ecoseekers | \r\n
Edible Brooklyn | \r\n
Electra bicycles | \r\n
Engineering Data | \r\n
Engrave-A-Crete | \r\n
Envirolutions | \r\n
Environ Biocomposites | \r\n
Evangeline Dennie, Architect, LEED AP | \r\n
Evelyn Productions | \r\n
FIBERFRAME™ fiberglass windows | \r\n
Fibertec - Fiberglass Windows and Doors Manufacturer | \r\n
Fifth Avenue Committee | \r\n
Foam Insulation - Spray Foam | \r\n
Foam It Green Polyurethane Spray Foam Kits - Seal and Insulate | \r\n
Foampower Home Page | \r\n
Gaia Institute | \r\n
GBCI: Green Building Certification Institute | \r\n
Girl Guides USA | \r\n
Go Green | \r\n
Gossypium The Ethical Eco-Cotton Store | \r\n
Gowanus Canal Conservancy | \r\n
Green Brooklyn | \r\n
Green Depot | \r\n
Green Depot: Green Building Supplies | \r\n
Green Edge | \r\n
green links | \r\n
Green Living Technologies | \r\n
green roof example | \r\n
green roof tax credits | \r\n
Green Spaces | \r\n
GreenBuildingsNY® | June 17-18, 2008 | Jacob K. Javits | \r\n
GreenBuildingTalk - Green Building Forums | \r\n
Greener Buildings - News on Green Buildings, | \r\n
greenGoat ::: resource management strategies | \r\n
GreenHome NYC | \r\n
GreenHomeNYC: We Help New York City\'s Buildings Go Green. | \r\n
GreenSpa NY | \r\n
Greg Barber Co. | \r\n
Grey Water Books, Ecological Design Information & Consulting | \r\n
HabitatMap | \r\n
hexapat green walkway | \r\n
Home Heating Systems - HeatingHelp.com | \r\n
home surplus | \r\n
Hydronic Comfort Heating - HydronicPros.com | \r\n
IceStone | \r\n
ICFA - Insulating Concrete Form Association | \r\n
Incentives in New York | \r\n
Inhabitat | \r\n
Iron & Steel Scrap in Metro New York on ThomasNet.com | \r\n
Kirei Board | \r\n
Kiwi Magazine | \r\n
League of Young Voters Education Fund | \r\n
LEED - USGBC: U.S. Green Building Council | \r\n
Low Impact Living | \r\n
Lower East Side Ecology Center | \r\n
Lumber Liquidators: Hardwood Flooring for Less! | \r\n
Magic Exterminating | \r\n
Metropolitan Waterfront Alliance | \r\n
Modern Way Lumber | \r\n
MOO.com | business card | \r\n
Motherplants | \r\n
Movers Not Shakers | \r\n
National Grid | \r\n
NCFI Polyurethanes | \r\n
New York Industrial Retention Network | \r\n
New York League of Conservation Voters | \r\n
NY broker web site | \r\n
NYC Department of Design and Construction | \r\n
NYSERDA | \r\n
NYSERDA - New York Energy Smart Loan Program | \r\n
Overheard in New York: The Voice of the City | \r\n
Paperstone | \r\n
Plyboo | \r\n
POLFOAM demilec distributor | \r\n
Power Naturally Web Site | \r\n
Pratt Institute | \r\n
Prospect Park | \r\n
Radiant Floor Design info | \r\n
radiant heat ThermoFin Information | \r\n
Reclaimed Home: Green Low Impact Housing Renovation of New York, Brooklyn, New Jersey | \r\n
recycled insulation | \r\n
Recycled Lumber, Plywood, & Flooring Buyers & Sellers | \r\n
Reddi-Wall, Inc. | \r\n
RePlayground | \r\n
Richlite | \r\n
Riverkeeper | \r\n
Rocket Mass Heaters | \r\n
Rolling Press | \r\n
Rooftop Gardening Source | \r\n
Scrapile | \r\n
Slow Food NYC | \r\n
Small Business Loans | \r\n
Solar 1 | \r\n
Solar One | \r\n
Solatube - The Miracle Skylight | \r\n
Soundproofing Products and Materials | \r\n
SoyThane Spray Urethane Foam | \r\n
SprayFoam.com- foam database | \r\n
Stewart/Stand | \r\n
Stone Barns Center for Food and Agriculture | \r\n
Structural Insulated Panel Association | \r\n
Sunmaxsolar.net | \r\n
SunPower - Smarter Solar | \r\n
Surface Environment | \r\n
Sustainable Business Network | \r\n
sustainableflatbush.org | \r\n
tankless water Takagi USA | \r\n
The Design Can | \r\n
Transportation Alternatives | \r\n
Treehugger | \r\n
TriState Bio Diesel | \r\n
UNILUX AG, Salmtal - Fenster und Türen | \r\n
USGBC New York Chapter | \r\n
Viessmann Manufacturing Company Inc. | \r\n
WE ADD UP | \r\n
Wearable Collections | \r\n
Your Solar Home - Renewable Energy Solutions | \r\n
3 R Living | \r\n
Alive Structures | \r\n
American Clay | \r\n
angies list | \r\n
Asthma Free Zone School | \r\n
BEST PEX Radiant Heating,- Radiant Direct | \r\n
Bettencourt Collection | \r\n
Bettencourt Green Building Supplies | \r\n
BlueHost.Com - FTP | \r\n
BodyBalance Solutions for Healthy Living | \r\n
bonneville windows | \r\n
BP Certified Installer Program | \r\n
Brooklyn Botanic Garden | \r\n
Brooklyn Center for the Urban Environment | \r\n
Brooklyn Children\'s Museum | \r\n
Build It Green! NYC | Non-profit Low Cost Salvage | \r\n
Building Materials Reuse Association - | \r\n
BuildingGreen.com - Home | \r\n
CeleBriTay NYC | \r\n
Center for the Urban Environment | \r\n
Clean Air NY | \r\n
Common Fire Foundation | \r\n
Community Education Center | \r\n
Community Energy | \r\n
Community Environmental Center | \r\n
Commuter Link | \r\n
contractor rules | \r\n
Co-op America Business Network - | \r\n
Council on the Environment of New York City | \r\n
Cradle to Cradle MBDC | \r\n
Creative Commons Deed | \r\n
D.I.Y. Services | Northeast Radiant Technology, L.L.C. | \r\n
Demilec Foam spray isenine alternative | \r\n
DEMILEC | HEATLOK SOYA Spray Polyurethane Foam | \r\n
Doyle\'s Thornless Blackberry - Home Page | \r\n
Drosera, Native Plant Botany | \r\n
Durapalm | \r\n
Earthbound Farm | \r\n
East New York Farms! | \r\n
Eat Well Guide | \r\n
ECOBROKER : Home | \r\n
ECOBROWNSTONE: The Art of Brownstone Greenovation | \r\n
Ecoseekers | \r\n
Edible Brooklyn | \r\n
Electra bicycles | \r\n
Engineering Data | \r\n
Engrave-A-Crete | \r\n
Envirolutions | \r\n
Environ Biocomposites | \r\n
Evangeline Dennie, Architect, LEED AP | \r\n
Evelyn Productions | \r\n
FIBERFRAME™ fiberglass windows | \r\n
Fibertec - Fiberglass Windows and Doors Manufacturer | \r\n
Fifth Avenue Committee | \r\n
Foam Insulation - Spray Foam | \r\n
Foam It Green Polyurethane Spray Foam Kits - Seal and Insulate | \r\n
Foampower Home Page | \r\n
Gaia Institute | \r\n
GBCI: Green Building Certification Institute | \r\n
Girl Guides USA | \r\n
Go Green | \r\n
Gossypium The Ethical Eco-Cotton Store | \r\n
Gowanus Canal Conservancy | \r\n
Green Brooklyn | \r\n
Green Depot | \r\n
Green Depot: Green Building Supplies | \r\n
Green Edge | \r\n
green links | \r\n
Green Living Technologies | \r\n
green roof example | \r\n
green roof tax credits | \r\n
Green Spaces | \r\n
GreenBuildingsNY® | June 17-18, 2008 | Jacob K. Javits | \r\n
GreenBuildingTalk - Green Building Forums | \r\n
Greener Buildings - News on Green Buildings, | \r\n
greenGoat ::: resource management strategies | \r\n
GreenHome NYC | \r\n
GreenHomeNYC: We Help New York City\'s Buildings Go Green. | \r\n
GreenSpa NY | \r\n
Greg Barber Co. | \r\n
Grey Water Books, Ecological Design Information & Consulting | \r\n
HabitatMap | \r\n
hexapat green walkway | \r\n
Home Heating Systems - HeatingHelp.com | \r\n
home surplus | \r\n
Hydronic Comfort Heating - HydronicPros.com | \r\n
IceStone | \r\n
ICFA - Insulating Concrete Form Association | \r\n
Incentives in New York | \r\n
Inhabitat | \r\n
Iron & Steel Scrap in Metro New York on ThomasNet.com | \r\n
Kirei Board | \r\n
Kiwi Magazine | \r\n
League of Young Voters Education Fund | \r\n
LEED - USGBC: U.S. Green Building Council | \r\n
Low Impact Living | \r\n
Lower East Side Ecology Center | \r\n
Lumber Liquidators: Hardwood Flooring for Less! | \r\n
Magic Exterminating | \r\n
Metropolitan Waterfront Alliance | \r\n
Modern Way Lumber | \r\n
MOO.com | business card | \r\n
Motherplants | \r\n
Movers Not Shakers | \r\n
National Grid | \r\n
NCFI Polyurethanes | \r\n
New York Industrial Retention Network | \r\n
New York League of Conservation Voters | \r\n
NY broker web site | \r\n
NYC Department of Design and Construction | \r\n
NYSERDA | \r\n
NYSERDA - New York Energy Smart Loan Program | \r\n
Overheard in New York: The Voice of the City | \r\n
Paperstone | \r\n
Plyboo | \r\n
POLFOAM demilec distributor | \r\n
Power Naturally Web Site | \r\n
Pratt Institute | \r\n
Prospect Park | \r\n
Radiant Floor Design info | \r\n
radiant heat ThermoFin Information | \r\n
Reclaimed Home: Green Low Impact Housing Renovation of New York, Brooklyn, New Jersey | \r\n
recycled insulation | \r\n
Recycled Lumber, Plywood, & Flooring Buyers & Sellers | \r\n
Reddi-Wall, Inc. | \r\n
RePlayground | \r\n
Richlite | \r\n
Riverkeeper | \r\n
Rocket Mass Heaters | \r\n
Rolling Press | \r\n
Rooftop Gardening Source | \r\n
Scrapile | \r\n
Slow Food NYC | \r\n
Small Business Loans | \r\n
Solar 1 | \r\n
Solar One | \r\n
Solatube - The Miracle Skylight | \r\n
Soundproofing Products and Materials | \r\n
SoyThane Spray Urethane Foam | \r\n
SprayFoam.com- foam database | \r\n
Stewart/Stand | \r\n
Stone Barns Center for Food and Agriculture | \r\n
Structural Insulated Panel Association | \r\n
Sunmaxsolar.net | \r\n
SunPower - Smarter Solar | \r\n
Surface Environment | \r\n
Sustainable Business Network | \r\n
sustainableflatbush.org | \r\n
tankless water Takagi USA | \r\n
The Design Can | \r\n
Transportation Alternatives | \r\n
Treehugger | \r\n
TriState Bio Diesel | \r\n
UNILUX AG, Salmtal - Fenster und Türen | \r\n
USGBC New York Chapter | \r\n
Viessmann Manufacturing Company Inc. | \r\n
WE ADD UP | \r\n
Wearable Collections | \r\n
Your Solar Home - Renewable Energy Solutions | \r\n
3 R Living | \r\n
Alive Structures | \r\n
American Clay | \r\n
angies list | \r\n
Asthma Free Zone School | \r\n
BEST PEX Radiant Heating,- Radiant Direct | \r\n
Bettencourt Collection | \r\n
Bettencourt Green Building Supplies | \r\n
BlueHost.Com - FTP | \r\n
BodyBalance Solutions for Healthy Living | \r\n
bonneville windows | \r\n
BP Certified Installer Program | \r\n
Brooklyn Botanic Garden | \r\n
Brooklyn Center for the Urban Environment | \r\n
Brooklyn Children\'s Museum | \r\n
Build It Green! NYC | Non-profit Low Cost Salvage | \r\n
Building Materials Reuse Association - | \r\n
BuildingGreen.com - Home | \r\n
CeleBriTay NYC | \r\n
Center for the Urban Environment | \r\n
Clean Air NY | \r\n
Common Fire Foundation | \r\n
Community Education Center | \r\n
Community Energy | \r\n
Community Environmental Center | \r\n
Commuter Link | \r\n
contractor rules | \r\n
Co-op America Business Network - | \r\n
Council on the Environment of New York City | \r\n
Cradle to Cradle MBDC | \r\n
Creative Commons Deed | \r\n
D.I.Y. Services | Northeast Radiant Technology, L.L.C. | \r\n
Demilec Foam spray isenine alternative | \r\n
DEMILEC | HEATLOK SOYA Spray Polyurethane Foam | \r\n
Doyle\'s Thornless Blackberry - Home Page | \r\n
Drosera, Native Plant Botany | \r\n
Durapalm | \r\n
Earthbound Farm | \r\n
East New York Farms! | \r\n
Eat Well Guide | \r\n
ECOBROKER : Home | \r\n
ECOBROWNSTONE: The Art of Brownstone Greenovation | \r\n
Ecoseekers | \r\n
Edible Brooklyn | \r\n
Electra bicycles | \r\n
Engineering Data | \r\n
Engrave-A-Crete | \r\n
Envirolutions | \r\n
Environ Biocomposites | \r\n
Evangeline Dennie, Architect, LEED AP | \r\n
Evelyn Productions | \r\n
FIBERFRAME™ fiberglass windows | \r\n
Fibertec - Fiberglass Windows and Doors Manufacturer | \r\n
Fifth Avenue Committee | \r\n
Foam Insulation - Spray Foam | \r\n
Foam It Green Polyurethane Spray Foam Kits - Seal and Insulate | \r\n
Foampower Home Page | \r\n
Gaia Institute | \r\n
GBCI: Green Building Certification Institute | \r\n
Girl Guides USA | \r\n
Go Green | \r\n
Gossypium The Ethical Eco-Cotton Store | \r\n
Gowanus Canal Conservancy | \r\n
Green Brooklyn | \r\n
Green Depot | \r\n
Green Depot: Green Building Supplies | \r\n
Green Edge | \r\n
green links | \r\n
Green Living Technologies | \r\n
green roof example | \r\n
green roof tax credits | \r\n
Green Spaces | \r\n
GreenBuildingsNY® | June 17-18, 2008 | Jacob K. Javits | \r\n
GreenBuildingTalk - Green Building Forums | \r\n
Greener Buildings - News on Green Buildings, | \r\n
greenGoat ::: resource management strategies | \r\n
GreenHome NYC | \r\n
GreenHomeNYC: We Help New York City\'s Buildings Go Green. | \r\n
GreenSpa NY | \r\n
Greg Barber Co. | \r\n
Grey Water Books, Ecological Design Information & Consulting | \r\n
HabitatMap | \r\n
hexapat green walkway | \r\n
Home Heating Systems - HeatingHelp.com | \r\n
home surplus | \r\n
Hydronic Comfort Heating - HydronicPros.com | \r\n
IceStone | \r\n
ICFA - Insulating Concrete Form Association | \r\n
Incentives in New York | \r\n
Inhabitat | \r\n
Iron & Steel Scrap in Metro New York on ThomasNet.com | \r\n
Kirei Board | \r\n
Kiwi Magazine | \r\n
League of Young Voters Education Fund | \r\n
LEED - USGBC: U.S. Green Building Council | \r\n
Low Impact Living | \r\n
Lower East Side Ecology Center | \r\n
Lumber Liquidators: Hardwood Flooring for Less! | \r\n
Magic Exterminating | \r\n
Metropolitan Waterfront Alliance | \r\n
Modern Way Lumber | \r\n
MOO.com | business card | \r\n
Motherplants | \r\n
Movers Not Shakers | \r\n
National Grid | \r\n
NCFI Polyurethanes | \r\n
New York Industrial Retention Network | \r\n
New York League of Conservation Voters | \r\n
NY broker web site | \r\n
NYC Department of Design and Construction | \r\n
NYSERDA | \r\n
NYSERDA - New York Energy Smart Loan Program | \r\n
Overheard in New York: The Voice of the City | \r\n
Paperstone | \r\n
Plyboo | \r\n
POLFOAM demilec distributor | \r\n
Power Naturally Web Site | \r\n
Pratt Institute | \r\n
Prospect Park | \r\n
Radiant Floor Design info | \r\n
radiant heat ThermoFin Information | \r\n
Reclaimed Home: Green Low Impact Housing Renovation of New York, Brooklyn, New Jersey | \r\n
recycled insulation | \r\n
Recycled Lumber, Plywood, & Flooring Buyers & Sellers | \r\n
Reddi-Wall, Inc. | \r\n
RePlayground | \r\n
Richlite | \r\n
Riverkeeper | \r\n
Rocket Mass Heaters | \r\n
Rolling Press | \r\n
Rooftop Gardening Source | \r\n
Scrapile | \r\n
Slow Food NYC | \r\n
Small Business Loans | \r\n
Solar 1 | \r\n
Solar One | \r\n
Solatube - The Miracle Skylight | \r\n
Soundproofing Products and Materials | \r\n
SoyThane Spray Urethane Foam | \r\n
SprayFoam.com- foam database | \r\n
Stewart/Stand | \r\n
Stone Barns Center for Food and Agriculture | \r\n
Structural Insulated Panel Association | \r\n
Sunmaxsolar.net | \r\n
SunPower - Smarter Solar | \r\n
Surface Environment | \r\n
Sustainable Business Network | \r\n
sustainableflatbush.org | \r\n
tankless water Takagi USA | \r\n
The Design Can | \r\n
Transportation Alternatives | \r\n
Treehugger | \r\n
TriState Bio Diesel | \r\n
UNILUX AG, Salmtal - Fenster und Türen | \r\n
USGBC New York Chapter | \r\n
Viessmann Manufacturing Company Inc. | \r\n
WE ADD UP | \r\n
Wearable Collections | \r\n
Your Solar Home - Renewable Energy Solutions | \r\n
3 R Living | \r\n
Alive Structures | \r\n
American Clay | \r\n
angies list | \r\n
Asthma Free Zone School | \r\n
BEST PEX Radiant Heating,- Radiant Direct | \r\n
Bettencourt Collection | \r\n
Bettencourt Green Building Supplies | \r\n
BlueHost.Com - FTP | \r\n
BodyBalance Solutions for Healthy Living | \r\n
bonneville windows | \r\n
BP Certified Installer Program | \r\n
Brooklyn Botanic Garden | \r\n
Brooklyn Center for the Urban Environment | \r\n
Brooklyn Children\'s Museum | \r\n
Build It Green! NYC | Non-profit Low Cost Salvage | \r\n
Building Materials Reuse Association - | \r\n
BuildingGreen.com - Home | \r\n
CeleBriTay NYC | \r\n
Center for the Urban Environment | \r\n
Clean Air NY | \r\n
Common Fire Foundation | \r\n
Community Education Center | \r\n
Community Energy | \r\n
Community Environmental Center | \r\n
Commuter Link | \r\n
contractor rules | \r\n
Co-op America Business Network - | \r\n
Council on the Environment of New York City | \r\n
Cradle to Cradle MBDC | \r\n
Creative Commons Deed | \r\n
D.I.Y. Services | Northeast Radiant Technology, L.L.C. | \r\n
Demilec Foam spray isenine alternative | \r\n
DEMILEC | HEATLOK SOYA Spray Polyurethane Foam | \r\n
Doyle\'s Thornless Blackberry - Home Page | \r\n
Drosera, Native Plant Botany | \r\n
Durapalm | \r\n
Earthbound Farm | \r\n
East New York Farms! | \r\n
Eat Well Guide | \r\n
ECOBROKER : Home | \r\n
ECOBROWNSTONE: The Art of Brownstone Greenovation | \r\n
Ecoseekers | \r\n
Edible Brooklyn | \r\n
Electra bicycles | \r\n
Engineering Data | \r\n
Engrave-A-Crete | \r\n
Envirolutions | \r\n
Environ Biocomposites | \r\n
Evangeline Dennie, Architect, LEED AP | \r\n
Evelyn Productions | \r\n
FIBERFRAME™ fiberglass windows | \r\n
Fibertec - Fiberglass Windows and Doors Manufacturer | \r\n
Fifth Avenue Committee | \r\n
Foam Insulation - Spray Foam | \r\n
Foam It Green Polyurethane Spray Foam Kits - Seal and Insulate | \r\n
Foampower Home Page | \r\n
Gaia Institute | \r\n
GBCI: Green Building Certification Institute | \r\n
Girl Guides USA | \r\n
Go Green | \r\n
Gossypium The Ethical Eco-Cotton Store | \r\n
Gowanus Canal Conservancy | \r\n
Green Brooklyn | \r\n
Green Depot | \r\n
Green Depot: Green Building Supplies | \r\n
Green Edge | \r\n
green links | \r\n
Green Living Technologies | \r\n
green roof example | \r\n
green roof tax credits | \r\n
Green Spaces | \r\n
GreenBuildingsNY® | June 17-18, 2008 | Jacob K. Javits | \r\n
GreenBuildingTalk - Green Building Forums | \r\n
Greener Buildings - News on Green Buildings, | \r\n
greenGoat ::: resource management strategies | \r\n
GreenHome NYC | \r\n
GreenHomeNYC: We Help New York City\'s Buildings Go Green. | \r\n
GreenSpa NY | \r\n
Greg Barber Co. | \r\n
Grey Water Books, Ecological Design Information & Consulting | \r\n
HabitatMap | \r\n
hexapat green walkway | \r\n
Home Heating Systems - HeatingHelp.com | \r\n
home surplus | \r\n
Hydronic Comfort Heating - HydronicPros.com | \r\n
IceStone | \r\n
ICFA - Insulating Concrete Form Association | \r\n
Incentives in New York | \r\n
Inhabitat | \r\n
Iron & Steel Scrap in Metro New York on ThomasNet.com | \r\n
Kirei Board | \r\n
Kiwi Magazine | \r\n
League of Young Voters Education Fund | \r\n
LEED - USGBC: U.S. Green Building Council | \r\n
Low Impact Living | \r\n
Lower East Side Ecology Center | \r\n
Lumber Liquidators: Hardwood Flooring for Less! | \r\n
Magic Exterminating | \r\n
Metropolitan Waterfront Alliance | \r\n
Modern Way Lumber | \r\n
MOO.com | business card | \r\n
Motherplants | \r\n
Movers Not Shakers | \r\n
National Grid | \r\n
NCFI Polyurethanes | \r\n
New York Industrial Retention Network | \r\n
New York League of Conservation Voters | \r\n
NY broker web site | \r\n
NYC Department of Design and Construction | \r\n
NYSERDA | \r\n
NYSERDA - New York Energy Smart Loan Program | \r\n
Overheard in New York: The Voice of the City | \r\n
Paperstone | \r\n
Plyboo | \r\n
POLFOAM demilec distributor | \r\n
Power Naturally Web Site | \r\n
Pratt Institute | \r\n
Prospect Park | \r\n
Radiant Floor Design info | \r\n
radiant heat ThermoFin Information | \r\n
Reclaimed Home: Green Low Impact Housing Renovation of New York, Brooklyn, New Jersey | \r\n
recycled insulation | \r\n
Recycled Lumber, Plywood, & Flooring Buyers & Sellers | \r\n
Reddi-Wall, Inc. | \r\n
RePlayground | \r\n
Richlite | \r\n
Riverkeeper | \r\n
Rocket Mass Heaters | \r\n
Rolling Press | \r\n
Rooftop Gardening Source | \r\n
Scrapile | \r\n
Slow Food NYC | \r\n
Small Business Loans | \r\n
Solar 1 | \r\n
Solar One | \r\n
Solatube - The Miracle Skylight | \r\n
Soundproofing Products and Materials | \r\n
SoyThane Spray Urethane Foam | \r\n
SprayFoam.com- foam database | \r\n
Stewart/Stand | \r\n
Stone Barns Center for Food and Agriculture | \r\n
Structural Insulated Panel Association | \r\n
Sunmaxsolar.net | \r\n
SunPower - Smarter Solar | \r\n
Surface Environment | \r\n
Sustainable Business Network | \r\n
sustainableflatbush.org | \r\n
tankless water Takagi USA | \r\n
The Design Can | \r\n
Transportation Alternatives | \r\n
Treehugger | \r\n
TriState Bio Diesel | \r\n
UNILUX AG, Salmtal - Fenster und Türen | \r\n
USGBC New York Chapter | \r\n
Viessmann Manufacturing Company Inc. | \r\n
WE ADD UP | \r\n
Wearable Collections | \r\n
Your Solar Home - Renewable Energy Solutions | \r\n
3 R Living | \r\n
Alive Structures | \r\n
American Clay | \r\n
angies list | \r\n
Asthma Free Zone School | \r\n
BEST PEX Radiant Heating,- Radiant Direct | \r\n
Bettencourt Collection | \r\n
Bettencourt Green Building Supplies | \r\n
BlueHost.Com - FTP | \r\n
BodyBalance Solutions for Healthy Living | \r\n
bonneville windows | \r\n
BP Certified Installer Program | \r\n
Brooklyn Botanic Garden | \r\n
Brooklyn Center for the Urban Environment | \r\n
Brooklyn Children\'s Museum | \r\n
Build It Green! NYC | Non-profit Low Cost Salvage | \r\n
Building Materials Reuse Association - | \r\n
BuildingGreen.com - Home | \r\n
CeleBriTay NYC | \r\n
Center for the Urban Environment | \r\n
Clean Air NY | \r\n
Common Fire Foundation | \r\n
Community Education Center | \r\n
Community Energy | \r\n
Community Environmental Center | \r\n
Commuter Link | \r\n
contractor rules | \r\n
Co-op America Business Network - | \r\n
Council on the Environment of New York City | \r\n
Cradle to Cradle MBDC | \r\n
Creative Commons Deed | \r\n
D.I.Y. Services | Northeast Radiant Technology, L.L.C. | \r\n
Demilec Foam spray isenine alternative | \r\n
DEMILEC | HEATLOK SOYA Spray Polyurethane Foam | \r\n
Doyle\'s Thornless Blackberry - Home Page | \r\n
Drosera, Native Plant Botany | \r\n
Durapalm | \r\n
Earthbound Farm | \r\n
East New York Farms! | \r\n
Eat Well Guide | \r\n
ECOBROKER : Home | \r\n
ECOBROWNSTONE: The Art of Brownstone Greenovation | \r\n
Ecoseekers | \r\n
Edible Brooklyn | \r\n
Electra bicycles | \r\n
Engineering Data | \r\n
Engrave-A-Crete | \r\n
Envirolutions | \r\n
Environ Biocomposites | \r\n
Evangeline Dennie, Architect, LEED AP | \r\n
Evelyn Productions | \r\n
FIBERFRAME™ fiberglass windows | \r\n
Fibertec - Fiberglass Windows and Doors Manufacturer | \r\n
Fifth Avenue Committee | \r\n
Foam Insulation - Spray Foam | \r\n
Foam It Green Polyurethane Spray Foam Kits - Seal and Insulate | \r\n
Foampower Home Page | \r\n
Gaia Institute | \r\n
GBCI: Green Building Certification Institute | \r\n
Girl Guides USA | \r\n
Go Green | \r\n
Gossypium The Ethical Eco-Cotton Store | \r\n
Gowanus Canal Conservancy | \r\n
Green Brooklyn | \r\n
Green Depot | \r\n
Green Depot: Green Building Supplies | \r\n
Green Edge | \r\n
green links | \r\n
Green Living Technologies | \r\n
green roof example | \r\n
green roof tax credits | \r\n
Green Spaces | \r\n
GreenBuildingsNY® | June 17-18, 2008 | Jacob K. Javits | \r\n
GreenBuildingTalk - Green Building Forums | \r\n
Greener Buildings - News on Green Buildings, | \r\n
greenGoat ::: resource management strategies | \r\n
GreenHome NYC | \r\n
GreenHomeNYC: We Help New York City\'s Buildings Go Green. | \r\n
GreenSpa NY | \r\n
Greg Barber Co. | \r\n
Grey Water Books, Ecological Design Information & Consulting | \r\n
HabitatMap | \r\n
hexapat green walkway | \r\n
Home Heating Systems - HeatingHelp.com | \r\n
home surplus | \r\n
Hydronic Comfort Heating - HydronicPros.com | \r\n
IceStone | \r\n
ICFA - Insulating Concrete Form Association | \r\n
Incentives in New York | \r\n
Inhabitat | \r\n
Iron & Steel Scrap in Metro New York on ThomasNet.com | \r\n
Kirei Board | \r\n
Kiwi Magazine | \r\n
League of Young Voters Education Fund | \r\n
LEED - USGBC: U.S. Green Building Council | \r\n
Low Impact Living | \r\n
Lower East Side Ecology Center | \r\n
Lumber Liquidators: Hardwood Flooring for Less! | \r\n
Magic Exterminating | \r\n
Metropolitan Waterfront Alliance | \r\n
Modern Way Lumber | \r\n
MOO.com | business card | \r\n
Motherplants | \r\n
Movers Not Shakers | \r\n
National Grid | \r\n
NCFI Polyurethanes | \r\n
New York Industrial Retention Network | \r\n
New York League of Conservation Voters | \r\n
NY broker web site | \r\n
NYC Department of Design and Construction | \r\n
NYSERDA | \r\n
NYSERDA - New York Energy Smart Loan Program | \r\n
Overheard in New York: The Voice of the City | \r\n
Paperstone | \r\n
Plyboo | \r\n
POLFOAM demilec distributor | \r\n
Power Naturally Web Site | \r\n
Pratt Institute | \r\n
Prospect Park | \r\n
Radiant Floor Design info | \r\n
radiant heat ThermoFin Information | \r\n
Reclaimed Home: Green Low Impact Housing Renovation of New York, Brooklyn, New Jersey | \r\n
recycled insulation | \r\n
Recycled Lumber, Plywood, & Flooring Buyers & Sellers | \r\n
Reddi-Wall, Inc. | \r\n
RePlayground | \r\n
Richlite | \r\n
Riverkeeper | \r\n
Rocket Mass Heaters | \r\n
Rolling Press | \r\n
Rooftop Gardening Source | \r\n
Scrapile | \r\n
Slow Food NYC | \r\n
Small Business Loans | \r\n
Solar 1 | \r\n
Solar One | \r\n
Solatube - The Miracle Skylight | \r\n
Soundproofing Products and Materials | \r\n
SoyThane Spray Urethane Foam | \r\n
SprayFoam.com- foam database | \r\n
Stewart/Stand | \r\n
Stone Barns Center for Food and Agriculture | \r\n
Structural Insulated Panel Association | \r\n
Sunmaxsolar.net | \r\n
SunPower - Smarter Solar | \r\n
Surface Environment | \r\n
Sustainable Business Network | \r\n
sustainableflatbush.org | \r\n
tankless water Takagi USA | \r\n
The Design Can | \r\n
Transportation Alternatives | \r\n
Treehugger | \r\n
TriState Bio Diesel | \r\n
UNILUX AG, Salmtal - Fenster und Türen | \r\n
USGBC New York Chapter | \r\n
Viessmann Manufacturing Company Inc. | \r\n
WE ADD UP | \r\n
Wearable Collections | \r\n
Your Solar Home - Renewable Energy Solutions | \r\nCourses &\r\n\r\nTraining Programs: \r\n \r\n *Solar Energy\r\nInternational (SEI) – www.solarenergy.org, (970)\r\n963-8855,\r\nMulti-week, hands on \r\n \r\n *Florida Solar Energy Center (FSEC) - www.fsec.ucf.edu/en,\r\n(321)\r\n638-1000 \r\n *Midwest Renewable Energy Association\r\n(MREA), www.the-mrea.org,\r\n(715) 592\r\n6595 \r\n\r\n *State University of New\r\nYork at Farmingdale, http://info.lu.farmingdale.edu/depts/met/solar/,\r\n(631) 420 2000 \r\n *North Carolina Solar Center - www.ncsc.ncsu.edu,\r\n(919) 515.5666 \r\n *State University of New\r\nYork at Delhi, https://secure.delhi.edu/academics/techdivision/photovoltaics/photovoltaics.htm,\r\n \r\n\r\n *SunPirate, Inc., http://www.sunpiratesolar.com/Training.htm,\r\n \r\n *Lane Community College, Eugene, OR, http://www.lanecc.edu/, \r\n *Great Lakes Renewable Energy\r\nAssoc., http://www.glrea.org/,\r\n \r\n\r\n Solar Living\r\nInstitute - www.solarliving.org,\r\n(707) 744 2017, Partial- &\r\nFull-week, hands on \r\n List of training programs (IREC): http://www.irecusa.org/index.php?id=91 \r\nDOE list of courses, jobs, etc.: http://www1.eere.energy.gov/education/ \r\n \r\nSol “Solar-on-Line” - www.solenergy.org \r\n\r\n Pacific Energy Center – www.pge.com/pec \r\n San Juan College, Farmington, NM http://www.sanjuancollege.edu/pages/4003.asp\r\n(800) 241 6327 \r\nAppalachian State University Dept of Technology, Boone, NC, www.tec.appstate.edu/at/app_tech.html\r\n(828) 262-3110 \r\n Sonoma State University – www.sonoma.edu/ensp \r\n\r\nDiablo Valley College, San Ramon, CA, www.dvc.edu, (925) 685-1230x522,\r\nAlt. Energy \r\nMercy Hot Springs, Firebaugh, CA, www.merceyhotsprings.com,\r\n(209) 826 3388 \r\nDe Anza College Energy Management Technology, environmentalstudies.deanza.edu/es/,\r\nCupertino,\r\nCA \r\nOnGrid Solar presentations on Financial Analysis & Payback: www.ongrid.net/classes.html \r\n\r\n Solar Decathlon (University teams) http://www.solardecathlon.org/ \r\n *Indicates this\r\nschool is accredited by the Institute for Sustainable Power, http://www.irecusa.org/index.php?id=91,\r\n(303) 683 4748 \r\n \r\n | \r\n \r\n\r\n
Organizations: \r\n \r\n American\r\nSolar Energy Society (ASES) - www.ases.org \r\n \r\n NorCal\r\nSolar Association (NCSEA) - www.norcalsolar.org, (530) 852\r\n0354 \r\n California Solar Energy Industries\r\nAssociation (CalSEIA) - www.calseia.org \r\n\r\nSolar Living Institute, www.solarliving.org, (707) 744\r\n2017 \r\n NABCEP-North American Board Certified\r\nEnergy Practitioners www.nabcep.org (730) 344\r\n0341 \r\nSolar Electric Power Association (SEPA) - www.solarelectricpower.org \r\nSolar Energy Industries Association (SEIA) - www.seia.org \r\n Prometheus Institute for Sustainable\r\nDevelopment - www.prometheus.org \r\n\r\nCalifornia Solar Center, Solar Forum & PV Alliance - www.californiasolarcenter.org \r\n International Solar Energy Society (ISES)\r\n- www.ises.org \r\n | \r\n
Conferences\r\n& Events: \r\n \r\n Solar Forums,\r\nCalifornia Solar Center\r\n& PV Alliance - www.californiasolarcenter.org \r\n \r\n ASES\r\n“Solar 2008”, May 3-8, 2008, San Diego, CA, www.ases.org, www.ases.org/solar2008 \r\n\r\n “33rd IEEE PV Specialists Conference”,\r\nMay 11-16, 2008, San Diego, CA, www.33pvsc.org \r\n “Intersolar 2008”, July 15-17, 2008, San Francisco, CA, www.intersolar.us, \r\n “SolFest”, mid-late August 2008,\r\nHopland, CA, www.solfest.org,\r\n(707)\r\n744 2017 \r\n\r\n “Solar Energy Week”, San Diego, CA, late\r\nSeptember, www.sdreo.org \r\n “Solar Power Canada”, Sept 16-18, 2008, Toronto, Canada, www.SolarCanadaExpo.com,\r\n \r\n ASES National Solar Home Tour, nationwide,\r\nearly Oct, www.ases.org,\r\n www.norcalsolar.org \r\n\r\n“Solar Power 2008”, Oct 13-16, 2008, San Diego, CA, www.SolarPowerConference.com \r\n Current Event\r\nListings: RenewableEnergyAccess.com/rea/events/home \r\n NREL/NCPV list of Solar/PV meetings: http://www.nrel.gov/news/events/ \r\n Fairs & Events around the US: www.homepower.com/resources/events \r\n\r\n | \r\n
Job Boards &\r\nIdeas: \r\n \r\n www.greenjobs.com \r\n \r\n\r\n www.solarjobs.us \r\n \r\n www.homepower.com/resources/jobs.cfm \r\n RenewableEnergyAccess.com/rea/jobs/home \r\n \r\n www.sustainablebusiness.com/jobs \r\n\r\n www.ecojobs.com \r\n www.eco.org \r\n www.greenengineeringjobs.com \r\n \r\n EnvironmentalCareer.com http://www.environmentalcareer.com/ \r\n\r\n DOE list of jobs, courses, etc.: http://www1.eere.energy.gov/education/ \r\n ADPSR – www.adpsr.org\r\n& www.adpsr-norcal.org\r\noccasionally has job\r\nannouncements \r\n\r\n Contact the\r\nmembership & installer lists of CalSEIA,\r\n SEIA, NABCEP, SEPA, NorCal\r\nSolar, FindSolar.com, ASES \r\n\r\n & CEC\r\ninstaller list: www.consumerenergycenter.org/cgi-bin/search.cgi \r\n \r\n Articles: \r\n \r\n\r\n Find\r\nYour Dream Job in Solar (823KB\r\nPDF), published\r\nin "Solar Today",\r\nSept/Oct 2005: www.ongrid.net/papers/SolarTodayDreamJob2005.pdf \r\n How to Land a Job in the Solar\r\nIndustry: Upstream vs. Downstream,\r\nRenewableEnergyAccess.com, Dec 2007: http://www.renewableenergyaccess.com/rea/news/businessre/story?id=50949\r\n \r\n\r\n \r\n \r\nCareer Counseling: \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n\r\n | \r\n
Volunteer\r\nExperience: Grid Alternatives - www.gridalternatives.org\r\n& Habitat\r\nfor Humanity Solar Projects \r\n \r\n\r\n Tools: \r\n \r\n Solar PathFinder,\r\n www.solarpathfinder.com,\r\n(317) 501 2529 \r\n \r\n Solmetric SunEye,\r\n www.solmetric.com, (877)\r\n263 5026 \r\n \r\n\r\nOnGrid Solar Financial Analysis Tool, www.ongrid.net/payback,\r\n(408) 428 0808, andy@ongrid.net \r\nArticles on Financial Payback for Solar: www.ongrid.net/papers \r\n | \r\n
\r\n | \r\n Solar\r\nFinancial Analysis & Purchasing Consultation | \r\n\r\n | \r\n\r\n
\r\n alternatives | \r\n \r\n cost/sq. ft./R (materials & labor) | \r\n \r\n energy (R- value per inch) | \r\n \r\n IAQ | \r\n \r\n\r\n expected product life (years) | \r\n \r\n life cycle thinking | \r\n \r\n practice | \r\n
\r\n fiberglass batt | \r\n \r\n .03 | \r\n \r\n 3.2 | \r\n \r\n typical | \r\n \r\n\r\n 15 | \r\n \r\n standard | \r\n \r\n standard | \r\n
\r\n cellulose blown and loose fill | \r\n \r\n .02 | \r\n \r\n 3.7 | \r\n \r\n good | \r\n \r\n\r\n 15 | \r\n \r\n good | \r\n \r\n standard | \r\n
\r\n fiberglass blown | \r\n \r\n .04 | \r\n \r\n 2.2 | \r\n \r\n good | \r\n \r\n\r\n 15 | \r\n \r\n standard | \r\n \r\n standard | \r\n
\r\n foamed-in-place polyisocyanurate\r\n or polyicynene | \r\n\r\n \r\n not ava | \r\n \r\n 3.6-5.0 | \r\n \r\n\r\n better | \r\n \r\n 15-30 | \r\n \r\n better | \r\n \r\n requires trained installer | \r\n
\r\n rigid perimeter: extruded | \r\n \r\n 0.14 | \r\n \r\n 5.0 | \r\n \r\n\r\n typical | \r\n \r\n 10-15 | \r\n \r\n standard | \r\n \r\n standard | \r\n
\r\n rigid perimeter: expanded | \r\n \r\n 0.13 | \r\n \r\n 3.85 | \r\n \r\n\r\n typical | \r\n \r\n 15 | \r\n \r\n good | \r\n \r\n standard | \r\n
\r\n rigid perimeter: polyisocyanurate | \r\n \r\n 0.09 | \r\n \r\n 7.2 | \r\n \r\n\r\n typical | \r\n \r\n 15-30 | \r\n \r\n better | \r\n \r\n standard | \r\n
\n alternatives | \n \n cost/sq. ft./R (materials & labor) | \n \n energy (R- value per inch) | \n \n IAQ | \n \n\n expected product life (years) | \n \n life cycle thinking | \n \n practice | \n
\n fiberglass batt | \n \n .03 | \n \n 3.2 | \n \n typical | \n \n\n 15 | \n \n standard | \n \n standard | \n
\n cellulose blown and loose fill | \n \n .02 | \n \n 3.7 | \n \n good | \n \n\n 15 | \n \n good | \n \n standard | \n
\n fiberglass blown | \n \n .04 | \n \n 2.2 | \n \n good | \n \n\n 15 | \n \n standard | \n \n standard | \n
\n foamed-in-place polyisocyanurate\n or polyicynene | \n\n \n not ava | \n \n 3.6-5.0 | \n \n\n better | \n \n 15-30 | \n \n better | \n \n requires trained installer | \n
\n rigid perimeter: extruded | \n \n 0.14 | \n \n 5.0 | \n \n\n typical | \n \n 10-15 | \n \n standard | \n \n standard | \n
\n rigid perimeter: expanded | \n \n 0.13 | \n \n 3.85 | \n \n\n typical | \n \n 15 | \n \n good | \n \n standard | \n
\n rigid perimeter: polyisocyanurate | \n \n 0.09 | \n \n 7.2 | \n \n\n typical | \n \n 15-30 | \n \n better | \n \n standard | \n
\r\n alternatives | \r\n \r\n cost/sq. ft./R (materials & labor) | \r\n \r\n energy (R- value per inch) | \r\n \r\n IAQ | \r\n \r\n\r\n expected product life (years) | \r\n \r\n life cycle thinking | \r\n \r\n practice | \r\n
\r\n fiberglass batt | \r\n \r\n .03 | \r\n \r\n 3.2 | \r\n \r\n typical | \r\n \r\n\r\n 15 | \r\n \r\n standard | \r\n \r\n standard | \r\n
\r\n cellulose blown and loose fill | \r\n \r\n .02 | \r\n \r\n 3.7 | \r\n \r\n good | \r\n \r\n\r\n 15 | \r\n \r\n good | \r\n \r\n standard | \r\n
\r\n fiberglass blown | \r\n \r\n .04 | \r\n \r\n 2.2 | \r\n \r\n good | \r\n \r\n\r\n 15 | \r\n \r\n standard | \r\n \r\n standard | \r\n
\r\n foamed-in-place polyisocyanurate\r\n or polyicynene | \r\n\r\n \r\n not ava | \r\n \r\n 3.6-5.0 | \r\n \r\n\r\n better | \r\n \r\n 15-30 | \r\n \r\n better | \r\n \r\n requires trained installer | \r\n
\r\n rigid perimeter: extruded | \r\n \r\n 0.14 | \r\n \r\n 5.0 | \r\n \r\n\r\n typical | \r\n \r\n 10-15 | \r\n \r\n standard | \r\n \r\n standard | \r\n
\r\n rigid perimeter: expanded | \r\n \r\n 0.13 | \r\n \r\n 3.85 | \r\n \r\n\r\n typical | \r\n \r\n 15 | \r\n \r\n good | \r\n \r\n standard | \r\n
\r\n rigid perimeter: polyisocyanurate | \r\n \r\n 0.09 | \r\n \r\n 7.2 | \r\n \r\n\r\n typical | \r\n \r\n 15-30 | \r\n \r\n better | \r\n \r\n standard | \r\n
3 R Living | \r\n
Alive Structures | \r\n
American Clay | \r\n
angies list | \r\n
Asthma Free Zone School | \r\n
BEST PEX Radiant Heating,- Radiant Direct | \r\n
Bettencourt Collection | \r\n
Bettencourt Green Building Supplies | \r\n
BlueHost.Com - FTP | \r\n
BodyBalance Solutions for Healthy Living | \r\n
bonneville windows | \r\n
BP Certified Installer Program | \r\n
Brooklyn Botanic Garden | \r\n
Brooklyn Center for the Urban Environment | \r\n
Brooklyn Children\'s Museum | \r\n
Build It Green! NYC | Non-profit Low Cost Salvage | \r\n
Building Materials Reuse Association - | \r\n
BuildingGreen.com - Home | \r\n
CeleBriTay NYC | \r\n
Center for the Urban Environment | \r\n
Clean Air NY | \r\n
Common Fire Foundation | \r\n
Community Education Center | \r\n
Community Energy | \r\n
Community Environmental Center | \r\n
Commuter Link | \r\n
contractor rules | \r\n
Co-op America Business Network - | \r\n
Council on the Environment of New York City | \r\n
Cradle to Cradle MBDC | \r\n
Creative Commons Deed | \r\n
D.I.Y. Services | Northeast Radiant Technology, L.L.C. | \r\n
Demilec Foam spray isenine alternative | \r\n
DEMILEC | HEATLOK SOYA Spray Polyurethane Foam | \r\n
Doyle\'s Thornless Blackberry - Home Page | \r\n
Drosera, Native Plant Botany | \r\n
Durapalm | \r\n
Earthbound Farm | \r\n
East New York Farms! | \r\n
Eat Well Guide | \r\n
ECOBROKER : Home | \r\n
ECOBROWNSTONE: The Art of Brownstone Greenovation | \r\n
Ecoseekers | \r\n
Edible Brooklyn | \r\n
Electra bicycles | \r\n
Engineering Data | \r\n
Engrave-A-Crete | \r\n
Envirolutions | \r\n
Environ Biocomposites | \r\n
Evangeline Dennie, Architect, LEED AP | \r\n
Evelyn Productions | \r\n
FIBERFRAME™ fiberglass windows | \r\n
Fibertec - Fiberglass Windows and Doors Manufacturer | \r\n
Fifth Avenue Committee | \r\n
Foam Insulation - Spray Foam | \r\n
Foam It Green Polyurethane Spray Foam Kits - Seal and Insulate | \r\n
Foampower Home Page | \r\n
Gaia Institute | \r\n
GBCI: Green Building Certification Institute | \r\n
Girl Guides USA | \r\n
Go Green | \r\n
Gossypium The Ethical Eco-Cotton Store | \r\n
Gowanus Canal Conservancy | \r\n
Green Brooklyn | \r\n
Green Depot | \r\n
Green Depot: Green Building Supplies | \r\n
Green Edge | \r\n
green links | \r\n
Green Living Technologies | \r\n
green roof example | \r\n
green roof tax credits | \r\n
Green Spaces | \r\n
GreenBuildingsNY® | June 17-18, 2008 | Jacob K. Javits | \r\n
GreenBuildingTalk - Green Building Forums | \r\n
Greener Buildings - News on Green Buildings, | \r\n
greenGoat ::: resource management strategies | \r\n
GreenHome NYC | \r\n
GreenHomeNYC: We Help New York City\'s Buildings Go Green. | \r\n
GreenSpa NY | \r\n
Greg Barber Co. | \r\n
Grey Water Books, Ecological Design Information & Consulting | \r\n
HabitatMap | \r\n
hexapat green walkway | \r\n
Home Heating Systems - HeatingHelp.com | \r\n
home surplus | \r\n
Hydronic Comfort Heating - HydronicPros.com | \r\n
IceStone | \r\n
ICFA - Insulating Concrete Form Association | \r\n
Incentives in New York | \r\n
Inhabitat | \r\n
Iron & Steel Scrap in Metro New York on ThomasNet.com | \r\n
Kirei Board | \r\n
Kiwi Magazine | \r\n
League of Young Voters Education Fund | \r\n
LEED - USGBC: U.S. Green Building Council | \r\n
Low Impact Living | \r\n
Lower East Side Ecology Center | \r\n
Lumber Liquidators: Hardwood Flooring for Less! | \r\n
Magic Exterminating | \r\n
Metropolitan Waterfront Alliance | \r\n
Modern Way Lumber | \r\n
MOO.com | business card | \r\n
Motherplants | \r\n
Movers Not Shakers | \r\n
National Grid | \r\n
NCFI Polyurethanes | \r\n
New York Industrial Retention Network | \r\n
New York League of Conservation Voters | \r\n
NY broker web site | \r\n
NYC Department of Design and Construction | \r\n
NYSERDA | \r\n
NYSERDA - New York Energy Smart Loan Program | \r\n
Overheard in New York: The Voice of the City | \r\n
Paperstone | \r\n
Plyboo | \r\n
POLFOAM demilec distributor | \r\n
Power Naturally Web Site | \r\n
Pratt Institute | \r\n
Prospect Park | \r\n
Radiant Floor Design info | \r\n
radiant heat ThermoFin Information | \r\n
Reclaimed Home: Green Low Impact Housing Renovation of New York, Brooklyn, New Jersey | \r\n
recycled insulation | \r\n
Recycled Lumber, Plywood, & Flooring Buyers & Sellers | \r\n
Reddi-Wall, Inc. | \r\n
RePlayground | \r\n
Richlite | \r\n
Riverkeeper | \r\n
Rocket Mass Heaters | \r\n
Rolling Press | \r\n
Rooftop Gardening Source | \r\n
Scrapile | \r\n
Slow Food NYC | \r\n
Small Business Loans | \r\n
Solar 1 | \r\n
Solar One | \r\n
Solatube - The Miracle Skylight | \r\n
Soundproofing Products and Materials | \r\n
SoyThane Spray Urethane Foam | \r\n
SprayFoam.com- foam database | \r\n
Stewart/Stand | \r\n
Stone Barns Center for Food and Agriculture | \r\n
Structural Insulated Panel Association | \r\n
Sunmaxsolar.net | \r\n
SunPower - Smarter Solar | \r\n
Surface Environment | \r\n
Sustainable Business Network | \r\n
sustainableflatbush.org | \r\n
tankless water Takagi USA | \r\n
The Design Can | \r\n
Transportation Alternatives | \r\n
Treehugger | \r\n
TriState Bio Diesel | \r\n
UNILUX AG, Salmtal - Fenster und Türen | \r\n
USGBC New York Chapter | \r\n
Viessmann Manufacturing Company Inc. | \r\n
WE ADD UP | \r\n
Wearable Collections | \r\n
Your Solar Home - Renewable Energy Solutions | \r\n
3 R Living | \r\n
Alive Structures | \r\n
American Clay | \r\n
angies list | \r\n
Asthma Free Zone School | \r\n
BEST PEX Radiant Heating,- Radiant Direct | \r\n
Bettencourt Collection | \r\n
Bettencourt Green Building Supplies | \r\n
BlueHost.Com - FTP | \r\n
BodyBalance Solutions for Healthy Living | \r\n
bonneville windows | \r\n
BP Certified Installer Program | \r\n
Brooklyn Botanic Garden | \r\n
Brooklyn Center for the Urban Environment | \r\n
Brooklyn Children\'s Museum | \r\n
Build It Green! NYC | Non-profit Low Cost Salvage | \r\n
Building Materials Reuse Association - | \r\n
BuildingGreen.com - Home | \r\n
CeleBriTay NYC | \r\n
Center for the Urban Environment | \r\n
Clean Air NY | \r\n
Common Fire Foundation | \r\n
Community Education Center | \r\n
Community Energy | \r\n
Community Environmental Center | \r\n
Commuter Link | \r\n
contractor rules | \r\n
Co-op America Business Network - | \r\n
Council on the Environment of New York City | \r\n
Cradle to Cradle MBDC | \r\n
Creative Commons Deed | \r\n
D.I.Y. Services | Northeast Radiant Technology, L.L.C. | \r\n
Demilec Foam spray isenine alternative | \r\n
DEMILEC | HEATLOK SOYA Spray Polyurethane Foam | \r\n
Doyle\'s Thornless Blackberry - Home Page | \r\n
Drosera, Native Plant Botany | \r\n
Durapalm | \r\n
Earthbound Farm | \r\n
East New York Farms! | \r\n
Eat Well Guide | \r\n
ECOBROKER : Home | \r\n
ECOBROWNSTONE: The Art of Brownstone Greenovation | \r\n
Ecoseekers | \r\n
Edible Brooklyn | \r\n
Electra bicycles | \r\n
Engineering Data | \r\n
Engrave-A-Crete | \r\n
Envirolutions | \r\n
Environ Biocomposites | \r\n
Evangeline Dennie, Architect, LEED AP | \r\n
Evelyn Productions | \r\n
FIBERFRAME™ fiberglass windows | \r\n
Fibertec - Fiberglass Windows and Doors Manufacturer | \r\n
Fifth Avenue Committee | \r\n
Foam Insulation - Spray Foam | \r\n
Foam It Green Polyurethane Spray Foam Kits - Seal and Insulate | \r\n
Foampower Home Page | \r\n
Gaia Institute | \r\n
GBCI: Green Building Certification Institute | \r\n
Girl Guides USA | \r\n
Go Green | \r\n
Gossypium The Ethical Eco-Cotton Store | \r\n
Gowanus Canal Conservancy | \r\n
Green Brooklyn | \r\n
Green Depot | \r\n
Green Depot: Green Building Supplies | \r\n
Green Edge | \r\n
green links | \r\n
Green Living Technologies | \r\n
green roof example | \r\n
green roof tax credits | \r\n
Green Spaces | \r\n
GreenBuildingsNY® | June 17-18, 2008 | Jacob K. Javits | \r\n
GreenBuildingTalk - Green Building Forums | \r\n
Greener Buildings - News on Green Buildings, | \r\n
greenGoat ::: resource management strategies | \r\n
GreenHome NYC | \r\n
GreenHomeNYC: We Help New York City\'s Buildings Go Green. | \r\n
GreenSpa NY | \r\n
Greg Barber Co. | \r\n
Grey Water Books, Ecological Design Information & Consulting | \r\n
HabitatMap | \r\n
hexapat green walkway | \r\n
Home Heating Systems - HeatingHelp.com | \r\n
home surplus | \r\n
Hydronic Comfort Heating - HydronicPros.com | \r\n
IceStone | \r\n
ICFA - Insulating Concrete Form Association | \r\n
Incentives in New York | \r\n
Inhabitat | \r\n
Iron & Steel Scrap in Metro New York on ThomasNet.com | \r\n
Kirei Board | \r\n
Kiwi Magazine | \r\n
League of Young Voters Education Fund | \r\n
LEED - USGBC: U.S. Green Building Council | \r\n
Low Impact Living | \r\n
Lower East Side Ecology Center | \r\n
Lumber Liquidators: Hardwood Flooring for Less! | \r\n
Magic Exterminating | \r\n
Metropolitan Waterfront Alliance | \r\n
Modern Way Lumber | \r\n
MOO.com | business card | \r\n
Motherplants | \r\n
Movers Not Shakers | \r\n
National Grid | \r\n
NCFI Polyurethanes | \r\n
New York Industrial Retention Network | \r\n
New York League of Conservation Voters | \r\n
NY broker web site | \r\n
NYC Department of Design and Construction | \r\n
NYSERDA | \r\n
NYSERDA - New York Energy Smart Loan Program | \r\n
Overheard in New York: The Voice of the City | \r\n
Paperstone | \r\n
Plyboo | \r\n
POLFOAM demilec distributor | \r\n
Power Naturally Web Site | \r\n
Pratt Institute | \r\n
Prospect Park | \r\n
Radiant Floor Design info | \r\n
radiant heat ThermoFin Information | \r\n
Reclaimed Home: Green Low Impact Housing Renovation of New York, Brooklyn, New Jersey | \r\n
recycled insulation | \r\n
Recycled Lumber, Plywood, & Flooring Buyers & Sellers | \r\n
Reddi-Wall, Inc. | \r\n
RePlayground | \r\n
Richlite | \r\n
Riverkeeper | \r\n
Rocket Mass Heaters | \r\n
Rolling Press | \r\n
Rooftop Gardening Source | \r\n
Scrapile | \r\n
Slow Food NYC | \r\n
Small Business Loans | \r\n
Solar 1 | \r\n
Solar One | \r\n
Solatube - The Miracle Skylight | \r\n
Soundproofing Products and Materials | \r\n
SoyThane Spray Urethane Foam | \r\n
SprayFoam.com- foam database | \r\n
Stewart/Stand | \r\n
Stone Barns Center for Food and Agriculture | \r\n
Structural Insulated Panel Association | \r\n
Sunmaxsolar.net | \r\n
SunPower - Smarter Solar | \r\n
Surface Environment | \r\n
Sustainable Business Network | \r\n
sustainableflatbush.org | \r\n
tankless water Takagi USA | \r\n
The Design Can | \r\n
Transportation Alternatives | \r\n
Treehugger | \r\n
TriState Bio Diesel | \r\n
UNILUX AG, Salmtal - Fenster und Türen | \r\n
USGBC New York Chapter | \r\n
Viessmann Manufacturing Company Inc. | \r\n
WE ADD UP | \r\n
Wearable Collections | \r\n
Your Solar Home - Renewable Energy Solutions | \r\n
3 R Living | \r\n
Alive Structures | \r\n
American Clay | \r\n
angies list | \r\n
Asthma Free Zone School | \r\n
BEST PEX Radiant Heating,- Radiant Direct | \r\n
Bettencourt Collection | \r\n
Bettencourt Green Building Supplies | \r\n
BlueHost.Com - FTP | \r\n
BodyBalance Solutions for Healthy Living | \r\n
bonneville windows | \r\n
BP Certified Installer Program | \r\n
Brooklyn Botanic Garden | \r\n
Brooklyn Center for the Urban Environment | \r\n
Brooklyn Children\'s Museum | \r\n
Build It Green! NYC | Non-profit Low Cost Salvage | \r\n
Building Materials Reuse Association - | \r\n
BuildingGreen.com - Home | \r\n
CeleBriTay NYC | \r\n
Center for the Urban Environment | \r\n
Clean Air NY | \r\n
Common Fire Foundation | \r\n
Community Education Center | \r\n
Community Energy | \r\n
Community Environmental Center | \r\n
Commuter Link | \r\n
contractor rules | \r\n
Co-op America Business Network - | \r\n
Council on the Environment of New York City | \r\n
Cradle to Cradle MBDC | \r\n
Creative Commons Deed | \r\n
D.I.Y. Services | Northeast Radiant Technology, L.L.C. | \r\n
Demilec Foam spray isenine alternative | \r\n
DEMILEC | HEATLOK SOYA Spray Polyurethane Foam | \r\n
Doyle\'s Thornless Blackberry - Home Page | \r\n
Drosera, Native Plant Botany | \r\n
Durapalm | \r\n
Earthbound Farm | \r\n
East New York Farms! | \r\n
Eat Well Guide | \r\n
ECOBROKER : Home | \r\n
ECOBROWNSTONE: The Art of Brownstone Greenovation | \r\n
Ecoseekers | \r\n
Edible Brooklyn | \r\n
Electra bicycles | \r\n
Engineering Data | \r\n
Engrave-A-Crete | \r\n
Envirolutions | \r\n
Environ Biocomposites | \r\n
Evangeline Dennie, Architect, LEED AP | \r\n
Evelyn Productions | \r\n
FIBERFRAME™ fiberglass windows | \r\n
Fibertec - Fiberglass Windows and Doors Manufacturer | \r\n
Fifth Avenue Committee | \r\n
Foam Insulation - Spray Foam | \r\n
Foam It Green Polyurethane Spray Foam Kits - Seal and Insulate | \r\n
Foampower Home Page | \r\n
Gaia Institute | \r\n
GBCI: Green Building Certification Institute | \r\n
Girl Guides USA | \r\n
Go Green | \r\n
Gossypium The Ethical Eco-Cotton Store | \r\n
Gowanus Canal Conservancy | \r\n
Green Brooklyn | \r\n
Green Depot | \r\n
Green Depot: Green Building Supplies | \r\n
Green Edge | \r\n
green links | \r\n
Green Living Technologies | \r\n
green roof example | \r\n
green roof tax credits | \r\n
Green Spaces | \r\n
GreenBuildingsNY® | June 17-18, 2008 | Jacob K. Javits | \r\n
GreenBuildingTalk - Green Building Forums | \r\n
Greener Buildings - News on Green Buildings, | \r\n
greenGoat ::: resource management strategies | \r\n
GreenHome NYC | \r\n
GreenHomeNYC: We Help New York City\'s Buildings Go Green. | \r\n
GreenSpa NY | \r\n
Greg Barber Co. | \r\n
Grey Water Books, Ecological Design Information & Consulting | \r\n
HabitatMap | \r\n
hexapat green walkway | \r\n
Home Heating Systems - HeatingHelp.com | \r\n
home surplus | \r\n
Hydronic Comfort Heating - HydronicPros.com | \r\n
IceStone | \r\n
ICFA - Insulating Concrete Form Association | \r\n
Incentives in New York | \r\n
Inhabitat | \r\n
Iron & Steel Scrap in Metro New York on ThomasNet.com | \r\n
Kirei Board | \r\n
Kiwi Magazine | \r\n
League of Young Voters Education Fund | \r\n
LEED - USGBC: U.S. Green Building Council | \r\n
Low Impact Living | \r\n
Lower East Side Ecology Center | \r\n
Lumber Liquidators: Hardwood Flooring for Less! | \r\n
Magic Exterminating | \r\n
Metropolitan Waterfront Alliance | \r\n
Modern Way Lumber | \r\n
MOO.com | business card | \r\n
Motherplants | \r\n
Movers Not Shakers | \r\n
National Grid | \r\n
NCFI Polyurethanes | \r\n
New York Industrial Retention Network | \r\n
New York League of Conservation Voters | \r\n
NY broker web site | \r\n
NYC Department of Design and Construction | \r\n
NYSERDA | \r\n
NYSERDA - New York Energy Smart Loan Program | \r\n
Overheard in New York: The Voice of the City | \r\n
Paperstone | \r\n
Plyboo | \r\n
POLFOAM demilec distributor | \r\n
Power Naturally Web Site | \r\n
Pratt Institute | \r\n
Prospect Park | \r\n
Radiant Floor Design info | \r\n
radiant heat ThermoFin Information | \r\n
Reclaimed Home: Green Low Impact Housing Renovation of New York, Brooklyn, New Jersey | \r\n
recycled insulation | \r\n
Recycled Lumber, Plywood, & Flooring Buyers & Sellers | \r\n
Reddi-Wall, Inc. | \r\n
RePlayground | \r\n
Richlite | \r\n
Riverkeeper | \r\n
Rocket Mass Heaters | \r\n
Rolling Press | \r\n
Rooftop Gardening Source | \r\n
Scrapile | \r\n
Slow Food NYC | \r\n
Small Business Loans | \r\n
Solar 1 | \r\n
Solar One | \r\n
Solatube - The Miracle Skylight | \r\n
Soundproofing Products and Materials | \r\n
SoyThane Spray Urethane Foam | \r\n
SprayFoam.com- foam database | \r\n
Stewart/Stand | \r\n
Stone Barns Center for Food and Agriculture | \r\n
Structural Insulated Panel Association | \r\n
Sunmaxsolar.net | \r\n
SunPower - Smarter Solar | \r\n
Surface Environment | \r\n
Sustainable Business Network | \r\n
sustainableflatbush.org | \r\n
tankless water Takagi USA | \r\n
The Design Can | \r\n
Transportation Alternatives | \r\n
Treehugger | \r\n
TriState Bio Diesel | \r\n
UNILUX AG, Salmtal - Fenster und Türen | \r\n
USGBC New York Chapter | \r\n
Viessmann Manufacturing Company Inc. | \r\n
WE ADD UP | \r\n
Wearable Collections | \r\n
Your Solar Home - Renewable Energy Solutions | \r\n
\r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n \r\n\r\n \r\nWe are a Proud Member of: \r\nContact us for details and purchase. To read more, click here. \r\nWe are a Proud Member of: \r\nContact us for details and purchase. To read more, click here. \r\nWe are a Proud Member of: \r\nContact us for details and purchase. To read more, click here. \r\nWe are a Proud Member of: \r\nContact us for details and purchase. To read more, click here. \r\nWe are a Proud Member of: \r\nContact us for details and purchase. To read more, click here. \r\nWe are a Proud Member of: \r\nContact us for details and purchase. To read more, click here. \r\nWe are a Proud Member of: \r\nContact us for details and purchase. To read more, click here. \r\nWe are a Proud Member of: alternatives cost/sq. ft./R (materials & labor) energy (R- value per inch) IAQ expected product life (years) life cycle thinking practice fiberglass batt .03 3.2 typical 15 standard standard cellulose blown and loose fill .02 3.7 good 15 good standard fiberglass blown .04 2.2 good 15 standard standard foamed-in-place polyisocyanurate\r\n or polyicynene not ava 3.6-5.0 better 15-30 better requires trained installer rigid perimeter: extruded 0.14 5.0 typical 10-15 standard standard rigid perimeter: expanded 0.13 3.85 typical 15 good standard rigid perimeter: polyisocyanurate 0.09 7.2 typical 15-30 better standard\nCutting the tires into strips.\n\n
\nPlacing the tire under the joists.\n\n
\nThe same tire pictured above but now we have put the support beam beneath it. The tire now acts as a sound barrier between the joists and the beam, breaking the vibration that would normally pass from the joist to the beam and the floor below.\n\n
\nHere is an example of the tire placed between the stud and the footer. It is better to place the tire between the stud and the header to stop sound coming from above. But in this case the stud was supporting the stairs so it didn\'t matter.', 'Soundproofing between floors', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '407-revision', '', '', '2008-12-19 18:13:37', '2008-12-20 00:13:37', '', 407, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/407-revision/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (243, 1, '2008-11-09 20:12:47', '2008-11-10 02:12:47', '', 'green eco building in brooklyn', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'img_0109', '', '', '2008-11-09 20:12:47', '2008-11-10 02:12:47', '', 0, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/img_0109.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (409, 1, '2008-12-19 17:16:40', '2008-12-19 23:16:40', '', 'recycled tires for soundproofing', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '66-april-20-2008-177small', '', '', '2008-12-19 17:16:40', '2008-12-19 23:16:40', '', 407, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/66-april-20-2008-177small.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (410, 1, '2008-12-19 17:19:00', '2008-12-19 23:19:00', '', 'tire', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'xxx66-april-20-2008-229', '', '', '2008-12-19 17:19:00', '2008-12-19 23:19:00', '', 407, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/xxx66-april-20-2008-229.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (411, 1, '2008-12-19 18:10:02', '2008-12-20 00:10:02', '', 'xxxxp1010255', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'xxxxp1010255', '', '', '2008-12-19 18:10:02', '2008-12-20 00:10:02', '', 407, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/xxxxp1010255.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (412, 1, '2008-12-19 18:12:18', '2008-12-20 00:12:18', '', 'xxxp1010258', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'xxxp1010258', '', '', '2008-12-19 18:12:18', '2008-12-20 00:12:18', '', 407, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/xxxp1010258.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (408, 1, '2008-12-19 17:13:16', '2008-12-19 23:13:16', 'Sound is an important element in a house, usually how to diminish the sound between walls and floors. Soundproofing a house is an art and a science. There are many things that at first go against logic, but once you understand the mechanics of sound they make perfect sense. \n\nFor example in one situation a very thin layer of one thing stops much more sound than a thick layer of another. But in another situation it might be the opposite, where a thick substance is more effective than a thing substance, whatever the substance is at the time (foam, metal, wood, caulk etc...).\n\nTwo sites that are very useful are STCRatings.com and Acoustics.com.\n\nThese two sides offer concrete technical information that are invaluable if you want to build or renovate a house. The sites are not selling any product so the information isn\'t very biased.', 'Good Soundproofing Sites', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '264-autosave', '', '', '2008-12-19 17:13:16', '2008-12-19 23:13:16', '', 264, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/264-autosave/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (407, 1, '2008-12-19 18:13:40', '2008-12-20 00:13:40', 'After some research we noticed that one of the most effective ways to reduce impact noise between floors was to put a recycled tyre product between the floor and sub floor. It creates a vibrating cushion that absorbs the impact, thus deadening the sound.\r\n\r\nThe only problem is that this product is costly. And costly is not green in the slightest.\r\n\r\nSo we went to the mechanic down the road. He was more than happy to give us some used tires. He has to pay to dispose of them into the landfill. We took the tires and cut them into little strips.\r\n\r\nThe strips were placed wherever a stud or support beam made contact with the floor above, creating a sound impact barrier between the two floors. Kids jumping, heavy boots and games of basketball should all become less audible from the neighbors above thanks to our technique.\r\n\r\n
\r\nCutting the tires into strips.\r\n\r\n
\r\nPlacing the tire under the joists.\r\n\r\n
\r\nThe same tire pictured above but now we have put the support beam beneath it. The tire now acts as a sound barrier between the joists and the beam, breaking the vibration that would normally pass from the joist to the beam and the floor below.\r\n\r\n
\r\nHere is an example of the tire placed between the stud and the footer. It is better to place the tire between the stud and the header to stop sound coming from above. But in this case the stud was supporting the stairs so it didn\'t matter.', 'Soundproofing between floors', 0, '', 'publish', 'open', 'open', '', 'soundproofing-floors', '', '', '2008-12-19 18:16:03', '2008-12-20 00:16:03', '', 0, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/?p=407', 0, 'post', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (246, 1, '2008-11-12 14:17:54', '2008-11-12 20:17:54', '', 'gennaro brooks-church ecobroker certified', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'eb-certified-logo-for-web-s', '', '', '2008-11-12 14:17:54', '2008-11-12 20:17:54', '', 8, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/eb-certified-logo-for-web-s.gif', 0, 'attachment', 'image/gif', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (247, 1, '2008-11-12 14:20:18', '2008-11-12 20:20:18', '', 'ecobrooklyn member usgbc', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'usgbc', '', '', '2008-11-12 14:20:18', '2008-11-12 20:20:18', '', 8, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/usgbc.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (248, 1, '2008-10-29 19:33:01', '2008-10-30 01:33:01', 'Eco Brooklyn Inc. is an alternative GREEN CONSTRUCTION and REAL ESTATE development company in the Brooklyn area.\r\n\r\nEco Brooklyn\'s Director is Gennaro Brooks-Church, a Licensed Real Estate Broker and Contractor. He can be reached at 347-244-3016. \r\n\r\n
', 'Green Real Estate Development', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '8-revision-31', '', '', '2008-11-12 14:23:08', '2008-11-12 20:23:08', '', 8, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/8-revision-31/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (253, 1, '2008-11-12 14:38:27', '2008-11-12 20:38:27', '', 'Gennaro Brooks-Church Real Estate Broker', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'nysreb1', '', '', '2008-11-12 14:38:27', '2008-11-12 20:38:27', '', 8, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/nysreb1.gif', 0, 'attachment', 'image/gif', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (254, 1, '2008-11-12 14:33:27', '2008-11-12 20:33:27', 'Eco Brooklyn Inc. is an alternative GREEN CONSTRUCTION and REAL ESTATE development company in the Brooklyn area.\r\n\r\nEco Brooklyn\'s Director is Gennaro Brooks-Church, a Licensed Real Estate Broker and Contractor. He can be reached at 347-244-3016. \r\n\r\n
', 'Green Real Estate Development', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '8-revision-32', '', '', '2008-11-12 14:33:27', '2008-11-12 20:33:27', '', 8, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/8-revision-32/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (255, 1, '2008-11-12 14:41:50', '2008-11-12 20:41:50', '', 'EcoBrooklyn NYC Licensed Contractor', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'nycdeptca1', '', '', '2008-11-12 14:41:50', '2008-11-12 20:41:50', '', 8, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/nycdeptca1.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (302, 1, '2008-09-27 18:05:10', '2008-09-28 00:05:10', 'To contact Eco Inc. Brooklyn call Gennaro Brooks-Church at 347 244 3016.\r\n\r\nEco Brooklyn Inc. is an alternative real estate development company offering services in GREEN CONSTRUCTION and REAL ESTATE. It is directed by Gennaro Brooks-Church, licensed Real Estate Broker, EcoBroker® and Contractor. Other team members are brought in depending on the job.\r\n\r\nAnything relating to green building is our passion. We work in the following mediums:\r\n\r\nRecycled Flooring and Timber\r\nRadiant Heat\r\nFiberglass Windows\r\nFoam Insulation\r\nSolar Water Heating\r\nSolar Electricity\r\nGreen Roofs\r\nHigh Efficiency Boilers\r\nHeat On Demand Boilers\r\nEcological Counters\r\nSoapstone Fireplaces\r\n\r\nWe can also help in these services:\r\n\r\nArchitectural Plans\r\nJob Expediting\r\nEnergy Audits\r\nJob Management\r\nReal Estate Sales and Rentals', 'About', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '2-revision-10', '', '', '2008-09-27 18:05:10', '2008-09-28 00:05:10', '', 2, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/2-revision-10/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (256, 1, '2008-11-12 14:39:12', '2008-11-12 20:39:12', 'Eco Brooklyn Inc. is an alternative GREEN CONSTRUCTION and REAL ESTATE development company in the Brooklyn area.\r\n\r\nEco Brooklyn\'s Director is Gennaro Brooks-Church, a Licensed Real Estate Broker and Contractor. He can be reached at 347-244-3016. \r\n\r\n
', 'Green Real Estate Development', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '8-revision-33', '', '', '2008-11-12 14:39:12', '2008-11-12 20:39:12', '', 8, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/8-revision-33/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (257, 1, '2008-08-28 12:01:19', '2008-08-28 18:01:19', 'I have been in building since I was 14. My experience is mostly US and Spain. The Spanish style tends to have a lot of stone, concrete and tiles. My US experience is SF and NY. Victorian houses in San Francisco have a lot of wood and Brownstones in Brooklyn have a nice mix of stone and wood.\r\n\r\nTo become a contractor in NY you need to pay fees (aprox $800), buy insurance(aprox $5000 plus), fill out some forms and take a 20 minutes test based on two pages of information.\r\n\r\nYou don\'t really need to show a lot of construction experience to get the license so when somebody says they are a licensed contractor, well, it could mean a lot of things. I don\'t mean to belittle the title because clearly anyone who has jumped through the hoops and paid the fees has an interest in building. \r\n\r\nIt is a good place to start when looking for a builder but having the license is only part of the equation.\r\n \r\nI think references help a lot. Another good tactic is to start with a very small job to test the contractor out.', 'Eco Brooklyn is a licensed and insured contractor', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '38-revision-5', '', '', '2008-08-28 12:01:19', '2008-08-28 18:01:19', '', 38, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/38-revision-5/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (260, 1, '2008-11-16 08:14:11', '2008-11-16 14:14:11', 'Last week I attended an Energy Efficiency Seminar hosted by Landmark West!, The Community Preservation Corporation and Steven Winter Associates, Inc.\r\n\r\nI covered the many ways to make a building more efficient. First we looked at where the energy goes, from heating, to hot water, to appliances, to holes in roof. We learned the percentages for each and got an in depth understanding of how to prioritize our energy improvement plan.\r\n\r\nFor example, if windows waste 10% of the energy and cost $10,000 to replace but a hole in the attic wastes 10% of the energy and costs $25 to fix then obviously go for the hole.\r\n\r\nThe basic message of the seminar was that you should go for the low hanging fruit. They will fix the vast majority of the energy issues and cost the least amount of money.\r\n\r\nBasically, the low hanging fruit are the holes. Most energy is wasted via holes in the house envelope. And most of these issues can be fixed for almost no money.\r\n\r\nThe mantra is: "Find Hole, Fill Hole."\r\n\r\nPlaces to look the are most important are where the house pressure is highest: at the base of the house and at the top of the house. \r\n\r\nThe base of the house has a lot of inward pressure where cold air is being sucked into the house. The top of the house has a lot of outward pressure where valuable hot air is being pushed out of the house.\r\n\r\nFind the holes any way you can. For the little killer holes a lighter or smoking candle can show you the draft. Fill with caulk, spray foam and putty. \r\n\r\nIf you do this it will amaze you how much energy will be saved. And money.\r\n\r\nA house has to be really in terrible shape for you to need to put insulation in the walls, replace the appliances, and get new windows. These would be the next steps but the "Find Hole, Fill Hole," is definitely the most important first step.', 'Energy Efficiency Seminar', 0, '', 'publish', 'open', 'open', '', 'energy-efficiency-seminar', '', '', '2008-11-16 08:14:11', '2008-11-16 14:14:11', '', 0, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/?p=260', 0, 'post', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (261, 1, '2008-11-16 08:14:03', '2008-11-16 14:14:03', 'Last week I attended an Energy Efficiency Seminar hosted by Landmark West!, The Community Preservation Corporation and Steven Winter Associates, Inc.\n\nI covered the many ways to make a building more efficient. First we looked at where the energy goes, from heating, to hot water, to appliances, to holes in roof. We learned the percentages for each and got an in depth understanding of how to prioritize our energy improvement plan.\n\nFor example, if windows waste 10% of the energy and cost $10,000 to replace but a hole in the attic wastes 10% of the energy and costs $25 to fix then obviously go for the hole.\n\nThe basic message of the seminar was that you should go for the low hanging fruit. They will fix the vast majority of the energy issues and cost the least amount of money.\n\nBasically, the low hanging fruit are the holes. Most energy is wasted via holes in the house envelope. And most of these issues can be fixed for almost no money.\n\nThe mantra is: "Find Hole, Fill Hole."\n\nPlaces to look the are most important are where the house pressure is highest: at the base of the house and at the top of the house. \n\nThe base of the house has a lot of inward pressure where cold air is being sucked into the house. The top of the house has a lot of outward pressure where valuable hot air is being pushed out of the house.\n\nFind the holes any way you can. For the little killer holes a lighter or smoking candle can show you the draft. Fill with caulk, spray foam and putty. \n\nIf you do this it will amaze you how much energy will be saved. And money.\n\nA house has to be really in terrible shape for you to need to put insulation in the walls, replace the appliances, and get new windows. These would be the next steps but the "Find Hole, Fill Hole," is definitely the most important first step.', 'Energy Efficiency Seminar', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '260-revision', '', '', '2008-11-16 08:14:03', '2008-11-16 14:14:03', '', 260, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/260-revision/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (262, 1, '2008-11-16 16:31:49', '2008-11-16 22:31:49', 'I discovered a great web site today called Radiant Heat Institute.com
\r\nIt is a godsend for a builder like me who likes to build cheap and green. He has loads of practical info. Very good site. \r\n\r\nHere is from his site on how to build green:\r\n\r\n1. Locate house with south orientation, +5 or - 5 degrees of due south is best. House to be elongated along the east-west axis for optimum exposure.\r\n\r\n2. 8% to 12 % of floor area to be south facing glazing. South glazing must be vertical to prevent overheating in the summer. In general avoid the use of skylights but if used, they should be designed with much caution and thought as to thermal gain and loss.\r\n\r\n3. Passive design houses can be direct gain, Trombe walls, mass walls, water walls or isolated gain (sunspaces or greenhouses). For the majority of designs, direct gain or isolated gain are used. Direct gain design relies on the interior mass of the house to store the solar heat.\r\n\r\n4. Optimally insulating the house envelope is the most important issue - R20 (3.52 rsi) walls, R30 (5.29 rsi) roof, R10 (1.76 rsi) footer. Make the envelope like a thermos bottle. There is no compromise on this issue. Insulate on the exterior of mass walls. The mass walls will act as a thermal flywheel keeping the temperature of the space consistent through the day and night. Insulation must block any thermal path to the exterior. Keeping surface temperatures up (mean radiant temperature) and interior internal mass are the keys to a successful thermal environment and the proper placement of insulation is the tool for achieving this.\r\n\r\n5. Use fixed or adjustable overhangs to block out sun completely from May 1 to July 30. Full sun should be allowed on Dec. 21. This rule will vary according to the local latitude and climate conditions.\r\n\r\n6. Locate living areas and high activity areas on south side of house.\r\n\r\n7. Locate closets, storage, garage and less active rooms on north side of house.\r\n\r\n8. Locate baths, kitchen and laundry facilities near the water heater\'s location to minimize pipe runs and energy loss.\r\n\r\n9. Keep exterior entries away from wind. Air lock entries are always a good idea.\r\n\r\n10. Keep infiltration to a minimum. Eliminate unwanted air entry. In very tight houses, an air to air heat exchange for ventilation is a good idea.\r\n\r\n11. Free ventilation (operable windows) should be 6% to 7.5% of floor area. Half on the leeward side and half on the windward side.\r\n\r\n12. It is best to use mass floors (stone, marble, tile) only where sun strikes floor. Floors in other areas should be of a light density, such as wood or carpet.\r\n\r\n13. In less than favorable passive solar orientation or design, use hydronic radiant floors. If optimum passive design is utilized, there is no need for a radiant floor. If radiant floors are used, solar heating of the water is ideal because of the lower temperatures required for floor heating. Insulation under the radiant floor is required.\r\n\r\n14. Double pain windows on south exposure, on other exposures use triple pane or low-E glass especially north glass which should be kept to a minimum.\r\n\r\n15. Keep west facing glass to a minimum to reduce summer overheating. If required for a view, use high shading coefficient glass or low-E glass (or reflective blinds).\r\n\r\n16. To optimize passive gain, use night window insulation such as shutters or insulative curtains.\r\n\r\n17. South exposure sunspaces (greenhouses) are solar rooms attached to the south side of the house. In Italy south facing terraces would be ideal to close in with glazing that could be opened in summer. The terrace can be closed off from the main house and opened and closed as needed. South glazing should be a maximum of 6" above the mass floor to allow optimum sun exposure to the mass floors. The floor perimeter or floor itself must be insulated as do all the columns and walls.\r\n\r\n18. Use active solar panels for water heating. Insulate pipe and storage.\r\n\r\n19. Without a doubt for maximum thermal comfort and cost effectiveness, the best use of the construction funds is to put it into the envelope rather than the heating system. If the envelope is designed with optimal passive solar features, the size and sophistication of the heating system can be designed to be much more economical plus the utility bills will be much less.\r\n\r\n20. Use natural landscape to help both in controlling winds and shade for natural cooling', 'Building Green Notes', 0, '', 'publish', 'open', 'open', '', 'building-green-notes', '', '', '2008-11-16 16:31:49', '2008-11-16 22:31:49', '', 0, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/?p=262', 0, 'post', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (263, 1, '2008-11-16 16:31:33', '2008-11-16 22:31:33', 'I discovered a great web site today called Radiant Heat Institute.com
\nIt is a godsend for a builder like me who likes to build cheap and green. He has loads of practical info. Very good site. \n\nHere is from his site on how to build green:\n\n1. Locate house with south orientation, +5 or - 5 degrees of due south is best. House to be elongated along the east-west axis for optimum exposure.\n\n2. 8% to 12 % of floor area to be south facing glazing. South glazing must be vertical to prevent overheating in the summer. In general avoid the use of skylights but if used, they should be designed with much caution and thought as to thermal gain and loss.\n\n3. Passive design houses can be direct gain, Trombe walls, mass walls, water walls or isolated gain (sunspaces or greenhouses). For the majority of designs, direct gain or isolated gain are used. Direct gain design relies on the interior mass of the house to store the solar heat.\n\n4. Optimally insulating the house envelope is the most important issue - R20 (3.52 rsi) walls, R30 (5.29 rsi) roof, R10 (1.76 rsi) footer. Make the envelope like a thermos bottle. There is no compromise on this issue. Insulate on the exterior of mass walls. The mass walls will act as a thermal flywheel keeping the temperature of the space consistent through the day and night. Insulation must block any thermal path to the exterior. Keeping surface temperatures up (mean radiant temperature) and interior internal mass are the keys to a successful thermal environment and the proper placement of insulation is the tool for achieving this.\n\n5. Use fixed or adjustable overhangs to block out sun completely from May 1 to July 30. Full sun should be allowed on Dec. 21. This rule will vary according to the local latitude and climate conditions.\n\n6. Locate living areas and high activity areas on south side of house.\n\n7. Locate closets, storage, garage and less active rooms on north side of house.\n\n8. Locate baths, kitchen and laundry facilities near the water heater\'s location to minimize pipe runs and energy loss.\n\n9. Keep exterior entries away from wind. Air lock entries are always a good idea.\n\n10. Keep infiltration to a minimum. Eliminate unwanted air entry. In very tight houses, an air to air heat exchange for ventilation is a good idea.\n\n11. Free ventilation (operable windows) should be 6% to 7.5% of floor area. Half on the leeward side and half on the windward side.\n\n12. It is best to use mass floors (stone, marble, tile) only where sun strikes floor. Floors in other areas should be of a light density, such as wood or carpet.\n\n13. In less than favorable passive solar orientation or design, use hydronic radiant floors. If optimum passive design is utilized, there is no need for a radiant floor. If radiant floors are used, solar heating of the water is ideal because of the lower temperatures required for floor heating. Insulation under the radiant floor is required.\n\n14. Double pain windows on south exposure, on other exposures use triple pane or low-E glass especially north glass which should be kept to a minimum.\n\n15. Keep west facing glass to a minimum to reduce summer overheating. If required for a view, use high shading coefficient glass or low-E glass (or reflective blinds).\n\n16. To optimize passive gain, use night window insulation such as shutters or insulative curtains.\n\n17. South exposure sunspaces (greenhouses) are solar rooms attached to the south side of the house. In Italy south facing terraces would be ideal to close in with glazing that could be opened in summer. The terrace can be closed off from the main house and opened and closed as needed. South glazing should be a maximum of 6" above the mass floor to allow optimum sun exposure to the mass floors. The floor perimeter or floor itself must be insulated as do all the columns and walls.\n\n18. Use active solar panels for water heating. Insulate pipe and storage.\n\n19. Without a doubt for maximum thermal comfort and cost effectiveness, the best use of the construction funds is to put it into the envelope rather than the heating system. If the envelope is designed with optimal passive solar features, the size and sophistication of the heating system can be designed to be much more economical plus the utility bills will be much less.\n\n20. Use natural landscape to help both in controlling winds and shade for natural cooling', 'Building Green Notes', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '262-revision', '', '', '2008-11-16 16:31:33', '2008-11-16 22:31:33', '', 262, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/262-revision/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (264, 1, '2008-11-17 20:27:12', '2008-11-18 02:27:12', 'Sound is an important element in a house, usually how to diminish the sound between walls and floors. Soundproofing a house is an art and a science. There are many things that at first go against logic, but once you understand the mechanics of sound they make perfect sense. \r\n\r\nFor example in one situation a very thin layer of one thing stops much more sound than a thick layer of another. But in another sutuation it might be the opposite, where a thick substance is more effective than a thing substance, whatever the substance is at the time (foam, metal, wood, caulk etc...).\r\n\r\nTwo sites that are very useful are STCRatings.com and Acoustics.com.\r\n\r\nThese two sides offer concrete technical information that are invaluable if you want to build or renovate a house. The sites are not selling any product so the information isn\'t very biased.', 'Good Soundproofing Sites', 0, '', 'publish', 'open', 'open', '', 'good-soundproofing-sites', '', '', '2008-11-17 20:27:12', '2008-11-18 02:27:12', '', 0, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/?p=264', 0, 'post', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (265, 1, '2008-11-17 20:26:52', '2008-11-18 02:26:52', 'Sound is an important element in a house, usually how to diminish the sound between walls and floors. Soundproofing a house is an art and a science. There are many things that at first go against logic, but once you understand the mechanics of sound they make perfect sense. \n\nFor example in one situation a very thin layer of one thing stops much more sound than a thick layer of another. But in another sutuation it might be the opposite, where a thick substance is more effective than a thing substance, whatever the substance is at the time (foam, metal, wood, caulk etc...).\n\nTwo sites that are very useful are STCRatings.com and Acoustics.com.\n\nThese two sides offer concrete technical information that are invaluable if you want to build or renovate a house. The sites are not selling any product so the information isn\'t very biased.', 'Good Soundproofing Sites', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '264-revision', '', '', '2008-11-17 20:26:52', '2008-11-18 02:26:52', '', 264, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/264-revision/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (266, 1, '2008-11-17 20:41:20', '2008-11-18 02:41:20', 'Because my architect and I did not see eye to eye we had to part ways, which meant he had to pull his application with the DOB. That would have been fine if my new architect kept to his schedule. But he didn\'t and I didn\'t get new plans submitted to the DOB before the old architect withdrew his.\r\n\r\nBecause I didn\'t have an active application at the DOB I got a big fat STOP WORK ORDER, which apart from grinding everything to a halt is annoying because everyone presumes it is because of something wrong I did on the job site.\r\n\r\nBut after much name calling, threats and extra money gauging, my architect finally got the new plans submitted and approved and I finally got a new work permit.\r\n\r\nThings are up and swinging again. I have a great crew of about 8 guys banging, digging and hauling.\r\n\r\nThis week we jackhammered the concrete in the back yard and carted it to the dumpster in the street. We also made good progress in the cellar where we are digging down three feet to make a nice spacious nine foot living space. Lots of fancy underpinning going on down there. \r\n\r\nMeanwhile we are sistering all the joists on the top floor with beams I reclaimed from the construction site across the street (me and the carpenters on that job have an agreement that they take the joists out carefully instead of cutting them in half and throwing them in the dumpster like normal).\r\n\r\nThe roof needs to be nice and strong to hold the green roof.\r\n\r\nOn the insulation front I just ordered 12,000 square feet of recycled insulation from the InsulationDepot.com. I don\'t need anywhere near that but a truck costs the same no matter how much you fill it so I filled it. What I don\'t use I\'ll sell to other like minded green builders in Brooklyn.\r\n\r\nTimes are tough right now: I get unemployed workers coming to the site each day with sad stories of being hungry and with kids etc. It is a great time to be an employer, if you can make any money yourself that is.', 'We are working again!', 0, '', 'publish', 'open', 'open', '', 'working-again', '', '', '2008-11-17 20:41:20', '2008-11-18 02:41:20', '', 0, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/?p=266', 0, 'post', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (267, 1, '2008-11-17 20:41:00', '2008-11-18 02:41:00', 'Because my architect and I did not see eye to eye we had to part ways, which meant he had to pull his application with the DOB. That would have been fine if my new architect kept to his schedule. But he didn\'t and I didn\'t get new plans submitted to the DOB before the old architect withdrew his.\n\nBecause I didn\'t have an active application at the DOB I got a big fat STOP WORK ORDER, which apart from grinding everything to a halt is annoying because everyone presumes it is because of something wrong I did on the job site.\n\nBut after much name calling, threats and extra money gauging, my architect finally got the new plans submitted and approved and I finally got a new work permit.\n\nThings are up and swinging again. I have a great crew of about 8 guys banging, digging and hauling.\n\nThis week we jackhammered the concrete in the back yard and carted it to the dumpster in the street. We also made good progress in the cellar where we are digging down three feet to make a nice spacious nine foot living space. Lots of fancy underpinning going on down there. \n\nMeanwhile we are sistering all the joists on the top floor with beams I reclaimed from the construction site across the street (me and the carpenters on that job have an agreement that they take the joists out carefully instead of cutting them in half and throwing them in the dumpster like normal).\n\nThe roof needs to be nice and strong to hold the green roof.\n\nOn the insulation front I just ordered 12,000 square feet of recycled insulation from the InsulationDepot.com. I don\'t need anywhere near that but a truck costs the same no matter how much you fill it so I filled it. What I don\'t use I\'ll sell to other like minded green builders in Brooklyn.\n\nTimes are tough right now: I get unemployed workers coming to the site each day with sad stories of being hungry and with kids etc. It is a great time to be an employer, if you can make any money your that is.', 'We are working again!', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '266-revision', '', '', '2008-11-17 20:41:00', '2008-11-18 02:41:00', '', 266, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/266-revision/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (268, 1, '2008-11-18 17:35:26', '2008-11-18 23:35:26', 'There is this cool concept called Bio-Biologie, formed by a German guy called Dr. Anton Schnieder, which looks at the house and its surroundings as a biological entity, almost as if it were alive.\r\n\r\nAnd like any living entity it needs certain things to remain healthy, which in turn keeps the inhabitants healthy. Many houses don\'t have these aspects.\r\n\r\nThese are simple things like non toxic materials, plenty of sun and air, no radiation or electromagnetic fields and lots of green. Basically they are feel good things and are very useful whenever doing a remodel or new building.\r\n\r\nThis site outlines 25 of his most important points.', 'Bio-Biologie Building', 0, '', 'publish', 'open', 'open', '', 'bio-biologie-building', '', '', '2008-11-18 17:35:26', '2008-11-18 23:35:26', '', 0, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/?p=268', 0, 'post', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (269, 1, '2008-11-18 17:35:18', '2008-11-18 23:35:18', 'There is this cool concept called Bio-Biologie, formed by a German guy called Dr. Anton Schnieder, which looks at the house and its surroundings as a biological entity, almost as if it were alive.\n\nAnd like any living entity it needs certain things to remain healthy, which in turn keeps the inhabitants healthy. Many houses don\'t have these aspects.\n\nThese are simple things like non toxic materials, plenty of sun and air, no radiation or electromagnetic fields and lots of green. Basically they are feel good things and are very useful whenever \n\nThis site outlines 25 of his most important points.', 'Bio-Biologie Building', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '268-revision', '', '', '2008-11-18 17:35:18', '2008-11-18 23:35:18', '', 268, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/268-revision/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (270, 1, '2008-11-18 18:03:54', '2008-11-19 00:03:54', 'It is so important to use healthy cleaning products in the house. The very same Wizz-Bang commerial products that can "kill germs" can also kill all the good germs in you. \r\n\r\nThe following text was originally from ABC\'s web site.\r\n\r\nThere are many ingredients in your own kitchen or bathroom cupboard that could easily be substituted for cleaners.\r\nMore and more people are looking for natural ways of cleaning as their concerns grow over chemicals in cleaners that can cause eye, nose and throat irritation, headaches and dizziness.\r\nMany common household cleaners contain alcohol, ammonia, bleach, formaldehyde and lye, substances that can cause nausea, vomiting, inflammation and burning of the eyes and throat.\r\nEnvironmentalists have linked these ingredients with neurological, liver and kidney damage, asthma and cancer.\r\nThere are hundreds of homegrown recipes for green cleaning; here are some of the basic ingredients and combinations you can try:\r\nFive Basic Ingredients\r\nAny of these ingredients can be safely mixed together. Experiment and find out what works best for you. Store mixtures in spray bottles and label them.\r\nWhite Vinegar: Mix with water and you can clean windows, any glass, countertops and tile.\r\nBaking Soda: Mixed with water this becomes an all purpose cleaner. Scour sinks, tubs and even sprinkle over carpets as a deodorizer.\r\nSalt: great as an abrasive for cleaning pots and pans.\r\nLemon Juice: use as bleach in laundry and on kitchen surfaces. Combine with vinegar and water and you have a nice de-clogger.\r\nOlive oil: Mix with vinegar and use as furniture polish.\r\n \r\nCook up some green cleaners:\r\nDrain cleaner: Pour 125 ml of baking soda down the sink and add at least a cup of vinegar. Put the cover on the drain and wait a few minutes. Finish by rinsing through with a mixture of boiling water and salt.\r\nOven cleaner: Make a paste of baking soda and water. First, scratch off burnt spots with a scouring brush and then apply the paste and scrub.\r\nKitchen cleanser: Use baking soda on non-scratch surfaces and vinegar and water mixture on all others.\r\nWindow cleaner: Put 75 ml of vinegar for every litre of water in a spray bottle.\r\nGlass cleaner: Blend 75 ml of vinegar, a spoonful of cornstarch and a litre of warm water. Apply with a sponge and wipe dry. No streaks!\r\nToilet bowl cleaner: Sprinkle baking soda around the inside of the toilet bowl and clean with toilet brush. Also drop some white vinegar into the bowl and let sit a few minutes before cleaning with the brush.\r\nTub and tile cleaner: Mix 400 ml baking soda, 125 ml liquid soap, 125 ml water and a few spoonfuls of vinegar. Apply, scrub and wipe.\r\nMildew remover: Vinegar and salt.\r\nSilver polish: Put a sheet of aluminum foil into a plastic or glass bowl. Sprinkle the foil with salt and baking soda and fill bowl with warm water. Soak your silver in the bowl and tarnish migrates to the foil. Dry and buff.\r\nCrystal: Try a mixture of vinegar, water and a small amount of baking soda. Pour on a soft cloth and rub.\r\nBrass cleaner: Cut a lemon in half, sprinkle it with salt and rub the lemon on the metal. Buff with a cloth.\r\nCopper cleaning: Make a paste with equal parts white vinegar, flour and salt, leave on for an hour and then buff with a cloth.\r\nRust removal: Vinegar can help remove rust on nuts and bolts and other mineral deposits such as calcium deposits\r\nToothpaste: Diminishes glass scratches, lifts crayon marks off the floor.\r\n \r\n \r\nThe following recipes were taken from Athena Thompson’s book “Homes That Heal and Those That Don’t” New Society Publishers, c.2004. ISBN 0-86571-511-4. www.homesthatheal.com. Reprinted with permission.\r\n \r\nKITCHEN CLEANER\r\nbaking soda\r\nessential oil (optional)\r\nHalf fill a plastic flip top or stainless steel shaker with baking soda. Add 15- 20 drops of essential oil (try lemon, thyme or lavender). Stir. Fill the shaker almost to the top with more baking soda. Put the lid on tightly and shake to mix.\r\nTo use: sprinkle on counters or sink, then wipe with a damp rag or cellulose sponge. Rinse well. Don’t use too much or you will need to keep rinsing and wiping.\r\n \r\nALL PURPOSE CLEANER\r\n2 tbsp white vinegar\r\n1 tsp Borax\r\n16 ounces hot, filtered water\r\n¼ cup liquid soap\r\n10-15 drops of essential oil, such as lavender or lemon (optional)\r\nFirst, mix the vinegar with the borax in a 16-ounce clean squirt bottle. Fill with hot, filtered water and shake until all the borax has dissolved. Next, add the liquid soap, followed by the essential oil. Shake again to mix. To use: squirt and wipe.\r\n \r\nTUB AND TILE CLEANER\r\n1 2/3 cups baking soda\r\n½ cup liquid soap\r\n½ cup filtered water\r\n2 tbsp white vinegar\r\nMix the baking soda and liquid soap in a bowl. Dilute with 1/2 cup of water. Add the vinegar last. Mix with a fork until any lumps are gone. It should have a pourable consistency; if not, add more water. Pour into a 16-oz. squeeze container (the kind with a squirt flip-top cap). Keep the cap on, as this mixture will dry out easily. Shake well before using. Add more water if it dries out.\r\nTo use: squirt onto tile, tub, sink, or toilet bowl and scrub. Rinse well. If any baking soda residue remains (which will look like powder), use a little vinegar and water to rinse, and next time use less baking soda in the recipe.\r\n \r\nANTIBACTERIAL SPRAY\r\nHere is a great non-toxic and very effective way to rid your bathroom (or any room) of germs.\r\n1 cup filtered water\r\n1 tsp pure essential oil of lavender\r\nPlace water in 16-oz. clean squirt bottle, add lavender oil, and shake vigorously to mix.\r\nTo use: squirt on surfaces and allow to stand for at least 15 minutes, or don’t rinse at all. This recipe keeps indefinitely. Use on toilet seats, countertops, doorknobs, and cutting boards – anywhere germs like to lurk. Lavender is more antiseptic than phenol, which is the industry standard.\r\n \r\n \r\nThe Following Recipes were collected by Building Biologist Jeanne McLaughlin\r\n \r\nSoapy Garlic Garden Spray for weeds\r\n1 head of garlic and 2 cups of boiling water and let it sit overnight\r\n2 tsp vegetable oil\r\n1 tsp liquid soap\r\n \r\nFor Ants - use apple cider vinegar, lavender, baking soda or powdered sugar applied to ant hills and trails\r\n \r\nBorax cleans blood, chocolate, mud, coffee stains and mildew\r\n \r\nBaking soda and corn starch works for wine stains\r\n \r\nInk Stains - use salt, then lemon and then rinse\r\n \r\nGrease Stains - use Baking soda\r\n \r\nUnclogging Drains - 1/2 cup baking soda and 1/2 cup vinegar and pour down the drain. Plug the drain. Wait 10 minutes and pour boiling water down to flush\r\n \r\nFabric softener - 9 oz of vinegar or baking soda with water\r\n \r\nDisenfect Toilets - vinegar, lemon or tea tree oil\r\n \r\nBleach - use apple cider vinegar instead\r\n \r\nFurniture Polish - 1 part lemon juice with 2 parts olive oil\r\n \r\nPot of basil in kitchen for flies\r\n \r\nLavender or cedar for moths\r\n \r\nPowdered milk and warm water for soaking new clothes to get chemicals out before washing\r\n\r\n \r\n', 'Green House Cleaning', 0, '', 'publish', 'open', 'open', '', 'green-house-cleaning', '', '', '2008-11-18 18:03:54', '2008-11-19 00:03:54', '', 0, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/?p=270', 0, 'post', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (271, 1, '2008-11-18 18:02:58', '2008-11-19 00:02:58', 'It is so important to use healthy cleaning products in the house. The very same Wizz-Bang commerial products that can "kill germs" can also kill all the good germs in you. \n\nThe followi\nThere are many ingredients in your own kitchen or bathroom cupboard that could easily be substituted for cleaners.\nMore and more people are looking for natural ways of cleaning as their concerns grow over chemicals in cleaners that can cause eye, nose and throat irritation, headaches and dizziness.\nMany common household cleaners contain alcohol, ammonia, bleach, formaldehyde and lye, substances that can cause nausea, vomiting, inflammation and burning of the eyes and throat.\nEnvironmentalists have linked these ingredients with neurological, liver and kidney damage, asthma and cancer.\nThere are hundreds of homegrown recipes for green cleaning; here are some of the basic ingredients and combinations you can try:\nFive Basic Ingredients\nAny of these ingredients can be safely mixed together. Experiment and find out what works best for you. Store mixtures in spray bottles and label them.\nWhite Vinegar: Mix with water and you can clean windows, any glass, countertops and tile.\nBaking Soda: Mixed with water this becomes an all purpose cleaner. Scour sinks, tubs and even sprinkle over carpets as a deodorizer.\nSalt: great as an abrasive for cleaning pots and pans.\nLemon Juice: use as bleach in laundry and on kitchen surfaces. Combine with vinegar and water and you have a nice de-clogger.\nOlive oil: Mix with vinegar and use as furniture polish.\n \nCook up some green cleaners:\nDrain cleaner: Pour 125 ml of baking soda down the sink and add at least a cup of vinegar. Put the cover on the drain and wait a few minutes. Finish by rinsing through with a mixture of boiling water and salt.\nOven cleaner: Make a paste of baking soda and water. First, scratch off burnt spots with a scouring brush and then apply the paste and scrub.\nKitchen cleanser: Use baking soda on non-scratch surfaces and vinegar and water mixture on all others.\nWindow cleaner: Put 75 ml of vinegar for every litre of water in a spray bottle.\nGlass cleaner: Blend 75 ml of vinegar, a spoonful of cornstarch and a litre of warm water. Apply with a sponge and wipe dry. No streaks!\nToilet bowl cleaner: Sprinkle baking soda around the inside of the toilet bowl and clean with toilet brush. Also drop some white vinegar into the bowl and let sit a few minutes before cleaning with the brush.\nTub and tile cleaner: Mix 400 ml baking soda, 125 ml liquid soap, 125 ml water and a few spoonfuls of vinegar. Apply, scrub and wipe.\nMildew remover: Vinegar and salt.\nSilver polish: Put a sheet of aluminum foil into a plastic or glass bowl. Sprinkle the foil with salt and baking soda and fill bowl with warm water. Soak your silver in the bowl and tarnish migrates to the foil. Dry and buff.\nCrystal: Try a mixture of vinegar, water and a small amount of baking soda. Pour on a soft cloth and rub.\nBrass cleaner: Cut a lemon in half, sprinkle it with salt and rub the lemon on the metal. Buff with a cloth.\nCopper cleaning: Make a paste with equal parts white vinegar, flour and salt, leave on for an hour and then buff with a cloth.\nRust removal: Vinegar can help remove rust on nuts and bolts and other mineral deposits such as calcium deposits\nToothpaste: Diminishes glass scratches, lifts crayon marks off the floor.\n \n \nThe following recipes were taken from Athena Thompson’s book “Homes That Heal and Those That Don’t” New Society Publishers, c.2004. ISBN 0-86571-511-4. www.homesthatheal.com. Reprinted with permission.\n \nKITCHEN CLEANER\nbaking soda\nessential oil (optional)\nHalf fill a plastic flip top or stainless steel shaker with baking soda. Add 15- 20 drops of essential oil (try lemon, thyme or lavender). Stir. Fill the shaker almost to the top with more baking soda. Put the lid on tightly and shake to mix.\nTo use: sprinkle on counters or sink, then wipe with a damp rag or cellulose sponge. Rinse well. Don’t use too much or you will need to keep rinsing and wiping.\n \nALL PURPOSE CLEANER\n2 tbsp white vinegar\n1 tsp Borax\n16 ounces hot, filtered water\n¼ cup liquid soap\n10-15 drops of essential oil, such as lavender or lemon (optional)\nFirst, mix the vinegar with the borax in a 16-ounce clean squirt bottle. Fill with hot, filtered water and shake until all the borax has dissolved. Next, add the liquid soap, followed by the essential oil. Shake again to mix. To use: squirt and wipe.\n \nTUB AND TILE CLEANER\n1 2/3 cups baking soda\n½ cup liquid soap\n½ cup filtered water\n2 tbsp white vinegar\nMix the baking soda and liquid soap in a bowl. Dilute with 1/2 cup of water. Add the vinegar last. Mix with a fork until any lumps are gone. It should have a pourable consistency; if not, add more water. Pour into a 16-oz. squeeze container (the kind with a squirt flip-top cap). Keep the cap on, as this mixture will dry out easily. Shake well before using. Add more water if it dries out.\nTo use: squirt onto tile, tub, sink, or toilet bowl and scrub. Rinse well. If any baking soda residue remains (which will look like powder), use a little vinegar and water to rinse, and next time use less baking soda in the recipe.\n \nANTIBACTERIAL SPRAY\nHere is a great non-toxic and very effective way to rid your bathroom (or any room) of germs.\n1 cup filtered water\n1 tsp pure essential oil of lavender\nPlace water in 16-oz. clean squirt bottle, add lavender oil, and shake vigorously to mix.\nTo use: squirt on surfaces and allow to stand for at least 15 minutes, or don’t rinse at all. This recipe keeps indefinitely. Use on toilet seats, countertops, doorknobs, and cutting boards – anywhere germs like to lurk. Lavender is more antiseptic than phenol, which is the industry standard.\n \n \nThe Following Recipes were collected by Building Biologist Jeanne McLaughlin\n \nSoapy Garlic Garden Spray for weeds\n1 head of garlic and 2 cups of boiling water and let it sit overnight\n2 tsp vegetable oil\n1 tsp liquid soap\n \nFor Ants - use apple cider vinegar, lavender, baking soda or powdered sugar applied to ant hills and trails\n \nBorax cleans blood, chocolate, mud, coffee stains and mildew\n \nBaking soda and corn starch works for wine stains\n \nInk Stains - use salt, then lemon and then rinse\n \nGrease Stains - use Baking soda\n \nUnclogging Drains - 1/2 cup baking soda and 1/2 cup vinegar and pour down the drain. Plug the drain. Wait 10 minutes and pour boiling water down to flush\n \nFabric softener - 9 oz of vinegar or baking soda with water\n \nDisenfect Toilets - vinegar, lemon or tea tree oil\n \nBleach - use apple cider vinegar instead\n \nFurniture Polish - 1 part lemon juice with 2 parts olive oil\n \nPot of basil in kitchen for flies\n \nLavender or cedar for moths\n \nPowdered milk and warm water for soaking new clothes to get chemicals out before washing\n\n \n', 'Green House Cleaning', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '270-revision', '', '', '2008-11-18 18:02:58', '2008-11-19 00:02:58', '', 270, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/270-revision/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (272, 1, '2008-11-19 15:06:12', '2008-11-19 21:06:12', 'On the 2nd street project we are doing a lot of underpinning and laying a concrete slab in the cellar. This requires a lot of concrete. Cement uses up a lot of energy to produce and creates a lot of CO2 Substituting up to 50% of the cement with fly ash is considered a more ecological idea.\r\n\r\nFly ash is an industrial byproduct from burning coal so to use it is to recycle and keep it from the landfill. You are substituting something that is costly to create (cement) with something that is there in abundance anyway. Very green.\r\n\r\nFly ash does have a lot of chemicals in it. But when mixed with cement they are held in the concrete and do not leach. In fact concrete with fly ash is much more waterproof than normal concrete mixed with only cement. i.e. the concrete does not mix with water well.\r\n\r\nConcrete mixed with fly ash takes longer to cure. Because of this it is important to use a lot less water. But once cured it is considerably stronger than normal concrete.\r\n\r\nThe only problem is that I have not been able to buy fly ash in the NY area. Cement companies buy it in bulk and won\'t sell a mere 1000 pounds of it. And because the underpinning has to be done in little parcels at a time it isn\'t possible to bring out a truck to pour concrete. We have to mix the concrete by hand in little batches.\r\n\r\nSo alas the concrete slab and underpinning of 22 2nd street will not have fly ash in the concrete....', 'Fly Ash isn\'t flying', 0, '', 'publish', 'open', 'open', '', 'fly-ash-isnt-flying', '', '', '2008-11-19 15:06:12', '2008-11-19 21:06:12', '', 0, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/?p=272', 0, 'post', '', 2) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (273, 1, '2008-11-19 15:05:53', '2008-11-19 21:05:53', 'On the 2nd street project we are doing a lot of underpinning and laying a concrete slab in the cellar. This requires a lot of concrete. Cement uses up a lot of energy to produce and creates a lot of CO2 Substituting up to 50% of the cement with fly ash is considered a more ecological idea.\n\nFly ash is an industrial byproduct from burning coal so to use it is to recycle and keep it from the landfill. You are substituting something that is costly to create (cement) with something that is there in abundance anyway. Very green.\n\nFly ash does have a lot of chemicals in it. But when mixed with cement they are held in the concrete and do not leach. In fact concrete with fly ash is much more waterproof than normal concrete mixed with only cement. i.e. the concrete does not mix with water well.\n\nConcrete mixed with fly ash takes longer to cure. Because of this it is important to use a lot less water. But once cured it is considerably stronger than normal concrete.\n\nThe only problem is that I have not been able to buy fly ash in the NY area. Cement companies buy it in bulk and won\'t sell a mere 1000 pounds of it. And because the underpinning has to be done in little parcels at a time it isn\'t possible to bring out a truck to pour concrete. We have to mix the concrete by hand in little batches.\n\nSo alas the concrete slab and underpinning of 22 2nd street will not have fly ash in the concrete....', 'Fly Ash isn\'t flying', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '272-revision', '', '', '2008-11-19 15:05:53', '2008-11-19 21:05:53', '', 272, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/272-revision/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (274, 1, '2008-11-19 19:43:48', '2008-11-20 01:43:48', 'These studs were on their way to the dump until I intercepted the contractor and he let me take them..\r\n\r\nI\'m using them in the cellar where they will be in touch with the ground and where in the past there have been termite problems (thus no wood studs).', 'Recycled Steel Studs', 0, '', 'publish', 'open', 'open', '', 'recycled-steel-studs', '', '', '2008-11-19 19:43:48', '2008-11-20 01:43:48', '', 0, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/?p=274', 0, 'post', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (275, 1, '2008-11-19 19:41:35', '2008-11-20 01:41:35', '', 'p1000057', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'p1000057', '', '', '2008-11-19 19:41:35', '2008-11-20 01:41:35', '', 274, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/p1000057.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (276, 1, '2008-11-19 19:43:20', '2008-11-20 01:43:20', 'These studs were on their way to the dump until I intercepted the contractor and he let me take them.
.\n\nI\'m using them in the cellar where they will be in touch with the ground and where in the past there have been termite problems ', 'Recycled Steel Studs', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '274-revision', '', '', '2008-11-19 19:43:20', '2008-11-20 01:43:20', '', 274, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/274-revision/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (277, 1, '0000-00-00 00:00:00', '0000-00-00 00:00:00', 'I have relationships with the contractors in the neighborhood. These oak floors were perfectly fine but the owner wanted to replace them with cherry wood ', 'Recycled Wood Floor', 0, '', 'draft', 'open', 'open', '', 'recycled-wood-floor', '', '', '2008-11-19 19:44:51', '2008-11-20 01:44:51', '', 0, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/?p=277', 0, 'post', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (278, 1, '2008-11-19 19:46:45', '2008-11-20 01:46:45', '', 'p1000063', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'p1000063', '', '', '2008-11-19 19:46:45', '2008-11-20 01:46:45', '', 277, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/p1000063.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (279, 1, '2008-11-19 19:48:26', '2008-11-20 01:48:26', 'I have relationships with the contractors in the neighborhood. These oak floors were perfectly fine but the owner wanted to replace them with cherry wood floors. Instead of put them in the dump I got them.\r\n\r\nThe lower floors of a brownstone are dark so I like light floors to maximize the light.\r\n\r\n
', 'Recycled Wood Floor', 0, '', 'publish', 'open', 'open', '', 'recycled-wood-floor-2', '', '', '2008-11-19 19:48:26', '2008-11-20 01:48:26', '', 0, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/?p=279', 0, 'post', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (280, 1, '2008-11-19 19:48:16', '2008-11-20 01:48:16', 'I have relationships with the contractors in the neighborhood. These oak floors were perfectly fine but the owner wanted to replace them with cherry wood floors. Instead of put them in the dump I got them.\n\nThe lower floors of a brownstone are dark so I like light floors to maximize the light.\n\n
', 'Recycled Wood Floor', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '279-revision', '', '', '2008-11-19 19:48:16', '2008-11-20 01:48:16', '', 279, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/279-revision/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (281, 1, '2008-11-19 19:51:29', '2008-11-20 01:51:29', 'At the beginning of this job I had to buy my salvaged wood from Fine Lumber in Williamsburg. But now that the local job sites know about my project I get most of my wood from them. \r\n\r\nHere you see a nice selection of old cut prime wood. That\'s my daughter.\r\n\r\n
', 'Salvaged Wood', 0, '', 'publish', 'open', 'open', '', 'salvaged-wood', '', '', '2008-11-19 19:51:29', '2008-11-20 01:51:29', '', 0, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/?p=281', 0, 'post', '', 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (282, 1, '2008-11-19 19:50:53', '2008-11-20 01:50:53', '', 'p1000049', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'p1000049', '', '', '2008-11-19 19:50:53', '2008-11-20 01:50:53', '', 281, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/p1000049.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (283, 1, '2008-11-19 19:49:29', '2008-11-20 01:49:29', 'At the beginning of this job I had to buy my salvaged wood from Fine Lu', 'Salvaged Wood', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '281-revision', '', '', '2008-11-19 19:49:29', '2008-11-20 01:49:29', '', 281, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/281-revision/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (284, 1, '2008-11-19 19:51:29', '2008-11-20 01:51:29', 'At the beginning of this job I had to buy my salvaged wood from Fine Lumber in Williamsburg. But now that the local job sites know about my project I get most of my wood from them. \n\nHere you see a nice selection of old cut prime wood. That\'s my daughter.\n\n
', 'Salvaged Wood', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '281-autosave', '', '', '2008-11-19 19:51:29', '2008-11-20 01:51:29', '', 281, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/281-autosave/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (285, 1, '2008-11-19 19:58:59', '2008-11-20 01:58:59', 'The Department of Buildings wants me to show the state of the sidewalk before and after the job so that they can determine if I have to redo it. To do this I had to get an architect\'s survey which costs $3000. To redo the sidewalk would cost me $1000. \r\n\r\nSo I\'m forced to spend $3000 for them to decide whether I need to do something that costs $1000. They are such idiots. What a total waste of money and energy.\r\n\r\nPre construction:\r\n\r\n
', 'DOB Retards - the sidewalk fiasco', 0, '', 'publish', 'open', 'open', '', 'dob-retards-sidewalk-fiasco', '', '', '2008-11-19 19:58:59', '2008-11-20 01:58:59', '', 0, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/?p=285', 0, 'post', '', 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (286, 1, '2008-11-19 19:58:09', '2008-11-20 01:58:09', '', '333', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '333', '', '', '2008-11-19 19:58:09', '2008-11-20 01:58:09', '', 285, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/333.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (287, 1, '2008-11-19 19:55:32', '2008-11-20 01:55:32', 'The Department of Buildings wants me to show the state of the sidewalk before and after the job so that they can determine if I have to redo it. To do this I had to get an architect\'s survey which costs $3000. To redo the sidewalk would cost me $1000. \n\nSo I\'m forced to spend $3000 for them to decide whether ', 'DOB Retards - the sidewalk fiasco', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '285-revision', '', '', '2008-11-19 19:55:32', '2008-11-20 01:55:32', '', 285, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/285-revision/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (288, 1, '2008-11-20 18:01:05', '2008-11-21 00:01:05', '[caption id="attachment_289" align="alignnleft" width="341" caption="Insulation from Eco Brooklyn Inc with Gennaro Brooks-Church"]
[/caption]\r\n\r\nGreen Building is like life: it is all about energy. How you control it, who has it, where it is flowing, and where it isn\'t flowing. You control the energy and you have a great house (possibly a great life too).\r\n\r\nSo obviously insulation plays a huge part ini green building. Green building typically insulates a lot more than normal building. We\'d rather spend more up front and less later in utility bills. Utility bills are wasteful and in imperfection. Ideally we will get to the point that houses are built so well that you don\'t have any utility bills.\r\n\r\nIn terms of insulation there are many choices. Of course fiberglass batts are out. They have a lot of embodied energy, most off gas formaldehyde and they don\'t even insulate well. \r\n\r\nIcenyne spray foam is touted as green and although it seals well it is so not green. That is the biggest scam in the green building industry. All spray foam is made from petro chemicals, even the so called soy based foam that has at most 30% soy and 70% petrolium. The main ingredient for all of them is isocyanate, which is only made by four multy billion dollar companies and it is basically oil.\r\n\r\nThe greenest insulation is cellulose. Recycled paper. Recycled is always the greenest way to go.\r\n\r\nBUT all insulation, foam, fiberglass and cellulose only gets around an R4 per inch and in space starved Brooklyn I wanted more. I found a company that sells once used (READ RECYCLED) foam board called POLYISO. Read this to see how great it is. At only 1.5 inches thick it packs at least an R9 and is by far the best R value out there.\r\n\r\nAnd because it is once used it has already off gassed any small amounts of VOC\'s it might have had.\r\n\r\nI need about 2000 square feet of it. I\'m going to put 4 layers in the roof plus a radiant barrier to make a whopping R36 and this does not include the green roof on top. Insulating the roof is so important.\r\n\r\nThen I\'m going to put one layer in the external walls. With the one foot of brick that will be an R21.\r\n\r\nI also have to put it around the border of the building on every floor between the joists to keep the radiant heat in my house.\r\n\r\nI also need 1600 square feet of Extruded Polystyrine, which is waterproof, to put under the green roof and under the radiant heated concrete slab in the cellar.\r\n\r\nSo I need about 3600 square feet. I bought 12,500 square feet of insulation!!!! I couldn\'t help it! I got a good deal and I really feel the greenest thing is for me to pay one big truck to bring the stuff to Brooklyn and redistribute it to others instead of everyone getting small trucks (which as it turns out isn\'t cost effective anyway).\r\n\r\nSo bottom line: I have insulation for sale. Lots of it. CHEAP, at least half price. Be green and get some! Contact me for details.\r\n\r\n[caption id="attachment_290" align="alignnone" width="500" caption="unloading the insulation from the 53 foot 18 wheeler"]
[/caption]\r\n\r\n[caption id="attachment_291" align="alignnone" width="500" caption="making space"]
[/caption]\r\n\r\n[caption id="attachment_292" align="alignnone" width="500" caption="starting to pack the insulation"]
[/caption]\r\n\r\n[caption id="attachment_293" align="alignnone" width="500" caption="getting full"]
[/caption]\r\n\r\n[caption id="attachment_295" align="alignnone" width="500" caption="taking over the yard"]
[/caption]', 'Insulation Has Arrived!', 0, '', 'publish', 'open', 'open', '', 'insulation-arrived', '', '', '2008-11-24 08:01:11', '2008-11-24 14:01:11', '', 0, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/?p=288', 0, 'post', '', 4) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (289, 1, '2008-11-20 17:43:16', '2008-11-20 23:43:16', '', 'insulation-gennaro-brooks-c', 0, 'Insulation from Eco Brooklyn Inc with Gennaro Brooks-Church', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'insulation-gennaro-brooks-c', '', '', '2008-11-20 17:43:16', '2008-11-20 23:43:16', '', 288, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/insulation-gennaro-brooks-c.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (290, 1, '2008-11-20 17:44:51', '2008-11-20 23:44:51', '', 'Unloading from Truck', 0, 'unloading the insulation from the 53 foot 18 wheeler', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'p1000687', '', '', '2008-11-20 17:44:51', '2008-11-20 23:44:51', '', 288, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/p1000687.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (291, 1, '2008-11-20 17:46:08', '2008-11-20 23:46:08', '', 'making space', 0, 'making space', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'p1000689', '', '', '2008-11-20 17:46:08', '2008-11-20 23:46:08', '', 288, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/p1000689.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (292, 1, '2008-11-20 17:46:49', '2008-11-20 23:46:49', '', 'more insulation', 0, 'starting to pack the insulation', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'p1000690', '', '', '2008-11-20 17:46:49', '2008-11-20 23:46:49', '', 288, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/p1000690.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (293, 1, '2008-11-20 17:47:38', '2008-11-20 23:47:38', '', 'getting full', 0, 'getting full', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'p1000691', '', '', '2008-11-20 17:47:38', '2008-11-20 23:47:38', '', 288, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/p1000691.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (294, 1, '2008-11-20 17:55:48', '2008-11-20 23:55:48', '', 'two types of insulation', 0, 'two types of insulation', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'p10006911', '', '', '2008-11-20 17:55:48', '2008-11-20 23:55:48', '', 288, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/p10006911.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (295, 1, '2008-11-20 17:58:40', '2008-11-20 23:58:40', '', 'taking over the yard', 0, 'taking over the yard', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'p1000700smaller', '', '', '2008-11-20 17:58:40', '2008-11-20 23:58:40', '', 288, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/p1000700smaller.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (300, 1, '2008-11-12 14:42:26', '2008-11-12 20:42:26', 'Eco Brooklyn Inc. is an alternative GREEN CONSTRUCTION and REAL ESTATE development company in the Brooklyn area.\r\n\r\nEco Brooklyn\'s Director is Gennaro Brooks-Church, a Licensed Real Estate Broker and Contractor. He can be reached at 347-244-3016. \r\n\r\n
', 'Green Real Estate Development', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '8-revision-34', '', '', '2008-11-12 14:42:26', '2008-11-12 20:42:26', '', 8, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/8-revision-34/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (296, 1, '2008-11-20 18:00:33', '2008-11-21 00:00:33', 'Here is Gennaro Brooks-Church standing on his mountain of insulation:\n[caption id="attachment_289" align="alignnleft" width="341" caption="Insulation from Eco Brooklyn Inc with Gennaro Brooks-Church"]
[/caption]\n\nGreen Building is like life: it is all about energy. How you control it, who has it, where it is flowing, and where it isn\'t flowing. You control the energy and you have a great house (possibly a great life too).\n\nSo obviously insulation plays a huge part ini green building. Green building typically insulates a lot more than normal building. We\'d rather spend more up front and less later in utility bills. Utility bills are wasteful and in imperfection. Ideally we will get to the point that houses are built so well that you don\'t have any utility bills.\n\nIn terms of insulation there are many choices. Of course fiberglass batts are out. They have a lot of embodied energy, most off gas formaldehyde and they don\'t even insulate well. \n\nIcenyne spray foam is touted as green and although it seals well it is so not green. That is the biggest scam in the green building industry. All spray foam is made from petro chemicals, even the so called soy based foam that has at most 30% soy and 70% petrolium. The main ingredient for all of them is isocyanate, which is only made by four multy billion dollar companies and it is basically oil.\n\nThe greenest insulation is cellulose. Recycled paper. Recycled is always the greenest way to go.\n\nBUT all insulation, foam, fiberglass and cellulose only gets around an R4 per inch and in space starved Brooklyn I wanted more. I found a company that sells once used (READ RECYCLED) foam board called POLYISO. At only 1.5 inches thick it packs at least an R9 and is by far the best R value out there.\n\nAnd because it is once used it has already off gassed any small amounts of VOC\'s it might have had.\n\nI need about 2000 square feet of it. I\'m going to put 4 layers in the roof plus a radiant barrier to make a whopping R36 and this does not include the green roof on top. Insulating the roof is so important.\n\nThen I\'m going to put one layer in the external walls. With the one foot of brick that will be an R21.\n\nI also have to put it around the border of the building on every floor between the joists to keep the radiant heat in my house.\n\nI also need 1600 square feet of Extruded Polystyrine, which is waterproof, to put under the green roof and under the radiant heated concrete slab in the cellar.\n\nSo I need about 3600 square feet. I bought 12,500 square feet of insulation!!!! I couldn\'t help it! I got a good deal and I really feel the greenest thing is for me to pay one big truck to bring the stuff to Brooklyn and redistribute it to others instead of everyone getting small trucks (which as it turns out isn\'t cost effective anyway).\n\nSo bottom line: I have insulation for sale. Lots of it. CHEAP, at least half price. Be green and get some! Contact me for details.\n\nHere we are unloading the insulation from the truck. Look how big the truck is! It was a bitch fitting it into the streets of Ca\n[caption id="attachment_290" align="alignnone" width="500" caption="unloading the insulation from the 53 foot 18 wheeler"]
[/caption]\n\n[caption id="attachment_291" align="alignnone" width="500" caption="making space"]
[/caption]\n\n[caption id="attachment_292" align="alignnone" width="500" caption="starting to pack the insulation"]
[/caption]\n\n[caption id="attachment_293" align="alignnone" width="500" caption="getting full"]
[/caption]\n\nHere you can see two types of insulation. To the right is the PolyISO 1.5 inch. To the left is the Extruded polystyrene, or XEPS, which I got in 1 inch and 3 inch: \n[caption id="attachment_294" align="alignnone" width="500" caption="two types of insulation"]
[/caption]\n\nHere it is filling up the yard:\n[caption id="attachment_295" align="alignnone" width="500" caption="taking over the yard"]
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INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (299, 1, '2008-11-20 18:37:54', '2008-11-21 00:37:54', '', 'Eco Brooklyn is a member of the American Solar Energy Society', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'ases_home_banner', '', '', '2008-11-20 18:37:54', '2008-11-21 00:37:54', '', 8, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/ases_home_banner.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (297, 1, '2008-11-24 08:00:39', '2008-11-24 14:00:39', '[caption id="attachment_289" align="alignnleft" width="341" caption="Insulation from Eco Brooklyn Inc with Gennaro Brooks-Church"]
[/caption]\n\nGreen Building is like life: it is all about energy. How you control it, who has it, where it is flowing, and where it isn\'t flowing. You control the energy and you have a great house (possibly a great life too).\n\nSo obviously insulation plays a huge part ini green building. Green building typically insulates a lot more than normal building. We\'d rather spend more up front and less later in utility bills. Utility bills are wasteful and in imperfection. Ideally we will get to the point that houses are built so well that you don\'t have any utility bills.\n\nIn terms of insulation there are many choices. Of course fiberglass batts are out. They have a lot of embodied energy, most off gas formaldehyde and they don\'t even insulate well. \n\nIcenyne spray foam is touted as green and although it seals well it is so not green. That is the biggest scam in the green building industry. All spray foam is made from petro chemicals, even the so called soy based foam that has at most 30% soy and 70% petrolium. The main ingredient for all of them is isocyanate, which is only made by four multy billion dollar companies and it is basically oil.\n\nThe greenest insulation is cellulose. Recycled paper. Recycled is always the greenest way to go.\n\nBUT all insulation, foam, fiberglass and cellulose only gets around an R4 per inch and in space starved Brooklyn I wanted more. I found a company that sells once used (READ RECYCLED) foam board called POLYISO. Read this to see how great it is. At only 1.5 inches thick it packs at least an R9 and is by far the best R value out there.\n\nAnd because it is once used it has already off gassed any small amounts of VOC\'s it might have had.\n\nI need about 2000 square feet of it. I\'m going to put 4 layers in the roof plus a radiant barrier to make a whopping R36 and this does not include the green roof on top. Insulating the roof is so important.\n\nThen I\'m going to put one layer in the external walls. With the one foot of brick that will be an R21.\n\nI also have to put it around the border of the building on every floor between the joists to keep the radiant heat in my house.\n\nI also need 1600 square feet of Extruded Polystyrine, which is waterproof, to put under the green roof and under the radiant heated concrete slab in the cellar.\n\nSo I need about 3600 square feet. I bought 12,500 square feet of insulation!!!! I couldn\'t help it! I got a good deal and I really feel the greenest thing is for me to pay one big truck to bring the stuff to Brooklyn and redistribute it to others instead of everyone getting small trucks (which as it turns out isn\'t cost effective anyway).\n\nSo bottom line: I have insulation for sale. Lots of it. CHEAP, at least half price. Be green and get some! Contact me for details.\n\n[caption id="attachment_290" align="alignnone" width="500" caption="unloading the insulation from the 53 foot 18 wheeler"]
[/caption]\n\n[caption id="attachment_291" align="alignnone" width="500" caption="making space"]
[/caption]\n\n[caption id="attachment_292" align="alignnone" width="500" caption="starting to pack the insulation"]
[/caption]\n\n[caption id="attachment_293" align="alignnone" width="500" caption="getting full"]
[/caption]\n\n[caption id="attachment_295" align="alignnone" width="500" caption="taking over the yard"]
[/caption]', 'Insulation Has Arrived!', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '288-autosave', '', '', '2008-11-24 08:00:39', '2008-11-24 14:00:39', '', 288, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/288-autosave/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (298, 1, '2008-11-20 18:01:05', '2008-11-21 00:01:05', 'Here is Gennaro Brooks-Church standing on his mountain of insulation:\r\n[caption id="attachment_289" align="alignnleft" width="341" caption="Insulation from Eco Brooklyn Inc with Gennaro Brooks-Church"]
[/caption]\r\n\r\nGreen Building is like life: it is all about energy. How you control it, who has it, where it is flowing, and where it isn\'t flowing. You control the energy and you have a great house (possibly a great life too).\r\n\r\nSo obviously insulation plays a huge part ini green building. Green building typically insulates a lot more than normal building. We\'d rather spend more up front and less later in utility bills. Utility bills are wasteful and in imperfection. Ideally we will get to the point that houses are built so well that you don\'t have any utility bills.\r\n\r\nIn terms of insulation there are many choices. Of course fiberglass batts are out. They have a lot of embodied energy, most off gas formaldehyde and they don\'t even insulate well. \r\n\r\nIcenyne spray foam is touted as green and although it seals well it is so not green. That is the biggest scam in the green building industry. All spray foam is made from petro chemicals, even the so called soy based foam that has at most 30% soy and 70% petrolium. The main ingredient for all of them is isocyanate, which is only made by four multy billion dollar companies and it is basically oil.\r\n\r\nThe greenest insulation is cellulose. Recycled paper. Recycled is always the greenest way to go.\r\n\r\nBUT all insulation, foam, fiberglass and cellulose only gets around an R4 per inch and in space starved Brooklyn I wanted more. I found a company that sells once used (READ RECYCLED) foam board called POLYISO. At only 1.5 inches thick it packs at least an R9 and is by far the best R value out there.\r\n\r\nAnd because it is once used it has already off gassed any small amounts of VOC\'s it might have had.\r\n\r\nI need about 2000 square feet of it. I\'m going to put 4 layers in the roof plus a radiant barrier to make a whopping R36 and this does not include the green roof on top. Insulating the roof is so important.\r\n\r\nThen I\'m going to put one layer in the external walls. With the one foot of brick that will be an R21.\r\n\r\nI also have to put it around the border of the building on every floor between the joists to keep the radiant heat in my house.\r\n\r\nI also need 1600 square feet of Extruded Polystyrine, which is waterproof, to put under the green roof and under the radiant heated concrete slab in the cellar.\r\n\r\nSo I need about 3600 square feet. I bought 12,500 square feet of insulation!!!! I couldn\'t help it! I got a good deal and I really feel the greenest thing is for me to pay one big truck to bring the stuff to Brooklyn and redistribute it to others instead of everyone getting small trucks (which as it turns out isn\'t cost effective anyway).\r\n\r\nSo bottom line: I have insulation for sale. Lots of it. CHEAP, at least half price. Be green and get some! Contact me for details.\r\n\r\nHere we are unloading the insulation from the truck. Look how big the truck is! It was a bitch fitting it into the streets of Carroll Gardens:\r\n[caption id="attachment_290" align="alignnone" width="500" caption="unloading the insulation from the 53 foot 18 wheeler"]
[/caption]\r\n\r\nLaying the spot:\r\n[caption id="attachment_291" align="alignnone" width="500" caption="making space"]
[/caption]\r\n\r\nFilling the spot:\r\n[caption id="attachment_292" align="alignnone" width="500" caption="starting to pack the insulation"]
[/caption]\r\n\r\nAnd Filling:\r\n[caption id="attachment_293" align="alignnone" width="500" caption="getting full"]
[/caption]\r\n\r\nHere you can see two types of insulation. To the right is the PolyISO 1.5 inch. To the left is the Extruded polystyrene, or XEPS, which I got in 1 inch and 3 inch: \r\n[caption id="attachment_294" align="alignnone" width="500" caption="two types of insulation"]
[/caption]\r\n\r\nHere it is filling up the yard:\r\n[caption id="attachment_295" align="alignnone" width="500" caption="taking over the yard"]
[/caption]', 'Insulation Has Arrived!', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '288-revision-2', '', '', '2008-11-20 18:01:05', '2008-11-21 00:01:05', '', 288, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/288-revision-2/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (303, 1, '2008-11-20 18:47:29', '2008-11-21 00:47:29', 'Eco Brooklyn Inc. is an alternative GREEN CONSTRUCTION and REAL ESTATE development company in the Brooklyn area.\r\n\r\n
Eco Brooklyn is directed by Gennaro Brooks-Church, licensed Real Estate Broker, EcoBroker® and General Contractor. Other team members are brought in depending on the job.\r\n\r\nWe work in the following mediums:\r\n\r\nRecycled Flooring and Timber\r\nRadiant Heat\r\nSustainable Flooring\r\nFiberglass Windows\r\nFoam Insulation\r\nSolar Water Heating\r\nSolar Electricity\r\nGreen Roofs\r\nHigh Efficiency Boilers\r\nHeat On Demand Boilers\r\nEcological Counter Tops\r\nSoapstone Fireplaces\r\n\r\nWe can also help in these services:\r\n\r\nArchitectural Plans\r\nJob Expediting\r\nEnergy Audits\r\nJob Management\r\nGreen Real Estate Sales and Rentals', 'About Us', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '2-revision-11', '', '', '2008-11-20 18:47:29', '2008-11-21 00:47:29', '', 2, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/2-revision-11/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (304, 1, '2008-11-20 18:50:32', '2008-11-21 00:50:32', '', 'eco-brooklyn-logo', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'eco-brooklyn-back-small', '', '', '2008-11-20 18:50:32', '2008-11-21 00:50:32', '', 2, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/eco-brooklyn-back-small.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (305, 1, '2008-11-20 18:48:12', '2008-11-21 00:48:12', 'Eco Brooklyn Inc. is an alternative GREEN CONSTRUCTION and REAL ESTATE development company in the Brooklyn area.\r\n\r\n
Eco Brooklyn is directed by Gennaro Brooks-Church, licensed Real Estate Broker, EcoBroker® and General Contractor. Other team members are brought in depending on the job.\r\n\r\nWe work in the following mediums:\r\n\r\nRecycled Flooring and Timber\r\nRadiant Heat\r\nSustainable Flooring\r\nFiberglass Windows\r\nFoam Insulation\r\nSolar Water Heating\r\nSolar Electricity\r\nGreen Roofs\r\nHigh Efficiency Boilers\r\nHeat On Demand Boilers\r\nEcological Counter Tops\r\nSoapstone Fireplaces\r\n\r\nWe can also help in these services:\r\n\r\nArchitectural Plans\r\nJob Expediting\r\nEnergy Audits\r\nJob Management\r\nGreen Real Estate Sales and Rentals', 'About Us', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '2-revision-12', '', '', '2008-11-20 18:48:12', '2008-11-21 00:48:12', '', 2, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/2-revision-12/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (306, 1, '2008-11-20 18:50:50', '2008-11-21 00:50:50', '
Eco Brooklyn Inc. is an alternative GREEN CONSTRUCTION and REAL ESTATE development company in the Brooklyn area.\r\n\r\n
Eco Brooklyn is directed by Gennaro Brooks-Church, licensed Real Estate Broker, EcoBroker® and General Contractor. Other team members are brought in depending on the job.\r\n\r\nWe work in the following mediums:\r\n\r\nRecycled Flooring and Timber\r\nRadiant Heat\r\nSustainable Flooring\r\nFiberglass Windows\r\nFoam Insulation\r\nSolar Water Heating\r\nSolar Electricity\r\nGreen Roofs\r\nHigh Efficiency Boilers\r\nHeat On Demand Boilers\r\nEcological Counter Tops\r\nSoapstone Fireplaces\r\n\r\nWe can also help in these services:\r\n\r\nArchitectural Plans\r\nJob Expediting\r\nEnergy Audits\r\nJob Management\r\nGreen Real Estate Sales and Rentals', 'About Us', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '2-revision-13', '', '', '2008-11-20 18:50:50', '2008-11-21 00:50:50', '', 2, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/2-revision-13/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (307, 1, '2008-11-20 18:51:15', '2008-11-21 00:51:15', '
\r\nEco Brooklyn Inc. is an alternative GREEN CONSTRUCTION and REAL ESTATE development company in the Brooklyn area.\r\n\r\n
\r\nEco Brooklyn is directed by Gennaro Brooks-Church, licensed Real Estate Broker, EcoBroker® and General Contractor. Other team members are brought in depending on the job.\r\n\r\nWe work in the following mediums:\r\n\r\nRecycled Flooring and Timber\r\nRadiant Heat\r\nSustainable Flooring\r\nFiberglass Windows\r\nFoam Insulation\r\nSolar Water Heating\r\nSolar Electricity\r\nGreen Roofs\r\nHigh Efficiency Boilers\r\nHeat On Demand Boilers\r\nEcological Counter Tops\r\nSoapstone Fireplaces\r\n\r\nWe can also help in these services:\r\n\r\nArchitectural Plans\r\nJob Expediting\r\nEnergy Audits\r\nJob Management\r\nGreen Real Estate Sales and Rentals', 'About Us', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '2-revision-14', '', '', '2008-11-20 18:51:15', '2008-11-21 00:51:15', '', 2, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/2-revision-14/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (311, 1, '2008-11-20 19:24:44', '2008-11-21 01:24:44', 'To phone Gennaro Brooks-Church please call 347 244 3016 from 9-5.\n\n[easy-contact]', 'Contact Us', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '310-autosave', '', '', '2008-11-20 19:24:44', '2008-11-21 01:24:44', '', 310, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/310-autosave/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (317, 1, '2008-11-20 19:23:41', '2008-11-21 01:23:41', 'To phone Gennaro Brooks-Church please call 347 244 3016 from 9-5.\r\n\r\n[easy-contact]\r\n\r\nWe look forward to speaking with you.', 'Contact Us', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '310-revision-3', '', '', '2008-11-20 19:23:41', '2008-11-21 01:23:41', '', 310, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/310-revision-3/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (312, 1, '2008-11-20 18:56:58', '2008-11-21 00:56:58', 'To contact Gennaro Brooks-Church please call 347 244 3016 from 9-5.\r\n\r\nTo email us please email info@ecobrooklyn.com.\r\n\r\nWe look forward to speaking with you.', 'Contact Us', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '310-revision', '', '', '2008-11-20 18:56:58', '2008-11-21 00:56:58', '', 310, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/310-revision/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (310, 1, '2008-11-20 18:56:58', '2008-11-21 00:56:58', 'To phone Gennaro Brooks-Church please call 347 244 3016 from 9-5. Our email is "info at ecobrooklyn dot com"\r\n\r\n[easy-contact]\r\n\r\n
Why buy new insulation when you can get great salvaged insulation for 60% less? It keeps it out of landfills, lessens having to make new insulation, the insulation has already off gassed any possible VOC\'s, you can use it for LEED credits, and the insulation is an amazing R6/inch (no other insulation gets that), which is great for space starved Brooklyn. It is clearly the greenest, cheapest, and most intelligent option.\r\n\r\nFor sale is PolyISO 4x8 board. It is 1.5 inch thick natural facer (no foil) with a total of R9 insulation value. It is once used but in great shape and just as effective as the new stuff. The price is $10/sheet (60% savings).\r\n\r\nWe also have waterproof blue Extruded Polistyrene, which is great for under concrete slabs or under green roofs.\r\n\r\nContact us for details and purchase.\r\n\r\n
', 'For Sale: Recycled Insulation!', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '8-revision-37', '', '', '2008-11-20 19:15:13', '2008-11-21 01:15:13', '', 8, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/8-revision-37/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (313, 1, '2008-11-20 19:12:32', '2008-11-21 01:12:32', '', 'XEPS and POLYISO', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'p10006912', '', '', '2008-11-20 19:12:32', '2008-11-21 01:12:32', '', 8, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/p10006912.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (314, 1, '2008-11-20 18:38:29', '2008-11-21 00:38:29', 'Eco Brooklyn Inc. is an alternative GREEN CONSTRUCTION and REAL ESTATE development company in the Brooklyn area.\r\n\r\nEco Brooklyn\'s Director is Gennaro Brooks-Church, a Licensed Real Estate Broker and Contractor. He can be reached at 347-244-3016. \r\n\r\n
', 'Green Real Estate Development', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '8-revision-35', '', '', '2008-11-20 18:38:29', '2008-11-21 00:38:29', '', 8, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/8-revision-35/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (315, 1, '2008-11-20 19:14:06', '2008-11-21 01:14:06', '
Why buy new insulation when you can get great salvaged insulation for 60% less? It keeps it out of landfills, lessens having to make new insulation, the insulation has already off gassed any possible VOC\'s, you can use it for LEED credits, and the insulation is an amazing R6/inch (no other insulation gets that), which is great for space starved Brooklyn. It is clearly the greenest, cheapest, and most intelligent option.\r\n\r\nFor sale is PolyISO 4x8 board. It is 1.5 inch thick natural facer (no foil) with a total of R9 insulation value. It is once used but in great shape and just as effective as the new stuff. The price is $10/sheet (60% savings).\r\n\r\nWe also have waterproof blue Extruded Polistyrene, which is great for under concrete slabs or under green roofs.\r\n\r\nContact us for details and purchase.\r\n\r\n
', 'For Sale: Recycled Insulation!', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '8-revision-36', '', '', '2008-11-20 19:14:06', '2008-11-21 01:14:06', '', 8, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/8-revision-36/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (316, 1, '2008-11-20 19:05:04', '2008-11-21 01:05:04', 'To contact Gennaro Brooks-Church please call 347 244 3016 from 9-5.\r\n\r\nTo email us please email "info at ecobrooklyn dot com"\r\n\r\nWe look forward to speaking with you.', 'Contact Us', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '310-revision-2', '', '', '2008-11-20 19:05:04', '2008-11-21 01:05:04', '', 310, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/310-revision-2/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (319, 1, '2008-11-20 18:03:49', '2008-11-21 00:03:49', '[caption id="attachment_289" align="alignnleft" width="341" caption="Insulation from Eco Brooklyn Inc with Gennaro Brooks-Church"]
[/caption]\r\n\r\nGreen Building is like life: it is all about energy. How you control it, who has it, where it is flowing, and where it isn\'t flowing. You control the energy and you have a great house (possibly a great life too).\r\n\r\nSo obviously insulation plays a huge part ini green building. Green building typically insulates a lot more than normal building. We\'d rather spend more up front and less later in utility bills. Utility bills are wasteful and in imperfection. Ideally we will get to the point that houses are built so well that you don\'t have any utility bills.\r\n\r\nIn terms of insulation there are many choices. Of course fiberglass batts are out. They have a lot of embodied energy, most off gas formaldehyde and they don\'t even insulate well. \r\n\r\nIcenyne spray foam is touted as green and although it seals well it is so not green. That is the biggest scam in the green building industry. All spray foam is made from petro chemicals, even the so called soy based foam that has at most 30% soy and 70% petrolium. The main ingredient for all of them is isocyanate, which is only made by four multy billion dollar companies and it is basically oil.\r\n\r\nThe greenest insulation is cellulose. Recycled paper. Recycled is always the greenest way to go.\r\n\r\nBUT all insulation, foam, fiberglass and cellulose only gets around an R4 per inch and in space starved Brooklyn I wanted more. I found a company that sells once used (READ RECYCLED) foam board called POLYISO. At only 1.5 inches thick it packs at least an R9 and is by far the best R value out there.\r\n\r\nAnd because it is once used it has already off gassed any small amounts of VOC\'s it might have had.\r\n\r\nI need about 2000 square feet of it. I\'m going to put 4 layers in the roof plus a radiant barrier to make a whopping R36 and this does not include the green roof on top. Insulating the roof is so important.\r\n\r\nThen I\'m going to put one layer in the external walls. With the one foot of brick that will be an R21.\r\n\r\nI also have to put it around the border of the building on every floor between the joists to keep the radiant heat in my house.\r\n\r\nI also need 1600 square feet of Extruded Polystyrine, which is waterproof, to put under the green roof and under the radiant heated concrete slab in the cellar.\r\n\r\nSo I need about 3600 square feet. I bought 12,500 square feet of insulation!!!! I couldn\'t help it! I got a good deal and I really feel the greenest thing is for me to pay one big truck to bring the stuff to Brooklyn and redistribute it to others instead of everyone getting small trucks (which as it turns out isn\'t cost effective anyway).\r\n\r\nSo bottom line: I have insulation for sale. Lots of it. CHEAP, at least half price. Be green and get some! Contact me for details.\r\n\r\n[caption id="attachment_290" align="alignnone" width="500" caption="unloading the insulation from the 53 foot 18 wheeler"]
[/caption]\r\n\r\n[caption id="attachment_291" align="alignnone" width="500" caption="making space"]
[/caption]\r\n\r\n[caption id="attachment_292" align="alignnone" width="500" caption="starting to pack the insulation"]
[/caption]\r\n\r\n[caption id="attachment_293" align="alignnone" width="500" caption="getting full"]
[/caption]\r\n\r\n[caption id="attachment_295" align="alignnone" width="500" caption="taking over the yard"]
[/caption]', 'Insulation Has Arrived!', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '288-revision-3', '', '', '2008-11-20 18:03:49', '2008-11-21 00:03:49', '', 288, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/288-revision-3/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (320, 1, '2008-11-24 13:13:05', '2008-11-24 19:13:05', 'There are a lot of radiant heat companies out there. The abundance can be confusing. We have found that certain stores offer the best of certain products.\r\n\r\nHere is an example for an order form from one of our vendors:\r\n\r\n
', 'Ordering Radiant Heat Materials', 0, '', 'publish', 'open', 'open', '', 'ordering-radiant-heat-materials', '', '', '2009-01-08 19:50:13', '2009-01-09 01:50:13', '', 0, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/?p=320', 0, 'post', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (321, 1, '2008-11-24 13:12:25', '2008-11-24 19:12:25', '', 'radiant-order', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'radiant-order', '', '', '2008-11-24 13:12:25', '2008-11-24 19:12:25', '', 320, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/radiant-order.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (322, 1, '2008-11-24 13:12:59', '2008-11-24 19:12:59', 'There are a lot of radiant heat companies out there. The abundance can be confusing. We have found that certain stores offer the best of certain products.\n\nHere is an example for an order form from one of our vendors:\n\n
', 'Ordering Radiant Heat Materials', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '320-revision', '', '', '2008-11-24 13:12:59', '2008-11-24 19:12:59', '', 320, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/320-revision/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (323, 1, '2008-11-20 18:51:46', '2008-11-21 00:51:46', '
\r\nEco Brooklyn Inc. is an alternative GREEN CONSTRUCTION and REAL ESTATE development company in the Brooklyn area.\r\n\r\n
\r\nEco Brooklyn is directed by Gennaro Brooks-Church, licensed Real Estate Broker, EcoBroker® and General Contractor. Other team members are brought in depending on the job.\r\n\r\nWe work in the following mediums:\r\n\r\nRecycled Flooring and Timber\r\nRadiant Heat\r\nSustainable Flooring\r\nFiberglass Windows\r\nFoam Insulation\r\nSolar Water Heating\r\nSolar Electricity\r\nGreen Roofs\r\nHigh Efficiency Boilers\r\nHeat On Demand Boilers\r\nEcological Counter Tops\r\nSoapstone Fireplaces\r\n\r\nWe can also help in these services:\r\n\r\nArchitectural Plans\r\nJob Expediting\r\nEnergy Audits\r\nJob Management\r\nGreen Real Estate Sales and Rentals', 'About Us', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '2-revision-15', '', '', '2008-11-20 18:51:46', '2008-11-21 00:51:46', '', 2, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/2-revision-15/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (324, 1, '2008-11-20 19:24:49', '2008-11-21 01:24:49', 'To phone Gennaro Brooks-Church please call 347 244 3016 from 9-5.\r\n\r\n[easy-contact]', 'Contact Us', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '310-revision-4', '', '', '2008-11-20 19:24:49', '2008-11-21 01:24:49', '', 310, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/310-revision-4/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (325, 1, '2008-11-27 13:44:35', '2008-11-27 19:44:35', 'A renovation usually stems from the need to make a place nicer or a more useful space. It also might include increasing your space. And while you are at it you use healthier materials.\r\n\r\nBut a renovation should also be seen from a house value point of view. Will it increase the value of the house? This is an important question to ask if you ever plan on selling the house. And even if you never plan on selling, a lot of the points below also apply to the amount of money a bank will be willing to lend you in a home equity line of credit.\r\n\r\nHere are some tips to using a renovation to not only get rid of the mold in the bathroom but also to increase your home value:\r\n\r\n1. Renovate with the buyers\' wants in mind. \r\nPut yourself into a possible buyer\'s shoes. Would a buyer appreciate your renovation? According to one study the following things are appreciated: new decks, new siding, kitchen remodel, new windows, bathroom remodel, new bed-and-bath suites in the attic and finished basements.\r\n\r\nBasically, extending the useful space of your home (decks, attics, basements) increases the usable space and is a good thing. Improving the practical elements of the home (kitchen, bath, bed) is also good.\r\n\r\nNon-practical things are not so great: a swimming pool in Minnesota or a movie theater.\r\n\r\n2. Is your upgrade ok for the neighborhood?\r\nBirds of a feather flock together. When it comes to houses it is the same. You want to stay in the same house type as the others on your block. Building a castle on a block that only has two bedroom ranch houses is a bad idea. Anyone who can afford your house will buy it in a better block.\r\n\r\nThe same goes for renovations. If your neighborhood is ultra fancy then maybe a jacuzzi is a good idea but if your neighbors\' idea of cooling off is to unlock the fire hydrant and get wet in the street then stick to a normal bathtub.\r\n\r\n Bottom line: check out what your neighbors are doing first and then copy them. But do it more tastefully, by spending less money and in a more green way. \r\n\r\nAnd generic is better than exotic because it appeals to more people (thus more potential buyers). A gentle white paint color is better than dark fuchsia. \r\n\r\nI\'m not saying your renovation should be shackled to some distant home sale or by what the idiots across the street are doing. But it is worth adding those considerations to the mix. Then you can follow your heart with a larger understanding of the situation.\r\n\r\n3. Where is your neighborhood going?\r\nIs it gentrifying or is the paint peeling? Or better said, is money being put into the houses or not? The best way to judge is by how much work is being done on the houses. \r\n\r\nAre the lots of dumpsters and contractor vans in the neighborhood? That means lots of people are fixing up their houses. That means values will go up and you investing in your house will probably give you a return.\r\n\r\nOr are there lots of for sale signs and broken down cars in the neighborhood? That means people are trying to get the hell out of the shit hole. And the $20k you just spent on the bathroom isn\'t worth the toilet you bought to piss in.\r\n\r\n4. What is your budget?\r\nThe more you spend on the renovation, the more money you would need in order to recoup your money when you sell the house. This is just plain common sense. \r\n\r\nThere are many things in life that are very nice and cost very little and this also applies to your kitchen cabinets. \r\n\r\nA study was done where people were asked to appraise two identical bottles of wine, only they were told that one bottle was expensive and the other was a cheap bottle of wine. They all said the expensive bottle tasted better. Hmmm....\r\n\r\nDon\'t put your insecurities into the renovation. Just because you think your ass is too flabby doesn\'t mean you can make up for it by buying "designer" tiles. It won\'t change your ass, although depending on how shallow your friends are they might actually think your ass looks firmer.\r\n\r\nBottom line: expensive does not mean fancy. Fancy means fancy. Expensive means expensive. Despite what every sales person in the entire world wants you to think, fancy and expensive are not connected. So pick the fancy stuff, not the expensive stuff, and your finances will be grateful.\r\n\r\n5. Go with the trends.\r\nThere are certain long term trends that you can tap into. The obvious one is to build green. In time green will simply be normal and anyone who doesn\'t build green now will have expensive alterations to do later. So building green is a must.\r\n\r\nAnother, also connected to green, is to build with utility prices in mind. Long term oil prices are going up so buying an oil furnace is not smart. Electric prices are going up so the same applies for anything electric in the house. \r\n\r\nNatural gas to some extent and alternative energy prices are going down so setting your house up for alternative energy is smart. Natural gas furnaces and a hookup for solar electric and hot water heating are smart (even if you don\'t install solar, put the lines and tubes there when you have the walls opened up).\r\n\r\nAnd insulate like there is no tomorrow, or actually insulate like tomorrow it will cost a lot to heat and cool your house, because it will. Prices are going up in these areas so counter them by building a house that uses as little energy as possible. This is very important. It is the basis of green.', 'Renovating To Increase House Value', 0, '', 'publish', 'open', 'open', '', 'renovating-increase-house', '', '', '2008-11-27 20:27:29', '2008-11-28 02:27:29', '', 0, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/?p=325', 0, 'post', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (326, 1, '2008-11-27 13:43:36', '2008-11-27 19:43:36', 'A renovation usually stems from the need to make a place nicer or a more useful space. It also might include increasing your space. And while you are at it you use healthier materials.\n\nBut a renovation should also be seen from a house value point of view. Will it increase the value of the house? This is an important question to ask if you ever plan on selling the house. And even if you never plan on selling, a lot of the points below also apply to the amount of money a bank will be willing to lend you in a home equity line of credit.\n\nHere are some tips to using a renovation to not only get rid of the mold in the bathroom but also to increase your home value:\n\n1. Renovate with the buyers\' wants in mind. \nPut yourself into a possible buyer\'s shoes. Would a buyer appreciate your renovation? According to one study the following things are appreciated: new decks, new siding, kitchen remodel, new windows, bathroom remodel, new bed-and-bath suites in the attic and finished basements.\n\nBasically, extending the usefull space of your home (decks, attics, basements) increases the usable space and is a good thing. Improving the practical elements of the home (kitchen, bath, bed) is also good.\n\nNon-practical things are not so great: a swimming pool in Minnesota or a movie theatre.\n\n2. Is your upgrade ok for the neighborhood?\nBirds of a feather flock together. When it comes to houses it is the same. You want to stay in the same house type as the others on your block. Building a castle on a block that only has two bedroom ranch houses is a bad idea. Anyone who can afford your house will buy it in a better block.\n\nThe same goes for renovations. If your neighborhood is ultra fancy then maybe a jacuzzi is a good idea but if your neighbours\' idea of cooling off is to unlock the fire hydrant and get wet in the street then stick to a normal bathtub.\n\n Bottom line: check out what your neighbors are doing first and then copy them. But do it more tastefully, by spending less money and in a more green way. \n\nAnd generic is better than exotic because it appeals to more people (thus more potential buyers). A gentle white paint color is better than dark fuchsia. \n\nI\'m not saying your renovation should be shackled to some distant home sale or by what the idiots across the street are doing. But it is worth adding those considerations to the mix. Then you can follow your heart with a larger understanding of the situation.\n\n3. Where is your neighborhood going?\nIs it gentrifying or is the paint peeling? Or better said, is money being put into the houses or not? The best way to judge is by how much work is being done on the houses. \n\nAre the lots of dumpsters and contractor vans in the neighborhood? That means lots of people are fixing up their houses. That means values will go up and you investing in your house will probably give you a return.\n\nOr are there lots of for sale signs and broken down cars in the neighborhood? That means people are trying to get the hell out of the shit hole. And the $20k you just spent on the bathroom isn\'t worth the toilet you bought to piss in.\n\n4. What is your budget?\nThis is just plain common sense. The more you spend on the renovation, the more money you would need in order to recoup your money when you sell the house.\n\nThere are many things in life that are very nice and cost very little and this also applies to your kitchen cabinets. \n\nA study was done where people were asked to appraise two identical bottles of wine, only they were told that one bottle was expensive and the other was a cheap bottle of wine. They all said the expensive bottle tasted better. Hmmm....\n\nJust because you think your ass is too flabby doesn\'t mean you can make up for it by buying "designer" tiles. It won\'t change your ass, although depending on how shallow your friends are they might actually think your ass looks firmer.\n\nBottom line: expensive does not mean fancy. Fancy means fancy. Expensive means expensive. Despite what every sales person in the entire world wants you to think, fancy and expensive are not connected. So pick the fancy stuff, not the expensive stuff, and your finances will be grateful.\n\n5. Go with the trends.\nThere are certain long term trends that you can tap into. The obvious one is to build green. In time green will simply be normal and anyone who doesn\'t build green now will have expensive alterations to do later. So building green is a must.\n\nAnother, also connected to green, is to build with utility prices in mind. Gas prices are going up so buying a gas furnace is not smart. Electric prices are going up so the same applies for anything electric in the house. \n\nNatural gas and alternative fuel prices are going down so setting your house up for alternative energy is smart. Natural gas furnaces and a hookup for solar electric and hot water heating are smart (even if you don\'t install solar, put the lines and tubes there when the walls are opened up).\n\nInsulate like there is no tomorrow, actually insulate like tomorrow it will cost a lot to heat and cool your house, because it will.', 'Renovating To Increase House Value', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '325-revision', '', '', '2008-11-27 13:43:36', '2008-11-27 19:43:36', '', 325, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/325-revision/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (327, 1, '2008-11-27 14:25:06', '2008-11-27 20:25:06', 'A renovation usually stems from the need to make a place nicer or a more useful space. It also might include increasing your space. And while you are at it you use healthier materials.\n\nBut a renovation should also be seen from a house value point of view. Will it increase the value of the house? This is an important question to ask if you ever plan on selling the house. And even if you never plan on selling, a lot of the points below also apply to the amount of money a bank will be willing to lend you in a home equity line of credit.\n\nHere are some tips to using a renovation to not only get rid of the mold in the bathroom but also to increase your home value:\n\n1. Renovate with the buyers\' wants in mind. \nPut yourself into a possible buyer\'s shoes. Would a buyer appreciate your renovation? According to one study the following things are appreciated: new decks, new siding, kitchen remodel, new windows, bathroom remodel, new bed-and-bath suites in the attic and finished basements.\n\nBasically, extending the useful space of your home (decks, attics, basements) increases the usable space and is a good thing. Improving the practical elements of the home (kitchen, bath, bed) is also good.\n\nNon-practical things are not so great: a swimming pool in Minnesota or a movie theater.\n\n2. Is your upgrade ok for the neighborhood?\nBirds of a feather flock together. When it comes to houses it is the same. You want to stay in the same house type as the others on your block. Building a castle on a block that only has two bedroom ranch houses is a bad idea. Anyone who can afford your house will buy it in a better block.\n\nThe same goes for renovations. If your neighborhood is ultra fancy then maybe a jacuzzi is a good idea but if your neighbors\' idea of cooling off is to unlock the fire hydrant and get wet in the street then stick to a normal bathtub.\n\n Bottom line: check out what your neighbors are doing first and then copy them. But do it more tastefully, by spending less money and in a more green way. \n\nAnd generic is better than exotic because it appeals to more people (thus more potential buyers). A gentle white paint color is better than dark fuchsia. \n\nI\'m not saying your renovation should be shackled to some distant home sale or by what the idiots across the street are doing. But it is worth adding those considerations to the mix. Then you can follow your heart with a larger understanding of the situation.\n\n3. Where is your neighborhood going?\nIs it gentrifying or is the paint peeling? Or better said, is money being put into the houses or not? The best way to judge is by how much work is being done on the houses. \n\nAre the lots of dumpsters and contractor vans in the neighborhood? That means lots of people are fixing up their houses. That means values will go up and you investing in your house will probably give you a return.\n\nOr are there lots of for sale signs and broken down cars in the neighborhood? That means people are trying to get the hell out of the shit hole. And the $20k you just spent on the bathroom isn\'t worth the toilet you bought to piss in.\n\n4. What is your budget?\nThe more you spend on the renovation, the more money you would need in order to recoup your money when you sell the house. This is just plain common sense. \n\nThere are many things in life that are very nice and cost very little and this also applies to your kitchen cabinets. \n\nA study was done where people were asked to appraise two identical bottles of wine, only they were told that one bottle was expensive and the other was a cheap bottle of wine. They all said the expensive bottle tasted better. Hmmm....\n\nDon\'t put your insecurities into the renovation. Just because you think your ass is too flabby doesn\'t mean you can make up for it by buying "designer" tiles. It won\'t change your ass, although depending on how shallow your friends are they might actually think your ass looks firmer.\n\nBottom line: expensive does not mean fancy. Fancy means fancy. Expensive means expensive. Despite what every sales person in the entire world wants you to think, fancy and expensive are not connected. So pick the fancy stuff, not the expensive stuff, and your finances will be grateful.\n\n5. Go with the trends.\nThere are certain long term trends that you can tap into. The obvious one is to build green. In time green will simply be normal and anyone who doesn\'t build green now will have expensive alterations to do later. So building green is a must.\n\nAnother, also connected to green, is to build with utility prices in mind. Long term oil prices are going up so buying an oil furnace is not smart. Electric prices are going up so the same applies for anything electric in the house. \n\nNatural gas to some extent and alternative fuel prices are going down so setting your house up for alternative energy is smart. Natural gas furnaces and a hookup for solar electric and hot water heating are smart (even if you don\'t install solar, put the lines and tubes there when the walls are opened up).\n\nInsulate like there is no tomorrow, actually insulate like tomorrow it will cost a lot to heat and cool your house, because it will. Prices are going up in these areas so counter them by building a house that uses as little energy as possible. This is very important. It is the basis of green.', 'Renovating To Increase House Value', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '325-autosave', '', '', '2008-11-27 14:25:06', '2008-11-27 20:25:06', '', 325, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/325-autosave/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (328, 1, '2008-11-20 20:18:49', '2008-11-21 02:18:49', '
Why buy new insulation when you can get great salvaged insulation for 60% less? It keeps it out of landfills, lessens having to make new insulation, the insulation has already off gassed any possible VOC\'s, you can use it for LEED credits, and the insulation is an amazing R6/inch (no other insulation gets that), which is great for space starved Brooklyn. It is clearly the greenest, cheapest, and most intelligent option.\r\n\r\nFor sale is PolyISO 4x8 board. It is 1.5 inch thick natural facer (no foil) with a total of R9 insulation value. It is once used but in great shape and just as effective as the new stuff. The price is $10/sheet (60% savings).\r\n\r\nWe also have waterproof blue Extruded Polistyrene, which is great for under concrete slabs or under green roofs.\r\n\r\nContact us for details and purchase. To read more, click here.\r\n\r\n
', 'For Sale: Recycled Insulation!', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '8-revision-38', '', '', '2008-11-20 20:18:49', '2008-11-21 02:18:49', '', 8, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/8-revision-38/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (330, 1, '2008-11-27 09:10:52', '2008-11-27 15:10:52', 'To phone Gennaro Brooks-Church please call 347 244 3016 from 9-5. Our email is "info at ecobrooklyn dot com"\r\n\r\n[easy-contact]', 'Contact Us', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '310-revision-5', '', '', '2008-11-27 09:10:52', '2008-11-27 15:10:52', '', 310, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/310-revision-5/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (329, 1, '2008-11-27 13:46:54', '2008-11-27 19:46:54', '
Why buy new insulation when you can get great salvaged insulation for 60% less? It keeps it out of landfills, lessens having to make new insulation, the insulation has already off gassed any possible VOC\'s, you can use it for LEED credits, and the insulation is an amazing R6/inch (no other insulation gets that), which is great for space starved Brooklyn. It is clearly the greenest, cheapest, and most intelligent option.\r\n\r\nFor sale is PolyISO 4x8 board. It is 1.5 inch thick natural facer (no foil) with a total of R9 insulation value. It is once used but in great shape and just as effective as the new stuff. The price is $10/sheet (60% savings).\r\n\r\nWe also have waterproof blue Extruded Polistyrene, which is great for under concrete slabs or under green roofs.\r\n\r\nContact us for details and purchase. To read more, click here.\r\n\r\nProud Member of:\r\n
\r\n\r\n
\r\nEco Brooklyn Inc. is an alternative GREEN REAL ESTATE, RENOVATION & DEVELOPMENT company in the Brooklyn area.\r\n\r\nEco Brooklyn Inc is a green builder. It focuses on building high quality energy efficient structures that last a long time and cost little to run. Attention is put on using sustainable products, recycling, and creating a structure that uses the least amount of energy possible. \r\n\r\nThe company is fully licensed and insured to do Home Improvement work in the state of NY. Insurance includes: Liability, Disability and Workers Compensation. Liability is up to $2 Million.\r\n\r\nWe adhere to the ethics outlined in its membership with Sustainable Business Network New York City. The ethical sustainable business practices are specified in the triple bottom line - People, Planet, and Profit.\r\n\r\n
\r\nEco Brooklyn Inc is run by Gennaro Brooks-Church, a NY Licensed Real Estate Broker and Certified EcoBroker®. All building is done with the value of the home in mind so that not only is the building of high quality but it is also of highest possible monetary value should the owners decide to sell or refinance.\r\n\r\nWe work in the following mediums:\r\n\r\nRecycled Flooring and Timber\r\nRadiant Heat\r\nSustainable Flooring\r\nFiberglass Windows\r\nFoam Insulation\r\nSolar Water Heating\r\nSolar Electricity\r\nGreen Roofs\r\nHigh Efficiency Boilers\r\nHeat On Demand Boilers\r\nEcological Counter Tops\r\nSoapstone Fireplaces\r\n\r\nWe can also help in these services:\r\n\r\nArchitectural Plans\r\nJob Expediting\r\nEnergy Audits\r\nJob Management\r\nGreen Real Estate Sales and Rentals', 'About Us', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '2-revision-16', '', '', '2008-11-27 09:10:09', '2008-11-27 15:10:09', '', 2, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/2-revision-16/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (332, 1, '2008-11-27 13:48:53', '2008-11-27 19:48:53', '
\r\nEco Brooklyn Inc. is an alternative GREEN REAL ESTATE, RENOVATION & DEVELOPMENT company in the Brooklyn area.\r\n\r\nEco Brooklyn Inc is a green builder. It focuses on building high quality energy efficient structures that last a long time and cost little to run. Attention is put on using sustainable products, recycling, and creating a structure that uses the least amount of energy possible. \r\n\r\nThe company is fully licensed and insured to do Home Improvement work in the state of NY. Insurance includes: Liability, Disability and Workers Compensation. Liability is up to $2 Million.\r\n\r\nWe adhere to the ethics outlined in its membership with Sustainable Business Network New York City. The ethical sustainable business practices are specified in the triple bottom line - People, Planet, and Profit.\r\n\r\n
\r\nEco Brooklyn Inc is run by Gennaro Brooks-Church, a NY Licensed Real Estate Broker and Certified EcoBroker®. All building is done with the value of the home in mind so that not only is the building of high quality but it is also of highest possible monetary value should the owners decide to sell or refinance.\r\n\r\nWe work in the following mediums:\r\n\r\nRecycled Flooring and Timber\r\nRadiant Heat\r\nSustainable Flooring\r\nFiberglass Windows\r\nFoam Insulation\r\nSolar Water Heating\r\nSolar Electricity\r\nGreen Roofs\r\nHigh Efficiency Boilers\r\nHeat On Demand Boilers\r\nEcological Counter Tops\r\nSoapstone Fireplaces\r\n\r\nWe can also help in these services:\r\n\r\nArchitectural Plans\r\nJob Expediting\r\nEnergy Audits\r\nJob Management\r\nGreen Real Estate Sales and Rentals\r\n\r\n
\r\nEco Brooklyn Inc. is an alternative GREEN REAL ESTATE, RENOVATION & DEVELOPMENT company in the Brooklyn area.\r\n\r\nEco Brooklyn Inc is a green builder. It focuses on building high quality energy efficient structures that last a long time and cost little to run. Attention is put on using sustainable products, recycling, and creating a structure that uses the least amount of energy possible. \r\n\r\nThe company is fully licensed and insured to do Home Improvement work in the state of NY. Insurance includes: Liability, Disability and Workers Compensation. Liability is up to $2 Million.\r\n\r\nWe adhere to the ethics outlined in its membership with Sustainable Business Network New York City. The ethical sustainable business practices are specified in the triple bottom line - People, Planet, and Profit.\r\n\r\n
\r\nEco Brooklyn Inc is run by Gennaro Brooks-Church, a NY Licensed Real Estate Broker and Certified EcoBroker®. All building is done with the value of the home in mind so that not only is the building of high quality but it is also of highest possible monetary value should the owners decide to sell or refinance.\r\n\r\n
\r\nEco Brooklyn Inc. is an alternative GREEN REAL ESTATE, RENOVATION & DEVELOPMENT company in the Brooklyn area.\r\n\r\nEco Brooklyn Inc is a green builder. It focuses on building high quality energy efficient structures that last a long time and cost little to run. Attention is put on using sustainable products, recycling, and creating a structure that uses the least amount of energy possible. \r\n\r\nThe company is fully licensed and insured to do Home Improvement work in the state of NY. Insurance includes: Liability, Disability and Workers Compensation. Liability is up to $2 Million.\r\n\r\nWe adhere to the ethics outlined in its membership with Sustainable Business Network New York City. The ethical sustainable business practices are specified in the triple bottom line - People, Planet, and Profit.\r\n\r\n
\r\nEco Brooklyn Inc is run by Gennaro Brooks-Church, a NY Licensed Real Estate Broker and Certified EcoBroker®. All building is done with the value of the home in mind so that not only is the building of high quality but it is also of highest possible monetary value should the owners decide to sell or refinance.\r\n\r\n
\r\nEco Brooklyn Inc. is an alternative GREEN REAL ESTATE, RENOVATION & DEVELOPMENT company in the Brooklyn area.\r\n\r\nEco Brooklyn Inc is a green builder. It focuses on building high quality energy efficient structures that last a long time and cost little to run. Attention is put on using sustainable products, recycling, and creating a structure that uses the least amount of energy possible. \r\n\r\nThe company is fully licensed and insured to do Home Improvement work in the state of NY. Insurance includes: Liability, Disability and Workers Compensation. Liability is up to $2 Million.\r\n\r\nWe adhere to the ethics outlined in its membership with Sustainable Business Network New York City. The ethical sustainable business practices are specified in the triple bottom line - People, Planet, and Profit.\r\n\r\n
\r\nEco Brooklyn Inc is run by Gennaro Brooks-Church, a NY Licensed Real Estate Broker and Certified EcoBroker®. All building is done with the value of the home in mind so that not only is the building of high quality but it is also of highest possible monetary value should the owners decide to sell or refinance.\r\n\r\n
\r\nEco Brooklyn Inc. is an alternative GREEN REAL ESTATE, RENOVATION & DEVELOPMENT company in the Brooklyn area.\r\n\r\nEco Brooklyn Inc is a green builder. It focuses on building high quality energy efficient structures that last a long time and cost little to run. Attention is put on using sustainable products, recycling, and creating a structure that uses the least amount of energy possible. \r\n\r\nThe company is fully licensed and insured to do Home Improvement work in the state of NY. Insurance includes: Liability, Disability and Workers Compensation. Liability is up to $2 Million.\r\n\r\nWe adhere to the ethics outlined in its membership with Sustainable Business Network New York City. The ethical sustainable business practices are specified in the triple bottom line - People, Planet, and Profit.\r\n\r\n
\r\nEco Brooklyn Inc is run by Gennaro Brooks-Church, a NY Licensed Real Estate Broker and Certified EcoBroker®. All building is done with the value of the home in mind so that not only is the building of high quality but it is also of highest possible monetary value should the owners decide to sell or refinance.\r\n\r\n
\r\nEco Brooklyn Inc. is an alternative GREEN REAL ESTATE, RENOVATION & DEVELOPMENT company in the Brooklyn area.\r\n\r\nEco Brooklyn Inc is a green builder. It focuses on building high quality energy efficient structures that last a long time and cost little to run. Attention is put on using sustainable products, recycling, and creating a structure that uses the least amount of energy possible. \r\n\r\nThe company is fully licensed and insured to do Home Improvement work in the state of NY. Insurance includes: Liability, Disability and Workers Compensation. Liability is up to $2 Million.\r\n\r\n
\r\nEco Brooklyn Inc is run by Gennaro Brooks-Church, a NY Licensed Real Estate Broker, Certified EcoBroker® and lifetime builder. \r\n\r\nAll building is done with the value of the home in mind so that not only is the building of high quality but it is also of highest possible monetary value should the owners decide to sell or refinance. Special attention is paid to long terms trends so houses are built to increase in value.\r\n\r\nWe adhere to the ethics outlined in its membership with Sustainable Business Network New York City. The ethical sustainable business practices are specified in the triple bottom line - People, Planet, and Profit.\r\n\r\n
\r\nEco Brooklyn Inc. is an GREEN REAL ESTATE, RENOVATION & DEVELOPMENT company in the Brooklyn area.\r\n\r\nIt focuses on building high quality energy efficient structures that last a long time and cost little to run. Attention is put on using sustainable products, recycling, and creating a structure that uses the least amount of energy possible. \r\n\r\nThe company is fully licensed and insured to do Home Improvement work in the state of NY. Insurance includes: Liability, Disability and Workers Compensation. Liability is up to $2 Million.\r\n\r\nIt invests in houses and renovates them as well as helps others renovate their homes.\r\n
\r\nEco Brooklyn Inc is run by Gennaro Brooks-Church, a NY Licensed Real Estate Broker, Certified EcoBroker® and lifetime builder. \r\n\r\nGennaro\'s knowledge of home values means all building is done with the value of the home in mind so that not only is the building of high quality but it is also of highest possible monetary value. Special attention is paid to long terms trends so houses are built to increase in value over time.\r\n\r\nWe adhere to the ethics outlined in its membership with Sustainable Business Network New York City. The ethical sustainable business practices are specified in the triple bottom line - People, Planet, and Profit.\r\n\r\n
Why buy new insulation when you can get great salvaged insulation for 60% less? It keeps it out of landfills, lessens having to make new insulation, the insulation has already off gassed any possible VOC\'s, you can use it for LEED credits, and the insulation is an amazing R6/inch (no other insulation gets that), which is great for space starved Brooklyn. It is clearly the greenest, cheapest, and most intelligent option.\r\n\r\nFor sale is PolyISO 4x8 board. It is 1.5 inch thick natural facer (no foil) with a total of R9 insulation value. It is once used but in great shape and just as effective as the new stuff. The price is $10/sheet (60% savings).\r\n\r\nWe also have waterproof blue Extruded Polistyrene, which is great for under concrete slabs or under green roofs.\r\n\r\nContact us for details and purchase. To read more, click here.\r\n\r\nProud Member of:\r\n
', 'For Sale: Recycled Insulation!', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '8-revision-40', '', '', '2008-11-27 13:47:36', '2008-11-27 19:47:36', '', 8, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/8-revision-40/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (340, 1, '2008-11-27 14:26:54', '2008-11-27 20:26:54', '
Why buy new insulation when you can get great salvaged insulation for 60% less? \r\n\r\nIt keeps it out of landfills, lessens having to make new insulation, the insulation has already off gassed any possible VOC\'s, you can use it for LEED credits, and the insulation is an amazing R6/inch (no other insulation gets that), which is great for space starved Brooklyn. \r\n\r\nIt is clearly the greenest, cheapest, and most intelligent option.\r\n\r\nFor sale is PolyISO 4x8 board. It is 1.5 inch thick natural facer (no foil) with a total of R9 insulation value. It is once used but in great shape and just as effective as the new stuff. The price is $10/sheet (60% savings).\r\n\r\nWe also have waterproof blue Extruded Polistyrene, which is great for under concrete slabs or under green roofs.\r\n\r\nContact us for details and purchase. To read more, click here.\r\n\r\nProud Member of:\r\n
', 'For Sale: Recycled Insulation!', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '8-revision-41', '', '', '2008-11-27 14:26:54', '2008-11-27 20:26:54', '', 8, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/8-revision-41/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (341, 1, '2008-11-27 14:27:37', '2008-11-27 20:27:37', '
Why buy new insulation when you can get great salvaged insulation for 60% less? \r\n\r\nIt keeps it out of landfills, lessens having to make new insulation, the insulation has already off gassed any possible VOC\'s, you can use it for LEED credits, and the insulation is an amazing R6/inch (no other insulation gets that), which is great for space starved Brooklyn. \r\n\r\nIt is clearly the greenest, cheapest, and most intelligent option.\r\n\r\nFor sale is PolyISO 4x8 board. It is 1.5 inch thick natural facer (no foil) with a total of R9 insulation value. It is once used but in great shape and just as effective as the new stuff. The price is $10/sheet (60% savings).\r\n\r\nWe also have waterproof blue Extruded Polistyrene, which is great for under concrete slabs or under green roofs.\r\n\r\nContact us for details and purchase. To read more, click here.\r\n\r\n\r\nWe are a Proud Member of:\r\n
', 'For Sale: Recycled Insulation!', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '8-revision-42', '', '', '2008-11-27 14:27:37', '2008-11-27 20:27:37', '', 8, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/8-revision-42/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (342, 1, '2008-11-27 14:28:23', '2008-11-27 20:28:23', '
Why buy new insulation when you can get great salvaged insulation for 60% less? \r\n\r\nIt keeps it out of landfills, lessens having to make new insulation, the insulation has already off gassed any possible VOC\'s, you can use it for LEED credits, and the insulation is an amazing R6/inch (no other insulation gets that), which is great for space starved Brooklyn. \r\n\r\nIt is clearly the greenest, cheapest, and most intelligent option.\r\n\r\nFor sale is PolyISO 4x8 board. It is 1.5 inch thick natural facer (no foil) with a total of R9 insulation value. It is once used but in great shape and just as effective as the new stuff. The price is $10/sheet (60% savings).\r\n\r\nWe also have waterproof blue Extruded Polistyrene, which is great for under concrete slabs or under green roofs.\r\n\r\nContact us for details and purchase. To read more, click here.\r\n\r\n
\r\nWe are a Proud Member of:
\r\n
', 'For Sale: Recycled Insulation!', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '8-revision-43', '', '', '2008-11-27 14:28:23', '2008-11-27 20:28:23', '', 8, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/8-revision-43/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (343, 1, '2008-11-27 14:28:55', '2008-11-27 20:28:55', '
Why buy new insulation when you can get great salvaged insulation for 60% less? \r\n\r\nIt keeps it out of landfills, lessens having to make new insulation, the insulation has already off gassed any possible VOC\'s, you can use it for LEED credits, and the insulation is an amazing R6/inch (no other insulation gets that), which is great for space starved Brooklyn. \r\n\r\nIt is clearly the greenest, cheapest, and most intelligent option.\r\n\r\nFor sale is PolyISO 4x8 board. It is 1.5 inch thick natural facer (no foil) with a total of R9 insulation value. It is once used but in great shape and just as effective as the new stuff. The price is $10/sheet (60% savings).\r\n\r\nWe also have waterproof blue Extruded Polistyrene, which is great for under concrete slabs or under green roofs.\r\n\r\nContact us for details and purchase. To read more, click here.\r\n\r\n
\r\nWe are a Proud Member of:
\r\n
', 'For Sale: Recycled Insulation!', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '8-revision-44', '', '', '2008-11-27 14:28:55', '2008-11-27 20:28:55', '', 8, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/8-revision-44/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (345, 1, '2008-11-27 14:29:58', '2008-11-27 20:29:58', '
Why buy new insulation when you can get great salvaged insulation for 60% less? \r\n\r\nIt keeps it out of landfills, lessens having to make new insulation, the insulation has already off gassed any possible VOC\'s, you can use it for LEED credits, and the insulation is an amazing R6/inch (no other insulation gets that), which is great for space starved Brooklyn. \r\n\r\nIt is clearly the greenest, cheapest, and most intelligent option.\r\n\r\nFor sale is PolyISO 4x8 board. It is 1.5 inch thick natural facer (no foil) with a total of R9 insulation value. It is once used but in great shape and just as effective as the new stuff. The price is $10/sheet (60% savings).\r\n\r\nWe also have waterproof blue Extruded Polistyrene, which is great for under concrete slabs or under green roofs.\r\n\r\nContact us for details and purchase. To read more, click here.\r\n\r\n
', 'For Sale: Recycled Insulation!', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '8-revision-46', '', '', '2008-11-27 14:29:58', '2008-11-27 20:29:58', '', 8, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/8-revision-46/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (344, 1, '2008-11-27 14:29:26', '2008-11-27 20:29:26', '
Why buy new insulation when you can get great salvaged insulation for 60% less? \r\n\r\nIt keeps it out of landfills, lessens having to make new insulation, the insulation has already off gassed any possible VOC\'s, you can use it for LEED credits, and the insulation is an amazing R6/inch (no other insulation gets that), which is great for space starved Brooklyn. \r\n\r\nIt is clearly the greenest, cheapest, and most intelligent option.\r\n\r\nFor sale is PolyISO 4x8 board. It is 1.5 inch thick natural facer (no foil) with a total of R9 insulation value. It is once used but in great shape and just as effective as the new stuff. The price is $10/sheet (60% savings).\r\n\r\nWe also have waterproof blue Extruded Polistyrene, which is great for under concrete slabs or under green roofs.\r\n\r\nContact us for details and purchase. To read more, click here.\r\n\r\n
\r\nWe are a Proud Member of:
\r\n
', 'For Sale: Recycled Insulation!', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '8-revision-45', '', '', '2008-11-27 14:29:26', '2008-11-27 20:29:26', '', 8, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/8-revision-45/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (346, 1, '2008-11-27 20:07:45', '2008-11-28 02:07:45', 'One of the housing trends I see now and in the future is smaller houses. The large American house is no longer a smart way to live. It made sense when building was cheap, energy was cheap, and labor was cheap.\r\n\r\nBut now only labor remains cheap. It costs a lot more to build and maintain a house now. And with resources such as wood and metal being gobbled up by emerging economies like China, it isn\'t going to get any cheaper to build. Likewise, energy is not going to get any cheaper either. Gone is cheap oil.\r\n\r\nThis means a small house that costs less to build and costs less to heat, cool and light makes real sense.\r\n\r\nAnyone in NY isn\'t going to really make any adjustments because we already live in small houses!\r\n\r\nHere are some tips to making a small house feel spacious:\r\n\r\n1. Declutter\r\nAlong with small houses come the need for less stuff. That bike machine you haven\'t used in four years? The six pairs of old shoes? Get rid of all junk, i.e. stuff you don\'t actually use and use often.\r\n\r\n2. Keep the windows clear\r\nHeavy drapes are good for keeping the cold out but they make a room feel smaller. Translucent white drapes are the best because they brighten the room and bring the outside space in. You can even buy insulated white drapes now. The draps hold air inside them and act as insulation to keep the cold and hot from passing. But they are still translucent so they let the light through.\r\n\r\n3. Use furniture that is light and see-through\r\nThe first thing to consider is if you even need the furniture! But for the furniture you do need, know that clunky thick furniture takes up space and makes a room smaller. A sleek, lighter design adds space to a room. A classic example is a heavy wooden table with thick boarded legs vs. a stainless steel metal frame table with a glass top. The glass top table lets light pass through it and increases the space in the room dramatically.\r\n\r\n4. Lots of light\r\nThe best lights are low watt fluorescent or LED, and lots of them. The LED are good for filling otherwise dark corners. They can be put under kitchen cabinets to light up counters, in bathrooms, entryways, stairs etc. The more dark spaces you have in a room the smaller it feels. Lots of light is really important. Light means electric bill, though, so use colored fluorescent so it actually looks nice and LED, since they eat little electricity.\r\n\r\n5. Remove Doors\r\nDoors take up valuable space and obviously enclose a room. Take away the doors and your rooms will provide views into other rooms, which adds a sense of space. The valuable real estate around the doorway can now be used as well since there isn\'t a swinging door there. If you must have door then a sliding door is a better alternative if possible.\r\n\r\n6. Think colors, or lack of\r\nPaint color effects the space of a room. Basically, dark makes a room smaller and light makes it bigger. Always use a bright white for the ceiling since it reflects the light down. For the walls use bright light colors.\r\n\r\n7. Keep it minimal\r\nSimple is a lot more spacious than cluttered or complicated. This applies to everything: art, furniture, paint colors, styles. Pick simple lines and textures for pillows and furniture. Pick minimalist art styles. The paint colors should be minimal, i.e don\'t have a hundred different colors in the place, keep a simple palate of two or three colors.\r\n\r\n8. Store it!\r\nPut things in drawers, shelves, boxes, closets, under the bed. Keep it out of sight! This means having a good choice of storage areas that fit into the rooms. You don\'t want a huge clunky armoire taking up the whole room. Slender shelves against the wall that go more up than out are better.\r\n\r\nHere is a great example of combining form, function and multiple use. The owners of this table found the driftwood and ball, so the table has personal meaning. Practically it serves as a table. It doubles as art. It is salvaged and incorporated some creativity from the owners to make it (very green!). And also very important, the glass top allows light to highlight the wood as well as pass into the rest of the room.\r\n\r\n
\r\n\r\n9. Multi-task it\r\nLike the driftwood glass table above, try to incorporate more than one use for all the objects and rooms in the house. Gone are the days of formal living rooms or dining rooms. Today the dining room is also the homework room, laptop room, meeting room, and home business room. Incorporating multiples uses and meanings into rooms and objects increases their usefulness and decreases the amount of stuff and space you need. Now that is green! \r\n\r\n10. Scrap the art\r\nIf you pick your objects and homes carefully you may be surrounded by art that is also actually useful. A classic example is a beautiful tea pot given to you by your mother. It is art, functional and emotional warmth all in one. Or how about the house with the amazing view? Who needs paintings when you can look out the window? So spend your money on a beautiful sofa and keep the walls clear. Not only can you admire the sofa but you can doze on it too!', 'Smaller House Trend', 0, '', 'publish', 'open', 'open', '', 'smaller-house-trend', '', '', '2008-11-27 20:27:04', '2008-11-28 02:27:04', '', 0, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/?p=346', 0, 'post', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (347, 1, '2008-11-27 20:07:32', '2008-11-28 02:07:32', 'One of the housing trends I see now and in the future is smaller houses. The large American house is no longer a smart way to live. It made sense when building was cheap, energy was cheap, and labor was cheap.\n\nBut now only labor remains cheap. It costs a lot more to build and maintain a house now. And with resources such as wood and metal being gobbled up by emerging economies like China, it isn\'t going to get any cheaper to build. Likewise, energy is not going to get any cheaper either. Gone is cheap oil.\n\nThis means a small house that costs less to build and costs less to heat, cool and light makes real sense.\n\nAnyone in NY isn\'t going to really make any adjustments because we already live in small houses!\n\nHere are some tips to making a small house feel spacious:\n\n1. Declutter\nAlong with small houses come the need for less stuff. That bike machine you haven\'t used in four years? The six pairs of old shoes? Get rid of all junk, i.e. stuff you don\'t actually use and use often.\n\n2. Keep the windows clear\nHeavy drapes are good for keeping the cold out but they make a room feel smaller. Translucent white drapes are the best because they brighten the room and bring the outside space in. You can even buy insulated white drapes now. The draps hold air inside them and act as insulation to keep the cold and hot from passing. But they are still translucent so they let the light through.\n\n3. Use furniture that is light and see-through\nThe first thing to consider is if you even need the furniture! But for the furniture you do need, know that clunky thick furniture takes up space and makes a room smaller. A sleek, lighter design adds space to a room. A classic example is a heavy wooden table with thick boarded legs vs. a stainless steel metal frame table with a glass top. The glass top table lets light pass through it and increases the space in the room dramatically.\n\n4. Lots of light\nThe best lights are low watt fluorescent or LED, and lots of them. The LED are good for filling otherwise dark corners. They can be put under kitchen cabinets to light up counters, in bathrooms, entryways, stairs etc. The more dark spaces you have in a room the smaller it feels. Lots of light is really important. Light means electric bill, though, so use colored fluorescent so it actually looks nice and LED, since they eat little electricity.\n\n5. Remove Doors\nDoors take up valuable space and obviously enclose a room. Take away the doors and your rooms will provide views into other rooms, which adds a sense of space. The valuable real estate around the doorway can now be used as well since there isn\'t a swinging door there. If you must have door then a sliding door is a better alternative if possible.\n\n6. Think colors, or lack of\nPaint color effects the space of a room. Basically, dark makes a room smaller and light makes it bigger. Always use a bright white for the ceiling since it reflects the light down. For the walls use bright light colors.\n\n7. Keep it minimal\nSimple is a lot more spacious than cluttered or complicated. This applies to everything: art, furniture, paint colors, styles. Pick simple lines and textures for pillows and furniture. Pick minimalist art styles. The paint colors should be minimal, i.e don\'t have a hundred different colors in the place, keep a simple palate of two or three colors.\n\n8. Store it!\nPut things in drawers, shelves, boxes, closets, under the bed. Keep it out of sight! This means having a good choice of storage areas that fit into the rooms. You don\'t want a huge clunky armoire taking up the whole room. Slender shelves against the wall that go more up than out are better.', 'Smaller House Trend', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '346-revision', '', '', '2008-11-27 20:07:32', '2008-11-28 02:07:32', '', 346, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/346-revision/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (348, 1, '2008-11-27 20:26:39', '2008-11-28 02:26:39', 'One of the housing trends I see now and in the future is smaller houses. The large American house is no longer a smart way to live. It made sense when building was cheap, energy was cheap, and labor was cheap.\n\nBut now only labor remains cheap. It costs a lot more to build and maintain a house now. And with resources such as wood and metal being gobbled up by emerging economies like China, it isn\'t going to get any cheaper to build. Likewise, energy is not going to get any cheaper either. Gone is cheap oil.\n\nThis means a small house that costs less to build and costs less to heat, cool and light makes real sense.\n\nAnyone in NY isn\'t going to really make any adjustments because we already live in small houses!\n\nHere are some tips to making a small house feel spacious:\n\n1. Declutter\nAlong with small houses come the need for less stuff. That bike machine you haven\'t used in four years? The six pairs of old shoes? Get rid of all junk, i.e. stuff you don\'t actually use and use often.\n\n2. Keep the windows clear\nHeavy drapes are good for keeping the cold out but they make a room feel smaller. Translucent white drapes are the best because they brighten the room and bring the outside space in. You can even buy insulated white drapes now. The draps hold air inside them and act as insulation to keep the cold and hot from passing. But they are still translucent so they let the light through.\n\n3. Use furniture that is light and see-through\nThe first thing to consider is if you even need the furniture! But for the furniture you do need, know that clunky thick furniture takes up space and makes a room smaller. A sleek, lighter design adds space to a room. A classic example is a heavy wooden table with thick boarded legs vs. a stainless steel metal frame table with a glass top. The glass top table lets light pass through it and increases the space in the room dramatically.\n\n4. Lots of light\nThe best lights are low watt fluorescent or LED, and lots of them. The LED are good for filling otherwise dark corners. They can be put under kitchen cabinets to light up counters, in bathrooms, entryways, stairs etc. The more dark spaces you have in a room the smaller it feels. Lots of light is really important. Light means electric bill, though, so use colored fluorescent so it actually looks nice and LED, since they eat little electricity.\n\n5. Remove Doors\nDoors take up valuable space and obviously enclose a room. Take away the doors and your rooms will provide views into other rooms, which adds a sense of space. The valuable real estate around the doorway can now be used as well since there isn\'t a swinging door there. If you must have door then a sliding door is a better alternative if possible.\n\n6. Think colors, or lack of\nPaint color effects the space of a room. Basically, dark makes a room smaller and light makes it bigger. Always use a bright white for the ceiling since it reflects the light down. For the walls use bright light colors.\n\n7. Keep it minimal\nSimple is a lot more spacious than cluttered or complicated. This applies to everything: art, furniture, paint colors, styles. Pick simple lines and textures for pillows and furniture. Pick minimalist art styles. The paint colors should be minimal, i.e don\'t have a hundred different colors in the place, keep a simple palate of two or three colors.\n\n8. Store it!\nPut things in drawers, shelves, boxes, closets, under the bed. Keep it out of sight! This means having a good choice of storage areas that fit into the rooms. You don\'t want a huge clunky armoire taking up the whole room. Slender shelves against the wall that go more up than out are better.\n\nHere is a great example of combining form, function and multiple use. The owners of this table found the driftwood and ball, so the table has personal meaning. Practically it serves as a table. It doubles as art. It is salvaged and incorporated some creativity from the owners to make it (very green!). And also very important, the glass top allows light to highlight the wood as well as pass into the rest of the room.\n\n
\n\n9. Multi-task it\nLike the driftwood glass table above, try to incorporate more than one use for all the objects and rooms in the house. Gone are the days of formal living rooms or dining rooms. Today the dining room is also the homework room, laptop room, meeting room, and home business room. Incorporating multiples uses and meanings into rooms and objects increases their usefulness and decreases the amount of stuff and space you need. Now that is green! \n\n10. Scrap the art\nIf you pick your objects and homes carefully you may be surrounded by art that is also actually useful. A classic example is a beautiful tea pot given to you by your mother. It is art, functional and emotional warmth all in one. Or how about the house with the amazing view? Who needs paintings when you can look out the window? So spend your money on a beautiful sofa and keep the walls clear. Not only can you admire the sofa but you can sleep on it', 'Smaller House Trend', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '346-autosave', '', '', '2008-11-27 20:26:39', '2008-11-28 02:26:39', '', 346, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/346-autosave/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (349, 1, '2008-11-27 20:18:22', '2008-11-28 02:18:22', '', 'glass-table', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'glass-table', '', '', '2008-11-27 20:18:22', '2008-11-28 02:18:22', '', 346, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/glass-table.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (350, 1, '2008-11-27 20:07:45', '2008-11-28 02:07:45', 'One of the housing trends I see now and in the future is smaller houses. The large American house is no longer a smart way to live. It made sense when building was cheap, energy was cheap, and labor was cheap.\r\n\r\nBut now only labor remains cheap. It costs a lot more to build and maintain a house now. And with resources such as wood and metal being gobbled up by emerging economies like China, it isn\'t going to get any cheaper to build. Likewise, energy is not going to get any cheaper either. Gone is cheap oil.\r\n\r\nThis means a small house that costs less to build and costs less to heat, cool and light makes real sense.\r\n\r\nAnyone in NY isn\'t going to really make any adjustments because we already live in small houses!\r\n\r\nHere are some tips to making a small house feel spacious:\r\n\r\n1. Declutter\r\nAlong with small houses come the need for less stuff. That bike machine you haven\'t used in four years? The six pairs of old shoes? Get rid of all junk, i.e. stuff you don\'t actually use and use often.\r\n\r\n2. Keep the windows clear\r\nHeavy drapes are good for keeping the cold out but they make a room feel smaller. Translucent white drapes are the best because they brighten the room and bring the outside space in. You can even buy insulated white drapes now. The draps hold air inside them and act as insulation to keep the cold and hot from passing. But they are still translucent so they let the light through.\r\n\r\n3. Use furniture that is light and see-through\r\nThe first thing to consider is if you even need the furniture! But for the furniture you do need, know that clunky thick furniture takes up space and makes a room smaller. A sleek, lighter design adds space to a room. A classic example is a heavy wooden table with thick boarded legs vs. a stainless steel metal frame table with a glass top. The glass top table lets light pass through it and increases the space in the room dramatically.\r\n\r\n4. Lots of light\r\nThe best lights are low watt fluorescent or LED, and lots of them. The LED are good for filling otherwise dark corners. They can be put under kitchen cabinets to light up counters, in bathrooms, entryways, stairs etc. The more dark spaces you have in a room the smaller it feels. Lots of light is really important. Light means electric bill, though, so use colored fluorescent so it actually looks nice and LED, since they eat little electricity.\r\n\r\n5. Remove Doors\r\nDoors take up valuable space and obviously enclose a room. Take away the doors and your rooms will provide views into other rooms, which adds a sense of space. The valuable real estate around the doorway can now be used as well since there isn\'t a swinging door there. If you must have door then a sliding door is a better alternative if possible.\r\n\r\n6. Think colors, or lack of\r\nPaint color effects the space of a room. Basically, dark makes a room smaller and light makes it bigger. Always use a bright white for the ceiling since it reflects the light down. For the walls use bright light colors.\r\n\r\n7. Keep it minimal\r\nSimple is a lot more spacious than cluttered or complicated. This applies to everything: art, furniture, paint colors, styles. Pick simple lines and textures for pillows and furniture. Pick minimalist art styles. The paint colors should be minimal, i.e don\'t have a hundred different colors in the place, keep a simple palate of two or three colors.\r\n\r\n8. Store it!\r\nPut things in drawers, shelves, boxes, closets, under the bed. Keep it out of sight! This means having a good choice of storage areas that fit into the rooms. You don\'t want a huge clunky armoire taking up the whole room. Slender shelves against the wall that go more up than out are better.', 'Smaller House Trend', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '346-revision-2', '', '', '2008-11-27 20:07:45', '2008-11-28 02:07:45', '', 346, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/346-revision-2/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (351, 1, '2008-11-27 14:25:59', '2008-11-27 20:25:59', 'A renovation usually stems from the need to make a place nicer or a more useful space. It also might include increasing your space. And while you are at it you use healthier materials.\r\n\r\nBut a renovation should also be seen from a house value point of view. Will it increase the value of the house? This is an important question to ask if you ever plan on selling the house. And even if you never plan on selling, a lot of the points below also apply to the amount of money a bank will be willing to lend you in a home equity line of credit.\r\n\r\nHere are some tips to using a renovation to not only get rid of the mold in the bathroom but also to increase your home value:\r\n\r\n1. Renovate with the buyers\' wants in mind. \r\nPut yourself into a possible buyer\'s shoes. Would a buyer appreciate your renovation? According to one study the following things are appreciated: new decks, new siding, kitchen remodel, new windows, bathroom remodel, new bed-and-bath suites in the attic and finished basements.\r\n\r\nBasically, extending the useful space of your home (decks, attics, basements) increases the usable space and is a good thing. Improving the practical elements of the home (kitchen, bath, bed) is also good.\r\n\r\nNon-practical things are not so great: a swimming pool in Minnesota or a movie theater.\r\n\r\n2. Is your upgrade ok for the neighborhood?\r\nBirds of a feather flock together. When it comes to houses it is the same. You want to stay in the same house type as the others on your block. Building a castle on a block that only has two bedroom ranch houses is a bad idea. Anyone who can afford your house will buy it in a better block.\r\n\r\nThe same goes for renovations. If your neighborhood is ultra fancy then maybe a jacuzzi is a good idea but if your neighbors\' idea of cooling off is to unlock the fire hydrant and get wet in the street then stick to a normal bathtub.\r\n\r\n Bottom line: check out what your neighbors are doing first and then copy them. But do it more tastefully, by spending less money and in a more green way. \r\n\r\nAnd generic is better than exotic because it appeals to more people (thus more potential buyers). A gentle white paint color is better than dark fuchsia. \r\n\r\nI\'m not saying your renovation should be shackled to some distant home sale or by what the idiots across the street are doing. But it is worth adding those considerations to the mix. Then you can follow your heart with a larger understanding of the situation.\r\n\r\n3. Where is your neighborhood going?\r\nIs it gentrifying or is the paint peeling? Or better said, is money being put into the houses or not? The best way to judge is by how much work is being done on the houses. \r\n\r\nAre the lots of dumpsters and contractor vans in the neighborhood? That means lots of people are fixing up their houses. That means values will go up and you investing in your house will probably give you a return.\r\n\r\nOr are there lots of for sale signs and broken down cars in the neighborhood? That means people are trying to get the hell out of the shit hole. And the $20k you just spent on the bathroom isn\'t worth the toilet you bought to piss in.\r\n\r\n4. What is your budget?\r\nThe more you spend on the renovation, the more money you would need in order to recoup your money when you sell the house. This is just plain common sense. \r\n\r\nThere are many things in life that are very nice and cost very little and this also applies to your kitchen cabinets. \r\n\r\nA study was done where people were asked to appraise two identical bottles of wine, only they were told that one bottle was expensive and the other was a cheap bottle of wine. They all said the expensive bottle tasted better. Hmmm....\r\n\r\nDon\'t put your insecurities into the renovation. Just because you think your ass is too flabby doesn\'t mean you can make up for it by buying "designer" tiles. It won\'t change your ass, although depending on how shallow your friends are they might actually think your ass looks firmer.\r\n\r\nBottom line: expensive does not mean fancy. Fancy means fancy. Expensive means expensive. Despite what every sales person in the entire world wants you to think, fancy and expensive are not connected. So pick the fancy stuff, not the expensive stuff, and your finances will be grateful.\r\n\r\n5. Go with the trends.\r\nThere are certain long term trends that you can tap into. The obvious one is to build green. In time green will simply be normal and anyone who doesn\'t build green now will have expensive alterations to do later. So building green is a must.\r\n\r\nAnother, also connected to green, is to build with utility prices in mind. Long term oil prices are going up so buying an oil furnace is not smart. Electric prices are going up so the same applies for anything electric in the house. \r\n\r\nNatural gas to some extent and alternative energy prices are going down so setting your house up for alternative energy is smart. Natural gas furnaces and a hookup for solar electric and hot water heating are smart (even if you don\'t install solar, put the lines and tubes there when you have the walls opened up).\r\n\r\nAnd insulate like there is no tomorrow, or actually insulate like tomorrow it will cost a lot to heat and cool your house, because it will. Prices are going up in these areas so counter them by building a house that uses as little energy as possible. This is very important. It is the basis of green.', 'Renovating To Increase House Value', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '325-revision-3', '', '', '2008-11-27 14:25:59', '2008-11-27 20:25:59', '', 325, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/325-revision-3/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (352, 1, '2008-12-06 19:57:28', '2008-12-07 01:57:28', '"Green" is one of those words that are tossed around all over the place. Here are some concrete green things for a home renovation:\r\n\r\n1. Find a contractor who uses efficient framing techniques to save on wood while still keeping the structure strong.\r\n\r\n2. Find a salvage yard that buys and sells reusable materials, then buy and sell with them as you do your renovation. Sell them the stuff you take out and buy from them the stuff you put back in.\r\n\r\n3. Install energy efficient windows (go triple pane if you can), doors, and appliances.\r\n\r\n4. Build with solar gain in mind: get more sun in the winter and less sun in the summer by using trees (bare in the winter and leafy in the summer) and awnings; Use more windows to the south and less on the north. \r\n\r\n5. Use smart technology in the materials: Optimum Value Engineering techniques to reduce the amount of wood and other materials, low VOC\'s in paints, cabinets, etc, non-formaldehyde in the materials and so on....\r\n\r\n6. Economize: buy local, buy less, build only as much as you need. Stay wholesome and don\'t try to keep up with the Joneses: build what you need practically, not what you think will impress people.', 'Green Home Building - what is it?', 0, '', 'publish', 'open', 'open', '', 'green-home-building-it', '', '', '2008-12-06 19:57:28', '2008-12-07 01:57:28', '', 0, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/?p=352', 0, 'post', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (353, 1, '2008-12-06 19:57:16', '2008-12-07 01:57:16', '"Green" is one of those words that are tossed around all over the place. Here are some concrete green things for a home renovation:\n\n1. Find a contractor who uses efficient framing techniques to save on wood while still keeping the structure strong.\n\n2. Find a salvage yard that buys and sells reusable materials, then buy and sell with them as you do your renovation. Sell them the stuff you take out and buy from them the stuff you put back in.\n\n3. Install energy efficient windows (go triple pane if you can), doors, and appliances.\n\n4. Build with solar gain in mind: get more sun in the winter and less sun in the summer by using trees (bare in the winter and leafy in the summer) and awnings; Use more windows to the south and less on the north. \n\n5. Use smart technology in the materials: Optimum Value Engineering techniques to reduce the amount of wood and other materials, low VOC\'s in paints, cabinets, etc, non-formaldehyde in the materials and so on....\n\n6. Economize: buy local, buy less, build only as much as you need. Stay wholesome and don\'t try to keep up with the Joneses: build what you need practically, not what you think will impress people.', 'Green Home Building - what is it?', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '352-revision', '', '', '2008-12-06 19:57:16', '2008-12-07 01:57:16', '', 352, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/352-revision/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (354, 1, '2008-12-06 20:40:48', '2008-12-07 02:40:48', 'There are certain inalienable elements that every human needs in their environment in order to stay healthy and happy. These elements are green, timeless, and universal.\r\n\r\nThey are:\r\n\r\n1. sunlight by day\r\n2. darkness by night\r\n3. greenery\r\n4. water\r\n5. meaningful sounds\r\n6. fresh gently moving air\r\n7. thermal comfort within thermal variation (not too hot or cold but some variety)\r\n8. interaction with other humans and other species\r\n9. a sense of safety\r\n10. dynamic synergy among all of the above things\r\n\r\nAny design process, whether it is moving furniture around or building a new house, should take these ten points into consideration. To do so will guide you down a path of health and happiness.\r\n\r\nNote: the ten points are from Carol Venolia, eco-architect.', 'What We Need, the Basics', 0, '', 'publish', 'open', 'open', '', 'need-basics', '', '', '2008-12-06 20:40:48', '2008-12-07 02:40:48', '', 0, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/?p=354', 0, 'post', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (355, 1, '2008-12-06 20:39:59', '2008-12-07 02:39:59', 'There are certain inalienable elements that every human needs in their environment in order to stay healthy and happy. These elements are green, timeless, and universal.\n\nThey are:\n\n1. sunlight by day\n2. darkness by night\n3. greenery\n4. water\n5. meaningful sounds\n6. fresh gently moving air\n7. thermal comfort within thermal variation (not too hot or cold but some variety)\n8. interaction with other humans and other species\n9. a sense of safety\n10. dynamic synergy among all of the above things\n\nAny design process, whether it is moving furniture around or building a new house, should take these ten points into consideration. To do so will guid', 'What We Need, the Basics', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '354-revision', '', '', '2008-12-06 20:39:59', '2008-12-07 02:39:59', '', 354, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/354-revision/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (356, 1, '2008-12-06 21:00:14', '2008-12-07 03:00:14', '', 'co-opamerica-seal', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'co-opamerica-seal', '', '', '2008-12-06 21:00:14', '2008-12-07 03:00:14', '', 8, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/co-opamerica-seal.gif', 0, 'attachment', 'image/gif', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (357, 1, '2008-11-27 14:30:34', '2008-11-27 20:30:34', '
Why buy new insulation when you can get great salvaged insulation for 60% less? \r\n\r\nIt keeps it out of landfills, lessens having to make new insulation, the insulation has already off gassed any possible VOC\'s, you can use it for LEED credits, and the insulation is an amazing R6/inch (no other insulation gets that), which is great for space starved Brooklyn. \r\n\r\nIt is clearly the greenest, cheapest, and most intelligent option.\r\n\r\nFor sale is PolyISO 4x8 board. It is 1.5 inch thick natural facer (no foil) with a total of R9 insulation value. It is once used but in great shape and just as effective as the new stuff. The price is $10/sheet (60% savings).\r\n\r\nWe also have waterproof blue Extruded Polistyrene, which is great for under concrete slabs or under green roofs.\r\n\r\n
', 'For Sale: Recycled Insulation!', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '8-revision-47', '', '', '2008-11-27 14:30:34', '2008-11-27 20:30:34', '', 8, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/8-revision-47/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (358, 1, '2008-12-06 21:17:02', '2008-12-07 03:17:02', '', 'Eco Brooklyn is a member of NESEA', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'nesea', '', '', '2008-12-06 21:17:02', '2008-12-07 03:17:02', '', 8, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/nesea.gif', 0, 'attachment', 'image/gif', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (359, 1, '2008-12-06 21:01:46', '2008-12-07 03:01:46', '
Why buy new insulation when you can get great salvaged insulation for 60% less? \r\n\r\nIt keeps it out of landfills, lessens having to make new insulation, the insulation has already off gassed any possible VOC\'s, you can use it for LEED credits, and the insulation is an amazing R6/inch (no other insulation gets that), which is great for space starved Brooklyn. \r\n\r\nIt is clearly the greenest, cheapest, and most intelligent option.\r\n\r\nFor sale is PolyISO 4x8 board. It is 1.5 inch thick natural facer (no foil) with a total of R9 insulation value. It is once used but in great shape and just as effective as the new stuff. The price is $10/sheet (60% savings).\r\n\r\nWe also have waterproof blue Extruded Polistyrene, which is great for under concrete slabs or under green roofs.\r\n\r\n
', 'For Sale: Recycled Insulation!', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '8-revision-48', '', '', '2008-12-06 21:01:46', '2008-12-07 03:01:46', '', 8, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/8-revision-48/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (360, 1, '2008-12-06 21:23:22', '2008-12-07 03:23:22', '', 'Eco Brooklyn is a member of NESEA', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'nesea1', '', '', '2008-12-06 21:23:22', '2008-12-07 03:23:22', '', 8, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/nesea1.gif', 0, 'attachment', 'image/gif', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (361, 1, '2008-12-06 21:18:04', '2008-12-07 03:18:04', '
Why buy new insulation when you can get great salvaged insulation for 60% less? \r\n\r\nIt keeps it out of landfills, lessens having to make new insulation, the insulation has already off gassed any possible VOC\'s, you can use it for LEED credits, and the insulation is an amazing R6/inch (no other insulation gets that), which is great for space starved Brooklyn. \r\n\r\nIt is clearly the greenest, cheapest, and most intelligent option.\r\n\r\nFor sale is PolyISO 4x8 board. It is 1.5 inch thick natural facer (no foil) with a total of R9 insulation value. It is once used but in great shape and just as effective as the new stuff. The price is $10/sheet (60% savings).\r\n\r\nWe also have waterproof blue Extruded Polistyrene, which is great for under concrete slabs or under green roofs.\r\n\r\n
', 'For Sale: Recycled Insulation!', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '8-revision-49', '', '', '2008-12-06 21:18:04', '2008-12-07 03:18:04', '', 8, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/8-revision-49/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (362, 1, '2008-12-06 21:26:18', '2008-12-07 03:26:18', '', 'Eco Brooklyn is a CHE Partner - Collaborative for Health and the Environment ', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'che-member', '', '', '2008-12-06 21:26:18', '2008-12-07 03:26:18', '', 8, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/che-member.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (363, 1, '2008-12-06 21:23:54', '2008-12-07 03:23:54', '
Why buy new insulation when you can get great salvaged insulation for 60% less? \r\n\r\nIt keeps it out of landfills, lessens having to make new insulation, the insulation has already off gassed any possible VOC\'s, you can use it for LEED credits, and the insulation is an amazing R6/inch (no other insulation gets that), which is great for space starved Brooklyn. \r\n\r\nIt is clearly the greenest, cheapest, and most intelligent option.\r\n\r\nFor sale is PolyISO 4x8 board. It is 1.5 inch thick natural facer (no foil) with a total of R9 insulation value. It is once used but in great shape and just as effective as the new stuff. The price is $10/sheet (60% savings).\r\n\r\nWe also have waterproof blue Extruded Polistyrene, which is great for under concrete slabs or under green roofs.\r\n\r\n
', 'For Sale: Recycled Insulation!', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '8-revision-50', '', '', '2008-12-06 21:23:54', '2008-12-07 03:23:54', '', 8, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/8-revision-50/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (364, 1, '2008-12-06 21:29:13', '2008-12-07 03:29:13', '', 'Eco Brooklyn is a CHE Partner - Collaborative for Health and the Environment ', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'che-member1', '', '', '2008-12-06 21:29:13', '2008-12-07 03:29:13', '', 8, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/che-member1.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (365, 1, '2008-12-09 16:37:34', '2008-12-09 22:37:34', 'I subscribe to some very scholarly journals on green building. I also subscribe to some radical journals on politics and conspiracies. I like to check out the pulse from various sources. And when I start seeing trends overlapping I know it is something worth paying attention to.\r\n\r\nThis week I was reading in this one very academic journal about the use of hemp fibers mixed with lime to make a concrete-like material that is stronger and apparently six times lighter than real concrete. It is used in France a lot and expanding around Europe.\r\n\r\nAnd then one of my conspiracy journals also spoke about it, but from the perspective of it being this miracle material that was being kept from the building industry due to political reasons (hemp apparently has many uses that threatens existing companies, namely oil and timber companies).\r\n\r\nSeeing it in two widely different contects raised my interest. It does indeed seem to be a viable building material on the rise. Worth keeping an eye out for it.\r\n\r\nThe basics:\r\nhemp grows as a plant, thus CONSUMES CO2.\r\nit grows abundantly and quickly, thus is rapidly renewable.\r\nbecause it grows, it does most of the production itself reducing embodied energy.\r\nonce it is made into "concrete" the CO2 is fixed into the walls, thus it is a CO2 neutral or possibly even CO2 NEGATIVE product.\r\n\r\nportland cement requires huge manufacturing power and thus creates massive amounts of CO2. It is the largest creator of CO2 in the building industry. Enough said.\r\n\r\nBasically, the connection of hemp with weed smoking hippies is a farce. Hemp has too many positive attributes, from paper, oil, wax, cement (the list is long) for it to be considered negatively.\r\n\r\nMore:\r\n\r\n', 'Hemp - Stonger and Lighter than Cement', 0, '', 'publish', 'open', 'open', '', 'hemp-stonger-lighter-cement', '', '', '2008-12-09 16:37:34', '2008-12-09 22:37:34', '', 0, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/?p=365', 0, 'post', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (366, 1, '2008-12-09 16:36:49', '2008-12-09 22:36:49', 'I subscribe to some very scholarly journals on green building. I also subscribe to some radical journals on politics and conspiracies. I like to check out the pulse from various sources. And when I start seeing trends overlapping I know it is something worth paying attention to.\n\nThis week I was reading in this one very academic journal about the use of hemp fibers mixed with lime to make a concrete-like material that is stronger and apparently six times lighter than real concrete. It is used in France a lot and expanding around Europe.\n\nAnd then one of my conspiracy journals also spoke about it, but from the perspective of it being this miracle material that was being kept from the building industry due to political reasons (hemp apparently has many uses that threatens existing companies, namely oil and timber companies).\n\nSeeing it in two widely different contects raised my interest. It does indeed seem to be a viable building material on the rise. Worth keeping an eye out for it.\n\nThe basics:\nhemp grows as a plant, thus CONSUMES CO2.\nit grows abundantly and quickly, thus is rapidly renewable.\nbecause it grows, it does most of the production itself reducing embodied energy.\nonce it is made into "concrete" the CO2 is fixed into the walls, thus it is a CO2 neutral or possibly even CO2 NEGATIVE product.\n\nportland cement requires huge manufacturing power and thus creates massive amounts of CO2. It is the largest creator of CO2 in the building industry. Enough said.\n\nBasically, the connection of hemp with weed smoking hippies is a farce. Hemp has too many positive\nMore:\n\n', 'Hemp - Stonger and Lighter than Cement', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '365-revision', '', '', '2008-12-09 16:36:49', '2008-12-09 22:36:49', '', 365, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/365-revision/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (367, 1, '2008-12-09 16:40:00', '2008-12-09 22:40:00', '', '1che-member', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '1che-member', '', '', '2008-12-09 16:40:00', '2008-12-09 22:40:00', '', 8, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/1che-member.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (368, 1, '2008-12-06 21:27:05', '2008-12-07 03:27:05', '
Why buy new insulation when you can get great salvaged insulation for 60% less? \r\n\r\nIt keeps it out of landfills, lessens having to make new insulation, the insulation has already off gassed any possible VOC\'s, you can use it for LEED credits, and the insulation is an amazing R6/inch (no other insulation gets that), which is great for space starved Brooklyn. \r\n\r\nIt is clearly the greenest, cheapest, and most intelligent option.\r\n\r\nFor sale is PolyISO 4x8 board. It is 1.5 inch thick natural facer (no foil) with a total of R9 insulation value. It is once used but in great shape and just as effective as the new stuff. The price is $10/sheet (60% savings).\r\n\r\nWe also have waterproof blue Extruded Polistyrene, which is great for under concrete slabs or under green roofs.\r\n\r\n
', 'For Sale: Recycled Insulation!', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '8-revision-51', '', '', '2008-12-06 21:27:05', '2008-12-07 03:27:05', '', 8, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/8-revision-51/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (369, 1, '2008-12-09 16:41:11', '2008-12-09 22:41:11', '
Why buy new insulation when you can get great salvaged insulation for 60% less? \r\n\r\nIt keeps it out of landfills, lessens having to make new insulation, the insulation has already off gassed any possible VOC\'s, you can use it for LEED credits, and the insulation is an amazing R6/inch (no other insulation gets that), which is great for space starved Brooklyn. \r\n\r\nIt is clearly the greenest, cheapest, and most intelligent option.\r\n\r\nFor sale is PolyISO 4x8 board. It is 1.5 inch thick natural facer (no foil) with a total of R9 insulation value. It is once used but in great shape and just as effective as the new stuff. The price is $10/sheet (60% savings).\r\n\r\nWe also have waterproof blue Extruded Polistyrene, which is great for under concrete slabs or under green roofs.\r\n\r\n
', 'For Sale: Recycled Insulation!', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '8-revision-52', '', '', '2008-12-09 16:41:11', '2008-12-09 22:41:11', '', 8, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/8-revision-52/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (370, 1, '2008-12-11 08:38:34', '2008-12-11 14:38:34', 'Here is an interesting article. It describes all the kinds of house wraps and vapor barriers in detail. It also concludes that despite all the fancy new products the good old tar paper is still the preferred product for the author.\r\n\r\nI like building that sticks to the basics and avoids as much as possible fancy high tech products. If it can be manufactured simply without lots of machinery then it is more ecological. Of course tar paper has tar, ie oil, but all the other wraps are also petro chemical based too....\r\n\r\nSo for our green project on 2nd street we are going with tar paper for the vapor barrier between the bricks and insulation. Then between the insulation and the inside sheet rock we will use a radiant barrier for more sealing and to radiate the heat back into the house.\r\n\r\nThe file is here.housewrap-tar-paper', 'About House Wrap and Tar Paper', 0, '', 'publish', 'open', 'open', '', 'house-wrap-tar-paper', '', '', '2008-12-11 08:38:34', '2008-12-11 14:38:34', '', 0, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/?p=370', 0, 'post', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (371, 1, '2008-12-11 08:36:17', '2008-12-11 14:36:17', '', 'housewrap-tar-paper', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'housewrap-tar-paper', '', '', '2008-12-11 08:36:17', '2008-12-11 14:36:17', '', 370, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/housewrap-tar-paper.pdf', 0, 'attachment', 'application/pdf', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (372, 1, '2008-12-11 08:37:54', '2008-12-11 14:37:54', 'Here is an interesting article. It describes all the kinds of house wraps and vapor barriers in detail. It also concludes that despite all the fancy new products the good old tar paper is still the preferred product for the author.\n\nI like building that sticks to the basics and avoids as much as possible fancy high tech products. If it can be manufactured simply without lots of machinery then it is more ecological. Of course tar paper has tar, ie oil, but all the other wraps are also petro chemical based too....\n\nSo for our green project on 2nd street we are going with tar paper for the vapor barrier between the bricks and insulation.\n\nThe file is here.housewrap-tar-paper', 'About House Wrap and Tar Paper', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '370-revision', '', '', '2008-12-11 08:37:54', '2008-12-11 14:37:54', '', 370, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/370-revision/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (373, 1, '2008-12-13 15:47:42', '2008-12-13 21:47:42', '', 'p1000939', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'p1000939', '', '', '2008-12-13 15:47:42', '2008-12-13 21:47:42', '', 375, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/p1000939.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (374, 1, '2008-12-13 15:49:05', '2008-12-13 21:49:05', '', 'poly iso insulation', 0, 'inserting polyiso insulation into the ceiling', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'p1000720xxxx', '', '', '2008-12-13 15:49:05', '2008-12-13 21:49:05', '', 375, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/p1000720xxxx.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (375, 1, '2008-12-13 15:53:24', '2008-12-13 21:53:24', 'We are inserting the salvaged poly iso insulation board into the top floor ceiling of the house between the joists. All the joists have been sistered with "new" salvaged joists. You can see the bolts holding them together. We are packing four layers of poly iso board, making it an air tight R 36. The roof insulation is obviously the most important in terms of insulation so we are making it very well insulated.\r\n\r\nBelow the insulation will be a radiant barrier of aluminum foil that will reflect back the heat into the building. On top of the roof will be two inches of waterproof extruded polystyrene insulation board and then the earth for the green roof. \r\n\r\nAfter all this, the roof will be very well insulated, probably close to R 50. Since the Poly ISO is salvaged from another job it is very cheap so we are using as much as we can possibly fit into the space. It is the same Poly ISO we are selling on the main page.\r\n\r\n [caption id="attachment_374" align="alignnone" width="451" caption="Above: inserting polyiso insulation into the ceiling"]
[/caption]\r\n\r\n [caption id="attachment_374" align="alignnone" width="451" caption="Below: you can see the poly iso has all been inserted. You can also see the joists. On some we have added two more, making three sistered joists in some places. These joists are each 3x8 inches thick. We did this to make the roof as strong as possible to carry the green roof. It should last another 100 years."]
', 'Inserting the Insulation Into the Roof Ceiling', 0, '', 'publish', 'open', 'open', '', 'inserting-insulation', '', '', '2008-12-13 16:22:39', '2008-12-13 22:22:39', '', 0, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/?p=375', 0, 'post', '', 2) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (376, 1, '2008-12-13 15:52:51', '2008-12-13 21:52:51', 'We are inserting the salvaged poly iso insulation board into the top floor ceiling of the house between the joists. All the joists have been sistered with "new" salvaged joists. You can see the bolts holding them together. We are packing four layers of poly iso board, making it an air tight R 36. The roof insulation is obviously the most important. \n\nBelow the insulation will be a radiant barrier of aluminium foil. On the roof will be two inches of waterproof extruded polystyrene insulation board and then the earth for the green roof. This roof will be very well insul [caption id="attachment_374" align="alignnone" width="451" caption="inserting polyiso insulation into the ceiling"]
[/caption]', 'Inserting the Insulation', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '375-revision', '', '', '2008-12-13 15:52:51', '2008-12-13 21:52:51', '', 375, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/375-revision/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (377, 1, '2008-12-13 15:55:28', '2008-12-13 21:55:28', '', 'p1000980', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'p1000980', '', '', '2008-12-13 15:55:28', '2008-12-13 21:55:28', '', 375, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/p1000980.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (378, 1, '2008-12-13 15:53:24', '2008-12-13 21:53:24', 'We are inserting the salvaged poly iso insulation board into the top floor ceiling of the house between the joists. All the joists have been sistered with "new" salvaged joists. You can see the bolts holding them together. We are packing four layers of poly iso board, making it an air tight R 36. The roof insulation is obviously the most important. \r\n\r\nBelow the insulation will be a radiant barrier of aluminium foil. On the roof will be two inches of waterproof extruded polystyrene insulation board and then the earth for the green roof. This roof will be very well insulated, probably close to R 50, when done.\r\n\r\n [caption id="attachment_374" align="alignnone" width="451" caption="inserting polyiso insulation into the ceiling"]
[/caption]', 'Inserting the Insulation', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '375-revision-2', '', '', '2008-12-13 15:53:24', '2008-12-13 21:53:24', '', 375, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/375-revision-2/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (379, 1, '2008-12-13 16:20:47', '2008-12-13 22:20:47', 'We are inserting the salvaged poly iso insulation board into the top floor ceiling of the house between the joists. All the joists have been sistered with "new" salvaged joists. You can see the bolts holding them together. We are packing four layers of poly iso board, making it an air tight R 36. The roof insulation is obviously the most important in terms of insulation so we are making it very well insulated.\n\nBelow the insulation will be a radiant barrier of aluminum foil that will reflect back the heat into the building. On top of the roof will be two inches of waterproof extruded polystyrene insulation board and then the earth for the green roof. \n\nAfter all this, the roof will be very well insulated, probably close to R 50. Since the Poly ISO is salvaged from another job it is very cheap so we are using as much as we can possibly fit into the space. It is the same Poly ISO we are selling on the main page.\n\n [caption id="attachment_374" align="alignnone" width="451" caption="Above: inserting polyiso insulation into the ceiling"]
[/caption]\n\n [caption id="attachment_374" align="alignnone" width="451" caption="Above: here you can see it has all been inserted. You can also see the joists. On some we have added two more, making three sistered joists in places. We did this to make the roof as strong as possible to carry the green roof."]
', 'Inserting the Insulation Into the Roof Ceiling', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '375-autosave', '', '', '2008-12-13 16:20:47', '2008-12-13 22:20:47', '', 375, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/375-autosave/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (380, 1, '2008-12-13 15:55:39', '2008-12-13 21:55:39', 'We are inserting the salvaged poly iso insulation board into the top floor ceiling of the house between the joists. All the joists have been sistered with "new" salvaged joists. You can see the bolts holding them together. We are packing four layers of poly iso board, making it an air tight R 36. The roof insulation is obviously the most important. \r\n\r\nBelow the insulation will be a radiant barrier of aluminium foil. On the roof will be two inches of waterproof extruded polystyrene insulation board and then the earth for the green roof. This roof will be very well insulated, probably close to R 50, when done.\r\n\r\n [caption id="attachment_374" align="alignnone" width="451" caption="inserting polyiso insulation into the ceiling"]
[/caption]\r\n\r\n
', 'Inserting the Insulation', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '375-revision-3', '', '', '2008-12-13 15:55:39', '2008-12-13 21:55:39', '', 375, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/375-revision-3/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (381, 1, '2008-12-13 16:18:01', '2008-12-13 22:18:01', 'We are inserting the salvaged poly iso insulation board into the top floor ceiling of the house between the joists. All the joists have been sistered with "new" salvaged joists. You can see the bolts holding them together. We are packing four layers of poly iso board, making it an air tight R 36. The roof insulation is obviously the most important in terms of insulation so we are making it very well insulated.\r\n\r\nBelow the insulation will be a radiant barrier of aluminum foil that will reflect back the heat into the building. On top of the roof will be two inches of waterproof extruded polystyrene insulation board and then the earth for the green roof. \r\n\r\nAfter all this, the roof will be very well insulated, probably close to R 50. Since the Poly ISO is salvaged from another job it is very cheap so we are using as much as we can possibly fit into the space. It is the same Poly ISO we are selling on the main page.\r\n\r\n [caption id="attachment_374" align="alignnone" width="451" caption="inserting polyiso insulation into the ceiling"]
[/caption]\r\n\r\n
', 'Inserting the Insulation Into the Roof Ceiling', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '375-revision-4', '', '', '2008-12-13 16:18:01', '2008-12-13 22:18:01', '', 375, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/375-revision-4/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (382, 1, '2008-12-13 16:20:56', '2008-12-13 22:20:56', 'We are inserting the salvaged poly iso insulation board into the top floor ceiling of the house between the joists. All the joists have been sistered with "new" salvaged joists. You can see the bolts holding them together. We are packing four layers of poly iso board, making it an air tight R 36. The roof insulation is obviously the most important in terms of insulation so we are making it very well insulated.\r\n\r\nBelow the insulation will be a radiant barrier of aluminum foil that will reflect back the heat into the building. On top of the roof will be two inches of waterproof extruded polystyrene insulation board and then the earth for the green roof. \r\n\r\nAfter all this, the roof will be very well insulated, probably close to R 50. Since the Poly ISO is salvaged from another job it is very cheap so we are using as much as we can possibly fit into the space. It is the same Poly ISO we are selling on the main page.\r\n\r\n [caption id="attachment_374" align="alignnone" width="451" caption="Above: inserting polyiso insulation into the ceiling"]
[/caption]\r\n\r\n [caption id="attachment_374" align="alignnone" width="451" caption="Above: here you can see it has all been inserted. You can also see the joists. On some we have added two more, making three sistered joists in places. We did this to make the roof as strong as possible to carry the green roof. It should last another 100 years."]
', 'Inserting the Insulation Into the Roof Ceiling', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '375-revision-5', '', '', '2008-12-13 16:20:56', '2008-12-13 22:20:56', '', 375, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/375-revision-5/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (383, 1, '2008-12-13 16:21:41', '2008-12-13 22:21:41', 'We are inserting the salvaged poly iso insulation board into the top floor ceiling of the house between the joists. All the joists have been sistered with "new" salvaged joists. You can see the bolts holding them together. We are packing four layers of poly iso board, making it an air tight R 36. The roof insulation is obviously the most important in terms of insulation so we are making it very well insulated.\r\n\r\nBelow the insulation will be a radiant barrier of aluminum foil that will reflect back the heat into the building. On top of the roof will be two inches of waterproof extruded polystyrene insulation board and then the earth for the green roof. \r\n\r\nAfter all this, the roof will be very well insulated, probably close to R 50. Since the Poly ISO is salvaged from another job it is very cheap so we are using as much as we can possibly fit into the space. It is the same Poly ISO we are selling on the main page.\r\n\r\n [caption id="attachment_374" align="alignnone" width="451" caption="Above: inserting polyiso insulation into the ceiling"]
[/caption]\r\n\r\n [caption id="attachment_374" align="alignnone" width="451" caption="Below: you can see the poly iso has all been inserted. You can also see the joists. On some we have added two more, making three sistered joists in places. We did this to make the roof as strong as possible to carry the green roof. It should last another 100 years."]
', 'Inserting the Insulation Into the Roof Ceiling', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '375-revision-6', '', '', '2008-12-13 16:21:41', '2008-12-13 22:21:41', '', 375, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/375-revision-6/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (384, 1, '2008-12-13 21:15:20', '2008-12-14 03:15:20', '', 'p1000748xxxx', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'p1000748xxxx', '', '', '2008-12-13 21:15:20', '2008-12-14 03:15:20', '', 385, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/p1000748xxxx.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (385, 1, '2008-12-13 21:46:46', '2008-12-14 03:46:46', 'In order to maximize the living space we decided to turn the cellar into a useable space. To do this we cut a 10x10 foot hole into the floor of the basement, which is only technically called the basement since it is a foot below grade. Practically it is the garden level. Once a hole was in the south side of the garden level it allowed plenty of sunshine to pass into the cellar. \r\n\r\nThe only problem is that the cellar was only six foot high. So we have dug it out another three feet. We had to dig under the existing foundation, which can be risky if not done correctly. First we built a second inner wall out of cinder blocks in the entire cellar. The existing brick wall was so deteriorated you could pull the bricks out by hand and it was actually amazing the four floors above kept standing.\r\n\r\nThe cinder block wall only took up four inches but added all the strength we needed to support the house, which we were in the process of banging and shaking to no end. We then dug down three feet in small areas at a time and underpinned the wall with concrete and the rocks we found in the soil.\r\n\r\nBefore putting the concrete we put plastic vapor barrier and two inches of waterproof insulation to guarantee a warm and dry environment.\r\n\r\n
\r\nAbove you see the sections being dug out.\r\n\r\n
\r\nAbove is the vapor barrier, called Stego wrap. It is one of the few plastics that actually do stop moisture and is priced accordingly. Most cheaper brands don\'t actually stop moisture.\r\n\r\n
\r\nHere we are putting the plastic, insulation and making the form to pour the concrete and stones.\r\n\r\n
\r\nWe used XEPS or extruded polystyrene, which is a dense and waterproof insulation. It is also not friendly to termites, which is important in this area.\r\n\r\n
\r\nHere you can see the rogh finished product where the floor had been dug out and the underpinning poured. We will then pour the concrete floor and then build the cinder blocks up to the other cinder block wall that is currently hanging three feet above ground.\r\n\r\n
\r\nHere you can see the opening in the floor above. We have also knocked out the south wall for a wall of windows so the sun can really shine down into the space. On the front and back walls we did not put cinder blocks because those walls had good solid stone as you can see in the picture. You can see the concrete underpinning under the stone walls where we dug down. A worker is finishing off some underpinning but using cinder blocks instead of concrete since that little alcove is not holding up the building and does not to be as strong.\r\n\r\n
\r\nThis photo shows the cellar before dug down. As you can see there was little headroom.\r\n\r\n
\r\nHere you see the same cellar almost all dug out.', 'Lowering the Cellar Three Feet', 0, '', 'publish', 'open', 'open', '', 'lowering-cellar-feet', '', '', '2008-12-13 21:46:46', '2008-12-14 03:46:46', '', 0, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/?p=385', 0, 'post', '', 2) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (386, 1, '2008-12-13 21:23:20', '2008-12-14 03:23:20', '', 'p1000752xxx', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'p1000752xxx', '', '', '2008-12-13 21:23:20', '2008-12-14 03:23:20', '', 385, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/p1000752xxx.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (387, 1, '2008-12-13 21:25:09', '2008-12-14 03:25:09', '', 'p1000707xxx', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'p1000707xxx', '', '', '2008-12-13 21:25:09', '2008-12-14 03:25:09', '', 385, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/p1000707xxx.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (388, 1, '2008-12-13 21:26:06', '2008-12-14 03:26:06', '', 'p1000750xxxx', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'p1000750xxxx', '', '', '2008-12-13 21:26:06', '2008-12-14 03:26:06', '', 385, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/p1000750xxxx.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (389, 1, '2008-12-13 21:27:37', '2008-12-14 03:27:37', '', 'p1000754xxs', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'p1000754xxs', '', '', '2008-12-13 21:27:37', '2008-12-14 03:27:37', '', 385, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/p1000754xxs.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (390, 1, '2008-12-13 21:34:59', '2008-12-14 03:34:59', '', 'p1010030xxxx', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'p1010030xxxx', '', '', '2008-12-13 21:34:59', '2008-12-14 03:34:59', '', 385, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/p1010030xxxx.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (391, 1, '2008-12-13 21:40:59', '2008-12-14 03:40:59', '', '66-april-20-2008-208xxxxxx', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '66-april-20-2008-208xxxxxx', '', '', '2008-12-13 21:40:59', '2008-12-14 03:40:59', '', 385, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/66-april-20-2008-208xxxxxx.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (392, 1, '2008-12-13 21:45:52', '2008-12-14 03:45:52', '', 'p1000718xxxxxzzzz', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'p1000718xxxxxzzzz', '', '', '2008-12-13 21:45:52', '2008-12-14 03:45:52', '', 385, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/p1000718xxxxxzzzz.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (393, 1, '2008-12-13 21:41:53', '2008-12-14 03:41:53', 'In order to maximize the living space we decided to turn the cellar into a useable space. To do this we cut a 10x10 foot hole into the floor of the basement, which is only technically called the basement since it is a foot below grade. Practically it is the garden level. Once a hole was in the south side of the garden level it allowed plenty of sunshine to pass into the cellar. \n\nThe only problem is that the cellar was only six foot high. So we have dug it out another three feet. We had to dig under the existing foundation, which can be risky if not done correctly. First we built a second inner wall out of cinder blocks in the entire cellar. The existing brick wall was so deteriorated you could pull the bricks out by hand and it was actually amazing the four floors above kept standing.\n\nThe cinder block wall only took up four inches but added all the strength we needed to support the house, which we were in the process of banging and shaking to no end. We then dug down three feet in small areas at a time and underpinned the wall with concrete and the rocks we found in the soil.\n\nBefore putting the concrete we put plastic vapor barrier and two inches of waterproof insulation to guarantee a warm and dry environment.\n\n
\nAbove you see the sections being dug out.\n\n
\nAbove is the vapor barrier, called Stego wrap. It is one of the few plastics that actually do stop moisture and is priced accordingly. Most cheaper brands don\'t actually stop moisture.\n\n
\nHere we are putting the plastic, insulation and making the form to pour the concrete and stones.\n\n
\nWe used XEPS or extruded polystyrene, which is a dense and waterproof insulation. It is also not friendly to termites, which is important in this area.\n\n
\nHere you can see the rogh finished product where the floor had been dug out and the underpinning poured. We will then pour the concrete floor and then build the cinder blocks up to the other cinder block wall that is currently hanging three feet above ground.\n\n
\nHere you can see the opening in the floor above. We have also knocked out the south wall for a wall of windows so the sun can really shine down into the space. On the front and back walls we did not put cinder blocks because those walls had good solid stone as you can see in the picture. You can see the concrete underpinning under the stone walls where we dug down. A worker is finishing off some underpinning but using cinder blocks instead of concrete since that little alcove is not holding up the building and does not to be as strong.\n\n
\nThis photo shows the cellar before dug down. As you can see there was little headroom.\n\n', 'Lowering the Cellar Three Feet', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '385-revision', '', '', '2008-12-13 21:41:53', '2008-12-14 03:41:53', '', 385, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/385-revision/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (394, 1, '2008-12-18 15:18:56', '2008-12-18 21:18:56', 'I paid a lot of money for fiberglass windows from this company called Fibertec and I am very disappointed. The sales rep was the greatest guy until I signed the contract then he disappeared off the side of the earth. \r\n\r\nFibertec was unbearably late in delivering the windows, like many weeks late. Once they came the windows were so cheaply made that they simply look like vinyl windows. The hardware was crap. The below picture shows the lock hatch that simply fell off many of the windows with the flick of a thumb. \r\n\r\nThe frames were not reinforced enough so that they bowed with some of the taller windows. See pic below.\r\n\r\nA lot of the springs in the window frames had not been attached which means the one attached spring pulled the frame out of it\'s square. This means the windows don\'t fit tight and air seeps in.\r\n\r\nWhen I contacted Fibertec they didn\'t get back to me for over a week of me trying to contact them. When they did get back to me it was some other person who knew nothing about my order and couldn\'t have cared less about the issue.\r\n\r\nBottom line: DO NOT USE FIBERTEC. Service sucks and quality sucks. But mostly the service. I can fix the windows myself. It is just annoying.\r\n\r\nHOWEVER, the fiberglass frame part I LOVE. I think this is the way to go. I really love them and once they are nicely painted and repaired I will be very happy with them. I met another company at a green trade show and next time I would go with them iinstead. Sorry can\'t remember their name right now. But their card is in a big pile somewhere.\r\n\r\n
\r\nABOVE: Lock latches falling off.\r\n\r\n
\r\nHere you can see the crack between the felt of the window and the frame. This is because the frame is bending due it not being able to hold the weight.\r\n\r\n
\r\nThe above photo shows us installing the windows. On the right you can see one installed. ', 'My Fibetec Fiberglass Windows Suck', 0, '', 'publish', 'open', 'open', '', 'fibetec-fiberglass-windows-suck', '', '', '2008-12-18 15:22:28', '2008-12-18 21:22:28', '', 0, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/?p=394', 0, 'post', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (395, 1, '2008-12-18 15:08:12', '2008-12-18 21:08:12', '', 'p1010048xxx', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'p1010048xxx', '', '', '2008-12-18 15:08:12', '2008-12-18 21:08:12', '', 394, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/p1010048xxx.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (396, 1, '2008-12-18 15:15:03', '2008-12-18 21:15:03', '', 'p1010108xxxxx', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'p1010108xxxxx', '', '', '2008-12-18 15:15:03', '2008-12-18 21:15:03', '', 394, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/p1010108xxxxx.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (397, 1, '2008-12-18 15:17:31', '2008-12-18 21:17:31', '', 'p1010040xxxxxssss', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'p1010040xxxxxssss', '', '', '2008-12-18 15:17:31', '2008-12-18 21:17:31', '', 394, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/p1010040xxxxxssss.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (398, 1, '2008-12-18 15:18:13', '2008-12-18 21:18:13', 'I paid a lot of money for fiberglass windows from this company called Fibertec and I am very disappointed. The sales rep was the greatest guy until I signed the contract then he disappeared off the side of the earth. \n\nThey were unbearably late in delivering the windows, like many weeks late. Once the windows came they were so disappointingly cheap that they simply look like vinyl windows. The hardware was crap. The below picture shows the lock hatch that simply fell off many of the windows with the flick of a thumb. \n\nThe frames were not reinforced enough so that they bowed with some of the taller windows.\n\nA lot of the springs in the window frames had not been attached which means the one attached spring pulled the frame out of it\'s square. This means the windows don\'t fit tight and air seeps in.\n\nWhen I contacted Fibertec they didn\'t get back to me for over a week of trying to contact them. When they did get back to me they knew nothing about my order and couldn\'t have cared less about the issue.\n\nBottom line: DO NOT USE FIBERTEC. Service sucks and quality sucks.\n\nHOWEVER, the fiberglass frame part I LOVE. I think this is the way to go. I really love them and once they are nicely painted and repaired I will be very happy with them. I met another company at a green trade show and next time I would go with them. Sorry can\'t remember their name right now. But their card is in a big pile somewhere.\n\n
\nABOVE: Lock latches falling off.\n\n
\nHere you can see the crack between the felt of the window and the frame. This is because the frame is bending due it not being able to hold the weight.\n\n
\nThe above photo shows us installing the windows. On the right you can see one installed. ', 'My Fibetec Fiberglass Windows Suck', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '394-revision', '', '', '2008-12-18 15:18:13', '2008-12-18 21:18:13', '', 394, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/394-revision/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (399, 1, '2008-12-18 15:22:29', '2008-12-18 21:22:29', 'I paid a lot of money for fiberglass windows from this company called Fibertec and I am very disappointed. The sales rep was the greatest guy until I signed the contract then he disappeared off the side of the earth. \n\nFibertec was unbearably late in delivering the windows, like many weeks late. Once they came the windows were so cheaply made that they simply look like vinyl windows. The hardware was crap. The below picture shows the lock hatch that simply fell off many of the windows with the flick of a thumb. \n\nThe frames were not reinforced enough so that they bowed with some of the taller windows. See pic below.\n\nA lot of the springs in the window frames had not been attached which means the one attached spring pulled the frame out of it\'s square. This means the windows don\'t fit tight and air seeps in.\n\nWhen I contacted Fibertec they didn\'t get back to me for over a week of me trying to contact them. When they did get back to me it was some other person who knew nothing about my order and couldn\'t have cared less about the issue.\n\nBottom line: DO NOT USE FIBERTEC. Service sucks and quality sucks. But mostly the service. I can fix the windows myself. It is just annoying.\n\nHOWEVER, the fiberglass frame part I LOVE. I think this is the way to go. I really love them and once they are nicely painted and repaired I will be very happy with them. I met another company at a green trade show and next time I would go with them iinstead. Sorry can\'t remember their name right now. But their card is in a big pile somewhere.\n\n
\nABOVE: Lock latches falling off.\n\n
\nHere you can see the crack between the felt of the window and the frame. This is because the frame is bending due it not being able to hold the weight.\n\n
\nThe above photo shows us installing the windows. On the right you can see one installed. ', 'My Fibetec Fiberglass Windows Suck', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '394-autosave', '', '', '2008-12-18 15:22:29', '2008-12-18 21:22:29', '', 394, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/394-autosave/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (400, 1, '2008-12-18 15:18:56', '2008-12-18 21:18:56', 'I paid a lot of money for fiberglass windows from this company called Fibertec and I am very disappointed. The sales rep was the greatest guy until I signed the contract then he disappeared off the side of the earth. \r\n\r\nThey were unbearably late in delivering the windows, like many weeks late. Once the windows came they were so disappointingly cheap that they simply look like vinyl windows. The hardware was crap. The below picture shows the lock hatch that simply fell off many of the windows with the flick of a thumb. \r\n\r\nThe frames were not reinforced enough so that they bowed with some of the taller windows.\r\n\r\nA lot of the springs in the window frames had not been attached which means the one attached spring pulled the frame out of it\'s square. This means the windows don\'t fit tight and air seeps in.\r\n\r\nWhen I contacted Fibertec they didn\'t get back to me for over a week of trying to contact them. When they did get back to me they knew nothing about my order and couldn\'t have cared less about the issue.\r\n\r\nBottom line: DO NOT USE FIBERTEC. Service sucks and quality sucks. But mostly the service. I can fix the windows myself. It is just annoying.\r\n\r\nHOWEVER, the fiberglass frame part I LOVE. I think this is the way to go. I really love them and once they are nicely painted and repaired I will be very happy with them. I met another company at a green trade show and next time I would go with them iinstead. Sorry can\'t remember their name right now. But their card is in a big pile somewhere.\r\n\r\n
\r\nABOVE: Lock latches falling off.\r\n\r\n
\r\nHere you can see the crack between the felt of the window and the frame. This is because the frame is bending due it not being able to hold the weight.\r\n\r\n
\r\nThe above photo shows us installing the windows. On the right you can see one installed. ', 'My Fibetec Fiberglass Windows Suck', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '394-revision-2', '', '', '2008-12-18 15:18:56', '2008-12-18 21:18:56', '', 394, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/394-revision-2/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (401, 1, '2008-12-19 16:17:39', '2008-12-19 22:17:39', '
\r\nWe are building a green show house to highlight our skills as well as make an educational contribution to the community. Visit the house\'s blog for ongoing details. Visitors are welcome to come see the work in progress. Please call for an appointment: Gennaro - 347 244 3016.\r\n\r\nThe building is a brick row house in Carroll Gardens, Brooklyn. The last renovation was cheaply done in the 1950\'s so it made a lot of green sense to gut most of it. We are installing an upper triplex and a lower duplex unit,\r\n\r\nWe are rebuilding it using the strictest green concepts we know of. The main green tenet involves consuming as little as possible. We reduce the impact on the earth by reusing and salvaging all possible materials. This means less material has to be made for the job. If that is not possible we use recycled and green products.\r\n\r\nWe will feature some green products in partnership with certain green companies we believe in.\r\n\r\nSome green elements are:\r\n\r\nAs much as possible the joists, studs, and other woods are either recycled from the structure or salvaged from other houses that were gutted. This means we are working with wood that is over 100 years old that otherwise would have been sent to the landfill.\r\n\r\nThe windows are fiberglass frame and of the highest energy efficiency. Windows are arranged to maximize solar gain on the south side and minimize heat loss on the north side.\r\n\r\nThe fire escape is recycled back into the building as walkways and stairs.\r\n\r\nThe roof has a "green roof" and bee hive. The roof and south wall have solar PV and hot water panels.\r\n\r\nRainwater is strategically routed to water the garden. The gardens, both on the roof and in the front and back of the house, will have all the required flora to recreate a wildlife sanctuary and attract local fauna.\r\n\r\nRadiant heat is in all floors and some bathroom walls.\r\n\r\nThe floors are either buffed and colored concrete, salvaged stone and slate, salvaged wood flooring or newly made floors from salvaged beams.\r\n\r\nAll electrical is being laid out to minimize the magnetic exposure to the occupants. Main shut off switches are located near the entrance doors to minimize usage when tenants are out.\r\n\r\nWe are using LOTS of high R value insulation to make the house air tight and warm. All exterior wall insulation is salvaged Poly ISO board. All interior walls and floors are hard packed cellulose insulation for both insulation and sound proofing benefits.\r\n\r\nStones from the cellar that we dug out and bricks from walls we removed are re-used as retaining walls and patios. The chain link fence from the yard is used instead of rebar in the cellar concrete slab.\r\n\r\nAll appliances and the boiler are the most energy efficient we could find. \r\n\r\nThe list goes on.', 'Show House', 0, '', 'publish', 'open', 'open', '', 'show-house', '', '', '2008-12-31 10:38:07', '2008-12-31 16:38:07', '', 0, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/?page_id=401', 0, 'page', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (402, 1, '2008-12-19 16:16:29', '2008-12-19 22:16:29', 'We are building a green show house to highlight our skills as well as make an educational contribution to the community. \n\nThe house is a four story brick row house in Carroll Gardens, Brooklyn. The last renovation was cheaply done in the 1950\'s so it made a lot of green sense to gut most of it. \n\nWe are rebuilding it using the strictest green concepts we know of. The main green tenets involve reducing the impact on the earth by reusing and salvaging materials. This means less material has to be made for the job. If that is not possible we use recycled and green products.\n\nWe will be featuring some green products in partnership with certain green companies we believe in.\n\nAs much as possible the joists, studs, and other woods are either recycled from the structure or salvaged from other houses that were gutted. This means we are working with wood that is over 100 years old that otherwise would have been sent to the landfill.\n\nThe windows are fiberglass frame and of the highest energy efficiency.\n\nThe fire escape is being recycled back into the building as walkways and stairs.\n\nThe roof have a green roof.\n\nThe roof and south wall have solar PV and hot water panels.\n\nThe floors have radiant heat.\n\nThe floors are either buffed concrete, salvaged wood flooring or newly made floors from salvaged beams.\n\nAll electrical is being laid out to minimize the magnetic exposure to the occupants. Main shut off switches are located near the entrance door to minimize usage when tenants are out.\n\nAll exterior wall insulation is salvaged Poly ISO board from other jobs. We are using LOTS of high R value insulation to make the house air tight and warm. All interior walls and floors are hard packed with cellulose insulation for both insulation and sound proofing benefits.\n\nWindows have been arranged to maximize solar gain on the south side and minimize heat loss on the north side.\n\nStones from the cellar that we dug out and bricks from walls we removed are being re-used as retaining walls and patios. The chain link fence from the yard is being used instead of rebar in the cellar concrete slab.\n\nThe list goes on.', 'Show House', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '401-revision', '', '', '2008-12-19 16:16:29', '2008-12-19 22:16:29', '', 401, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/401-revision/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (403, 1, '2008-12-19 16:56:21', '2008-12-19 22:56:21', 'We are building a green show house to highlight our skills as well as make an educational contribution to the community. Visit the house\'s blog for ongoing details.\n\nThe building is a four story brick row house in Carroll Gardens, Brooklyn. The last renovation was cheaply done in the 1950\'s so it made a lot of green sense to gut most of it. \n\nWe are rebuilding it using the strictest green concepts we know of. The main green tenet involves consuming as little as possible. We reduce the impact on the earth by reusing and salvaging all possible materials. This means less material has to be made for the job. If that is not possible we use recycled and green products.\n\nWe will feature some green products in partnership with certain green companies we believe in.\n\nSome green elements are:\n\nAs much as possible the joists, studs, and other woods are either recycled from the structure or salvaged from other houses that were gutted. This means we are working with wood that is over 100 years old that otherwise would have been sent to the landfill.\n\nThe windows are fiberglass frame and of the highest energy efficiency. Windows are arranged to maximize solar gain on the south side and minimize heat loss on the north side.\n\nThe fire escape is recycled back into the building as walkways and stairs.\n\nThe roof has a green roof and bee hive.\n\nThe roof and south wall have solar PV and hot water panels.\n\nRadiant heat is in all floors and some bathroom walls.\n\nThe floors are either buffed and colored concrete, salvaged stone and slate, salvaged wood flooring or newly made floors from salvaged beams.\n\nAll electrical is being laid out to minimize the magnetic exposure to the occupants. Main shut off switches are located near the entrance doors to minimize usage when tenants are out.\n\nWe are using LOTS of high R value insulation to make the house air tight and warm. All exterior wall insulation is salvaged Poly ISO board. All interior walls and floors are hard packed cellulose insulation for both insulation and sound proofing benefits.\n\nStones from the cellar that we dug out and bricks from walls we removed are re-used as retaining walls and patios. The chain link fence from the yard is used instead of rebar in the cellar concrete slab.\n\nAll appliances and the boiler are the most energy efficient we could find. \n\nThe list goes on.', 'Show House', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '401-autosave', '', '', '2008-12-19 16:56:21', '2008-12-19 22:56:21', '', 401, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/401-autosave/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (404, 1, '2008-12-19 16:17:39', '2008-12-19 22:17:39', 'We are building a green show house to highlight our skills as well as make an educational contribution to the community. \r\n\r\nThe house is a four story brick row house in Carroll Gardens, Brooklyn. The last renovation was cheaply done in the 1950\'s so it made a lot of green sense to gut most of it. \r\n\r\nWe are rebuilding it using the strictest green concepts we know of. The main green tenets involve reducing the impact on the earth by reusing and salvaging materials. This means less material has to be made for the job. If that is not possible we use recycled and green products.\r\n\r\nWe will be featuring some green products in partnership with certain green companies we believe in.\r\n\r\nAs much as possible the joists, studs, and other woods are either recycled from the structure or salvaged from other houses that were gutted. This means we are working with wood that is over 100 years old that otherwise would have been sent to the landfill.\r\n\r\nThe windows are fiberglass frame and of the highest energy efficiency.\r\n\r\nThe fire escape is being recycled back into the building as walkways and stairs.\r\n\r\nThe roof have a green roof.\r\n\r\nThe roof and south wall have solar PV and hot water panels.\r\n\r\nThe floors have radiant heat.\r\n\r\nThe floors are either buffed concrete, salvaged wood flooring or newly made floors from salvaged beams.\r\n\r\nAll electrical is being laid out to minimize the magnetic exposure to the occupants. Main shut off switches are located near the entrance door to minimize usage when tenants are out.\r\n\r\nAll exterior wall insulation is salvaged Poly ISO board from other jobs. We are using LOTS of high R value insulation to make the house air tight and warm. All interior walls and floors are hard packed with cellulose insulation for both insulation and sound proofing benefits.\r\n\r\nWindows have been arranged to maximize solar gain on the south side and minimize heat loss on the north side.\r\n\r\nStones from the cellar that we dug out and bricks from walls we removed are being re-used as retaining walls and patios. The chain link fence from the yard is being used instead of rebar in the cellar concrete slab.\r\n\r\nThe list goes on.', 'Show House', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '401-revision-2', '', '', '2008-12-19 16:17:39', '2008-12-19 22:17:39', '', 401, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/401-revision-2/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (405, 1, '2008-12-19 17:06:51', '2008-12-19 23:06:51', '', 'eco brooklyn green show house', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'img_0109-2', '', '', '2008-12-19 17:06:51', '2008-12-19 23:06:51', '', 401, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/img_0109.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (406, 1, '2008-12-19 16:59:18', '2008-12-19 22:59:18', '\r\n\r\nWe are building a green show house to highlight our skills as well as make an educational contribution to the community. Visit the house\'s blog for ongoing details.\r\n\r\nThe building is a four story brick row house in Carroll Gardens, Brooklyn. The last renovation was cheaply done in the 1950\'s so it made a lot of green sense to gut most of it. \r\n\r\nWe are rebuilding it using the strictest green concepts we know of. The main green tenet involves consuming as little as possible. We reduce the impact on the earth by reusing and salvaging all possible materials. This means less material has to be made for the job. If that is not possible we use recycled and green products.\r\n\r\nWe will feature some green products in partnership with certain green companies we believe in.\r\n\r\nSome green elements are:\r\n\r\nAs much as possible the joists, studs, and other woods are either recycled from the structure or salvaged from other houses that were gutted. This means we are working with wood that is over 100 years old that otherwise would have been sent to the landfill.\r\n\r\nThe windows are fiberglass frame and of the highest energy efficiency. Windows are arranged to maximize solar gain on the south side and minimize heat loss on the north side.\r\n\r\nThe fire escape is recycled back into the building as walkways and stairs.\r\n\r\nThe roof has a green roof and bee hive.\r\n\r\nThe roof and south wall have solar PV and hot water panels.\r\n\r\nRadiant heat is in all floors and some bathroom walls.\r\n\r\nThe floors are either buffed and colored concrete, salvaged stone and slate, salvaged wood flooring or newly made floors from salvaged beams.\r\n\r\nAll electrical is being laid out to minimize the magnetic exposure to the occupants. Main shut off switches are located near the entrance doors to minimize usage when tenants are out.\r\n\r\nWe are using LOTS of high R value insulation to make the house air tight and warm. All exterior wall insulation is salvaged Poly ISO board. All interior walls and floors are hard packed cellulose insulation for both insulation and sound proofing benefits.\r\n\r\nStones from the cellar that we dug out and bricks from walls we removed are re-used as retaining walls and patios. The chain link fence from the yard is used instead of rebar in the cellar concrete slab.\r\n\r\nAll appliances and the boiler are the most energy efficient we could find. \r\n\r\nThe list goes on.', 'Show House', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '401-revision-3', '', '', '2008-12-19 16:59:18', '2008-12-19 22:59:18', '', 401, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/401-revision-3/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (414, 1, '2008-12-19 18:13:40', '2008-12-20 00:13:40', 'After some research we noticed that one of the most effective ways to reduce impact noise between floors was to put a recycled tyre product between the floor and sub floor. It creates a vibrating cushion that absorbs the impact, thus deadening the sound.\r\n\r\nThe only problem is that this product is costly. And costly is not green in the slightest.\r\n\r\nSo we went to the mechanic down the road. He was more than happy to give us some used tires. He has to pay to dispose of them into the landfill. We took the tires and cut them into little strips.\r\n\r\nThe strips were placed wherever a stud or support beam made contact with the floor above, creating a sound impact barrier between the two floors. Kids jumping, heavy boots and games of basketball should all become less audible from the neighbors above thanks to our technique.\r\n\r\n
\r\nCutting the tires into strips.\r\n\r\n
\r\nPlacing the tire under the joists.\r\n\r\n
\r\nThe same tire pictured above but now we have put the support beam beneath it. The tire now acts as a sound barrier between the joists and the beam, breaking the vibration that would normally pass from the joist to the beam and the floor below.\r\n\r\n
\r\nHere is an example of the tire placed between the stud and the footer. It is better to place the tire between the stud and the header to stop sound coming from above. But in this case the stud was supporting the stairs so it didn\'t matter.', 'Soundproofing between floors', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '407-revision-2', '', '', '2008-12-19 18:13:40', '2008-12-20 00:13:40', '', 407, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/407-revision-2/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (415, 1, '2008-12-23 15:46:57', '2008-12-23 21:46:57', '
\r\nAbove Pic: "ugly" wood that I use for everything from studs to window frames.\r\n\r\nRecycling is a great way to reuse materials and save money. It is important to keep in mind the extra costs of recycling.\r\n\r\nIf you get the materials for free, say from a salvage, that is a great starting point. It beats paying for it from a store.\r\n\r\nBut free or not you then have to have a use for it otherwise you need to pay to store it until the job is ready. This costs money.\r\n\r\nSecondly, and this is often an issue with wood or metal studs, recycled material isn\'t always clean. My carpenters have never felled a tree for wood. They are used to reaching their arm out and grabbing a perfectly cut clean piece of wood that fits exactly what they need. This is the consumer society we live in.\r\n\r\nAnd I am always getting grief from my carpenters about this. I bring them ugly, nail ridden, odd sized wood and ask them to work with it. They don\'t like it. It takes them precious time to clean the wood and size it for their needs. \r\n\r\nIn fact today one carpenter said he felt guilty because he was wasting so much of my time (=money) using the old wood instead of out of the box new wood.\r\n\r\nBut the important thing to understand is that it is still better. I would rather pay my carpenter the money instead of the store. Despite the obvious benefits of recycling etc, I\'m still saving money.\r\n\r\nI may pay the carpenter $20 extra but I save $15 because I didn\'t pay for the wood. Even if I wasn\'t saving any money at all I would still do it. \r\n\r\nIt makes too much sense not to do it. It means my carpenters need to slow down. It means my studs won\'t be nice and clean looking. But it also means I\'ve saved some trees, the wood is stronger than the crap they speed grow today, I\'m lessened the landfill burden, and I might even save some money!', 'The Costs of Recycling', 0, '', 'publish', 'open', 'open', '', 'costs-recycling', '', '', '2008-12-23 15:46:57', '2008-12-23 21:46:57', '', 0, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/?p=415', 0, 'post', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (416, 1, '2008-12-23 15:45:23', '2008-12-23 21:45:23', '', 'xxxximg_0096', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'xxxximg_0096', '', '', '2008-12-23 15:45:23', '2008-12-23 21:45:23', '', 415, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/xxxximg_0096.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (417, 1, '2008-12-23 15:46:16', '2008-12-23 21:46:16', '
\nAbove Pic: "ugly" wood that I use for everything from studs to \nRecycling is a great way to reuse materials and save money. It is important to keep in mind the extra costs of recycling.\n\nIf you get the materials for free, say from a salvage, that is a great starting point. It beats paying for it from a store.\n\nBut free or not you then have to have a use for it otherwise you need to pay to store it until the job is ready. This costs money.\n\nSecondly, and this is often an issue with wood or metal studs, recycled material isn\'t always clean. My carpenters have never felled a tree for wood. They are used to reaching their arm out and grabbing a perfectly cut clean piece of wood that fits exactly what they need. This is the consumer society we live in.\n\nAnd I am always getting grief from my carpenters about this. I bring them ugly, nail ridden, odd sized wood and ask them to work with it. They don\'t like it. It takes them precious time to clean the wood and size it for their needs. \n\nIn fact today one carpenter said he felt guilty because he was wasting so much of my time (=money) using the old wood instead of out of the box new wood.\n\nBut the important thing to understand is that it is still better. I would rather pay my carpenter the money instead of the store. Despite the obvious benefits of recycling etc, I\'m still saving money.\n\nI may pay the carpenter $20 extra but I save $15 because I didn\'t pay for the wood. Even if I wasn\'t saving any money at all I would still do it. \n\nIt makes too much sense not to do it. It means my carpenters need to slow down. It means my studs won\'t be nice and clean looking. But it also means I\'ve saved some trees, the wood is stronger than the crap they speed grow today, I\'m lessened the landfill burden, and I might even save some money!', 'The costs of recycling', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '415-revision', '', '', '2008-12-23 15:46:16', '2008-12-23 21:46:16', '', 415, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/415-revision/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (418, 1, '0000-00-00 00:00:00', '0000-00-00 00:00:00', '\nofficeinsight 18 of 25 TM 5.23.05\nCont’d on next page . . .\nwith “these” specifi cations for a stated\nprice. Alternately, we might use a system\nof grades such as “Good, Better, and\nBest,” or a system based on numerical\nrankings, “on a scale from one to ten,\netc.” Recently, in the area of sustainability,\nUSGBC has combined a system\nof points and grades to create a scale\nsuch as the one used by the LEED rating\nsystem: “Certifi ed, Silver, Gold and\nPlatinum.”\nHere’s how the real estate industry\nplaces value on buildings:\n(Oper. Inc. – Oper.Exp.)/\nCap. Rate\nThat’s progress, but here’s how the\nreal estate industry places value on\nbuildings. The most common appraisal\nmethod used to value income-producing\nreal estate is an approach called income\ncapitalization method. The appraisal process\nbegins by establishing the project’s\nnet operating income (NOI). NOI is the\ntotal income from the building minus operating\ncosts but not any debt service.\nThe next step is to divide the NOI by a\ncapitalization rate (also called “cap rate”).\nThe capitalization rate is a market based\ninterest rate that is equivalent to a freeand-\nclear return on investment.\nThe result of this step is the building’s\neconomic value. Note that a building’s\nvalue is not directly related to its construction\ncost. The three components\nthat impact a building’s value are income\n(rent), operating expenses, and capitalization\nrate. [(Oper. Inc. – Oper. Exp.)/\nCap. Rate]\nIncome or rent is a function of the\nmarketplace. While the rent for one building\nmay be more or less than the rent\nfor others, it typically fi ts into a “market\nrange.” Clearly, the quality of location,\ndesign, and construction comes into\nplay here. As a rule, better buildings rent\nat the top end of the market range, lease\nup quicker and have lower vacancies\nrates. Similarly, capitalization rate is generally\noutside of the control of the owner,\ndesigners or building operators.\nthe variable that can be controlled\nin any given market is\noperating costs\nThere is a variable that can be controlled\nin any given market, however: operating\ncosts; these can vary 30 to 40%\nor more for similar buildings. Designers\nand building operators share accountability\nfor this. Often higher operating\ncosts were designed and constructed\ninto the building. On the other hand, welldesigned\nand properly operated buildings\nare cheaper to run and therefore\nare worth more money (i.e., have greater\nvalue) than their peers. For example,\nthere are numerous buildings across the\ncounty where the annual energy costs\nare a $1.00/sq.ft. less than the building\nacross the street.\nLet’s look at a case where a building’s\nannual energy cost could be reduced by\n$0.50/sq.ft. The investment is $1.25/sq.ft.\nThe simple pay back period is 2.5 years.\nThis falls into that gray area where many\narchitects, engineers and owner repre-\nMany overlook an important point\nwhen discussing construction costs:\na building’s value is not directly tied to\nconstruction costs. Failure to understand\nthat is causing plenty of damage in presenting\nthe case for green buildings\nwhen beginning the design process. Let\nme explain.\nMost projects are built for the budget\nthat was established at the beginning of\nthe project. If your construction budget is\n$125/sq.ft., you spend a $125/sq.ft. plus\nor minus a few bucks. If it’s $275, you\nspend $275 give or take a dollar or two.\nThe fi rst barrier to green design was\nthe perception that it cost more than traditional\nconstruction. But this perception\nwas based upon false assumptions and\ndata that was vague and lacking in rigor.\nThen Davis Langdon published a report\n“Examining the Cost of Green.” Davis\nLangdon found there was no signifi cant\ndifference in the construction costs for\nLEED-seeking and non-LEED buildings\nin any of the categories they studied.\nUnfortunately, the perception that green\ncosts more still exists.\nHow much value did you get\nfor the money you spend?\nEnvironmental advocates must, therefore,\nbring to bear another, and perhaps\nmore important, argument by rephrasing\ntheir proposals, not in terms of cost, but\nby asking the question, “How much value\ndid you get for the money you spend?”\nHow do we express value? More often\nthan not, we use costs as a way to\ngauge value; that is, you get a building\nTurning Green into Gold\nWin Your Design Case\nby Focusing on Value, Not Cost\nby B. Alan Whitson, RPA\n\nofficeinsight 19 of 25 TM 5.23.05\n. . . Cont’d from preceding page\nsentatives would pass on this solution.\nBut what if we examine this from the\nperspective of value added rather than\nthe cost. Using the income capitalization\nmethod, that $0.50 in savings falls\ndirectly to the bottom line increasing the\nNOI. Dividing the $0.50 by a 7.75% capitalization\nrate, the value of the building\nincreases by $6.45/sq.ft. The return on\ninvestment ($6.45/$1.25) – 516%! Literally\nwe are buying ten-dollar bills for two\nbucks.\nwhere do we get the $1.25,\nsince it’s never in the budget\nAt this point somebody always asks\nwhere do we get the $1.25, since it’s\nnever in the budget. Here’s how that\npencils out. The building’s value has increased\nby $6.45 per square foot. The\npermanent lender is welling to lend the\nowner 75% of the building’s value or an\nadditional $4.84/sq.ft. The investment\nis $1.25/sq.ft., which leaves the owner\n$3.59/sq.ft. to do something else with.\nThe loan amount of $4.84/sq.ft. amortized\nover 30-years at 8.25% interest\nrate requires $0.44 in payments per year.\nThe payment is covered by the $0.50 in\nreduced energy costs yielding a 1.14\ndebt service coverage ratio.\nClearly this is a case where good design\nis adding value faster than it adds\ncost.\n…………………………………………\n(This column is published in conjunction\nwith the Corporate Realty, Design &\nManagement Institute and the Center for\nSustainable Real Estate. Click on www.\nsquarefootage.net for a seminar schedule,\nbooks, and white papers on sustainability\nand high performance buildings.\nAlan Whitson’s latest book, Interior Fit Out\n− Guidelines for the High Performance &\nSustainable Workplace will be released\nthis Summer. Moving, expansion, and\nconsolidation will be covered in the new\nseminar series, TI’s/Interior Fit Out: New\nRules for 2005. You can contact Alan\nWhitson at awhitson@squarefootage.\nnet)\nwww.dtank.com', '', 0, '', 'draft', 'open', 'open', '', '', '', '', '2008-12-28 15:29:22', '2008-12-28 21:29:22', '', 0, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/?p=418', 0, 'post', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (419, 1, '2008-12-29 18:04:38', '2008-12-30 00:04:38', '
\r\nOnly in USA are dumpsters so full of wonderful stuff. And you can\'t get fancier than a Corcoran dumpster. There is one in front of the Corcoran condos on President St in Carroll Gardens. I had the good luck to check them out today and found 1000 sq.ft. of once used wide plank maple flooring!\r\n\r\nThe builder was there and he said they were installed six months ago in the summer. Probably because they weren\'t acclimatized correctly they warped a little. But my carpenter says it\'s nothing the correct nails and some sanding can\'t fix.\r\n\r\nSo it looks like the green show house will have 100% salvaged flooring. We salvaged some oak from another reno a couple months ago.\r\n\r\n
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INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (422, 1, '2008-12-29 18:00:54', '2008-12-30 00:00:54', 'Only in USA are dumpsters so full of wonderful stuff. And you can\'t get fancier than a Corcoran dumpster. There is one in front of the Corcoran condos on President St in Carroll Gardens. I had the good luck to check them out today and found 1000 sq.ft. of once used wide plank maple flooring!\n\nThe builder was there and he said they were installed six months ago in the summer. Probably because they weren\'t acclimatized correctly they warped a little. But my carpenter says it\'s nothing the correct nails and some sanding can\'t fix.\n\nSo it looks like the green show house will have 100% salvaged flooring. We salvaged some oak from another reno', 'Wood Flooring courtesy of Corcoran', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '419-revision', '', '', '2008-12-29 18:00:54', '2008-12-30 00:00:54', '', 419, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/419-revision/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (423, 1, '2008-12-09 19:27:55', '2008-12-10 01:27:55', '
Why buy new insulation when you can get great salvaged insulation for 60% less? \r\n\r\nIt keeps it out of landfills, lessens having to make new insulation, the insulation has already off gassed any possible VOC\'s, you can use it for LEED credits, and the insulation is an amazing R6/inch (no other insulation gets that), which is great for space starved Brooklyn. \r\n\r\nIt is clearly the greenest, cheapest, and most intelligent option.\r\n\r\nFor sale is PolyISO 4x8 board. It is 1.5 inch thick natural facer (no foil) with a total of R9 insulation value. It is once used but in great shape and just as effective as the new stuff. The price is $10/sheet (60% savings).\r\n\r\nWe also have waterproof blue Extruded Polistyrene, which is great for under concrete slabs or under green roofs.\r\n\r\n
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INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (424, 1, '2008-12-29 20:52:58', '2008-12-30 02:52:58', '
\r\n\r\nWe have completely dug down the cellar by 3 and 1/2 feet. Then we put a vapour barrier and 3 inch insulation which we taped at the seams. Then we put down the salvaged fencing from the back yard to act as strengthener for the cement. On the fence we tied the pex tubing for the radiant head. \r\n\r\nMeanwhile on the ceiling we are insulating the pipes. Fanatical insulation is the trick to green building.\r\n\r\nThe next step is to pour the cement.\r\n\r\n
\r\n', 'Laying the foundation for the concrete slab', 0, '', 'publish', 'open', 'open', '', 'laying-foundation-concrete-slab', '', '', '2008-12-29 20:52:58', '2008-12-30 02:52:58', '', 0, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/?p=424', 0, 'post', '', 0) ;
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INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (427, 1, '2008-12-29 20:52:53', '2008-12-30 02:52:53', '
\n\nWe have completely dug down the cellar by 3 and 1/2 feet. Then we put a vapour barrier and 3 inch insulation which we taped at the seams. Then we put down the salvaged fencing from the back yard to act as strengthener for the cement. On the fence we tied the pex tubing for the radiant head. \n\nMeanwhile on the ceiling we are insulating the pipes. Fanatical insulation is the trick to green building.\n\nThe next step is to pour the cement.\n\n
\n', 'Laying the foundation for the concrete slab', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '424-revision', '', '', '2008-12-29 20:52:53', '2008-12-30 02:52:53', '', 424, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/424-revision/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (428, 1, '2008-12-29 20:54:55', '2008-12-30 02:54:55', 'As seen from the stoop of the green show house. Nice!\r\n
', 'Brooklyn on a Crisp Winter Day!', 0, '', 'publish', 'open', 'open', '', 'brooklyn-crisp-winter-day', '', '', '2008-12-29 20:54:55', '2008-12-30 02:54:55', '', 0, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/?p=428', 0, 'post', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (429, 1, '2008-12-29 20:54:21', '2008-12-30 02:54:21', '', 'p1010277', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'p1010277', '', '', '2008-12-29 20:54:21', '2008-12-30 02:54:21', '', 428, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/p1010277.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
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INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (431, 1, '2008-12-30 16:56:14', '2008-12-30 22:56:14', 'I have a moto that I live by when building: Fanatic Insulation. I\'m not sure if I coined the phrase but I think I did :). We use weather barrier, caulk, insulation, foam, flashing etc like there we\'re building an antarctic deep sea submarine.\r\n\r\nConsidering some European standards, notably in Germany, our insulation style actually isn\'t that fanatic. Just recently I was reading about homes in Germany that are so well insulated that in the dead of winter all they need is a little portable heater to heat the entire home. Or one small fireplace. Now that is energy smart!\r\n\r\nA house needs to seen as a living entity and a renovation is an operation. When you sew them back up again it needs to be done with thoroughness and accuracy. You wouldn\'t leave a patient with a gaping hole in them and the same applies to a house. It needs to be sealed correctly with the correct materials. \r\n\r\nOtherwise "infection" will occur. In the form of wood rot from water, wasted energy from air, etc.\r\n\r\nNow of course the houses in Germany aren\'t just warm because of insulation. They are "passive houses" and of course passive heat from the sun helps. \r\n\r\nAnd if a house is fanatically insulated then you have to give it "artificial lungs" since it is no longer breathing through the cracks in the walls. Fans, windows, air circulators and vents need to be added intelligently so that the house can breathe otherwise the very well insulated air stagnates in it\'s own soup. \r\n\r\nThe key in this is to do it more effectively than the cracks in the wall that while letting the house breathe also let in the elements. A heat transfer plate is one cool tool where the heat going out the house heats the air coming into the house. Likewise you can have the same tool for the water; where the hot water going out of the house (shower, dishwasher etc) heats the water coming into the house through heat transfer coils.\r\n\r\n', 'Fanatic Insulation', 0, '', 'publish', 'open', 'open', '', 'fanatic-insulation', '', '', '2008-12-30 17:03:06', '2008-12-30 23:03:06', '', 0, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/?p=431', 0, 'post', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (432, 1, '2008-12-30 16:55:25', '2008-12-30 22:55:25', 'I have a moto that I live by when building: Fanatic Insulation. I\'m not sure if I coined the phrase but I think I did :). We use weather barrier, caulk, insulation, foam, flashing etc like there we\'re building an antarctic deep sea submarine.\n\nConsidering some European standards, notably in Germany, our insulation style actually isn\'t that fanatic. Just recently I was reading about homes in Germany that are so well insulated that in the dead of winter all they need is a little portable heater to heat the entire home. Or one small fireplace. Now that is energy smart!\n\nA house needs to seen as a living entity and a renovation is an operation. When you sew them back up again it needs to be done with thoroughness and accuracy. You wouldn\'t leave a patient with a gaping hole in them and the same applies to a house. It needs to be sealed correctly with the correct materials. \n\nOtherwise "infection" will occur. In the form of wood rot from ', 'Fanatic Insulation', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '431-revision', '', '', '2008-12-30 16:55:25', '2008-12-30 22:55:25', '', 431, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/431-revision/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (433, 1, '0000-00-00 00:00:00', '0000-00-00 00:00:00', '', 'I missed LEED by a hair', 0, '', 'draft', 'open', 'open', '', '', '', '', '2008-12-30 16:56:32', '2008-12-30 22:56:32', '', 0, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/?p=433', 0, 'post', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (434, 1, '2008-12-30 17:02:37', '2008-12-30 23:02:37', 'I have a moto that I live by when building: Fanatic Insulation. I\'m not sure if I coined the phrase but I think I did :). We use weather barrier, caulk, insulation, foam, flashing etc like there we\'re building an antarctic deep sea submarine.\n\nConsidering some European standards, notably in Germany, our insulation style actually isn\'t that fanatic. Just recently I was reading about homes in Germany that are so well insulated that in the dead of winter all they need is a little portable heater to heat the entire home. Or one small fireplace. Now that is energy smart!\n\nA house needs to seen as a living entity and a renovation is an operation. When you sew them back up again it needs to be done with thoroughness and accuracy. You wouldn\'t leave a patient with a gaping hole in them and the same applies to a house. It needs to be sealed correctly with the correct materials. \n\nOtherwise "infection" will occur. In the form of wood rot from water, wasted energy from air, etc.\n\nNow of course the houses in Germany aren\'t just warm because of insulation. They are "passive houses" and of course passive heat from the sun helps. \n\nAnd if a house is fanatically insulated then you have to give it "artificial lungs" since it is no longer breathing through the cracks in the walls. Fans, windows, air circulators and vents need to be added intelligently so that the house can breathe otherwise the very well insulated air stagnates in it\'s own soup. \n\nThe key in this is to do it more effectively than the cracks in the wall that while letting the house breathe also let in the elements. A heat transfer plate is one cool tool where the heat going out the house heats the air coming into the house. Likewise you can have the same tool for the water; where the hot water coming out of the house (shower, dishwasher etc) heats the water coming into the house through heat transfer \n\n', 'Fanatic Insulation', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '431-autosave', '', '', '2008-12-30 17:02:37', '2008-12-30 23:02:37', '', 431, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/431-autosave/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (435, 1, '2008-12-30 16:56:14', '2008-12-30 22:56:14', 'I have a moto that I live by when building: Fanatic Insulation. I\'m not sure if I coined the phrase but I think I did :). We use weather barrier, caulk, insulation, foam, flashing etc like there we\'re building an antarctic deep sea submarine.\r\n\r\nConsidering some European standards, notably in Germany, our insulation style actually isn\'t that fanatic. Just recently I was reading about homes in Germany that are so well insulated that in the dead of winter all they need is a little portable heater to heat the entire home. Or one small fireplace. Now that is energy smart!\r\n\r\nA house needs to seen as a living entity and a renovation is an operation. When you sew them back up again it needs to be done with thoroughness and accuracy. You wouldn\'t leave a patient with a gaping hole in them and the same applies to a house. It needs to be sealed correctly with the correct materials. \r\n\r\nOtherwise "infection" will occur. In the form of wood rot from water, wasted energy from air, etc.', 'Fanatic Insulation', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '431-revision-2', '', '', '2008-12-30 16:56:14', '2008-12-30 22:56:14', '', 431, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/431-revision-2/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (436, 1, '2008-12-31 09:31:25', '2008-12-31 15:31:25', 'We have a cellar half of the ceiling on the south side being open so that large amounts of light stream in and make a very nice living area.\r\n\r\nFirst we dug out the cellar 3 1/2 feet:\r\n
\r\n\r\nWhile digging we found a giant stone which I decided to keep and put under the stairs, much to head shaking of everyone else. They wanted to dig a hole and bury it. I want to give it a name and designate it the protector of the house. I\'m different that way I guess:\r\n
\r\n\r\nThen we underpinned the walls:\r\n
\r\n\r\nThen 3 inches of insulation including around the border.\r\n
\r\n\r\nSalvaged steel from fencing. From this:\r\n
\r\n\r\nTo this:\r\n
\r\n\r\nPex hot water tubing (the black foam is to insulate some water pipes in the ceiling):\r\n
\r\n\r\n4-5 inches of concrete. We used cement and sand without rocks to not damage the tubes.\r\nWe decided to not use Fly Ash in any of the cement because even though fly ash makes a better mix and is also recycling material I had doubts about the heavy metal content of fly ash.\r\n\r\nPassing the concrete into the cellar along a chute we made out of plywood:\r\n
\r\n\r\n
\r\n\r\n
\r\n\r\n
\r\n\r\nColoring. We scattered a cement/sand/color mixture and troweled it in. I\'m not sure I like the coloring. I wanted something warm and sunny for the cellar but it turned out a little too dramatic. I might sand it down a bit to remove some of the intensity. We might also cut grout lines and put some lighter grout to also cut down on the intensity. \r\n\r\n
\r\n\r\n
\r\n\r\n
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INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (443, 1, '2008-12-31 09:08:46', '2008-12-31 15:08:46', '', 'p10102731', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'p10102731', '', '', '2008-12-31 09:08:46', '2008-12-31 15:08:46', '', 436, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/p10102731.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (444, 1, '2008-12-31 09:14:56', '2008-12-31 15:14:56', '', 'p1010344', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'p1010344', '', '', '2008-12-31 09:14:56', '2008-12-31 15:14:56', '', 436, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/p1010344.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
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INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (446, 1, '2008-12-31 09:18:37', '2008-12-31 15:18:37', '', 'p1010334', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'p1010334', '', '', '2008-12-31 09:18:37', '2008-12-31 15:18:37', '', 436, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/p1010334.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (447, 1, '2008-12-31 09:23:33', '2008-12-31 15:23:33', '', 'p1010355', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'p1010355', '', '', '2008-12-31 09:23:33', '2008-12-31 15:23:33', '', 436, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/p1010355.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (448, 1, '2008-12-31 09:26:58', '2008-12-31 15:26:58', '', 'p1010373', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'p1010373', '', '', '2008-12-31 09:26:58', '2008-12-31 15:26:58', '', 436, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/p1010373.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (449, 1, '2008-12-31 09:28:45', '2008-12-31 15:28:45', '', 'p1010401', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'p1010401', '', '', '2008-12-31 09:28:45', '2008-12-31 15:28:45', '', 436, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/p1010401.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (450, 1, '2008-12-31 09:30:30', '2008-12-31 15:30:30', '', 'p1010386', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'p1010386', '', '', '2008-12-31 09:30:30', '2008-12-31 15:30:30', '', 436, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/p1010386.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (451, 1, '2008-12-31 09:31:09', '2008-12-31 15:31:09', 'We have a cellar half of the ceiling on the south side being open so that large amounts of light stream in and make a very nice living area.\n\nFirst we dug out the cellar 3 1/2 feet:\n
\n\nWhile digging we found a giant stone which I decided to keep and put under the stairs, much to head shaking of everyone else. They wanted to dig a hole and bury it. I want to give it a name and designate it the protector of the house. I\'m different that way I guess:\n
\n\nThen we underpinned the walls:\n
\n\nThen 3 inches of insulation including around the border.\n
\n\nSalvaged steel from fencing. From this:\n
\n\nTo this:\n
\n\nPex hot water tubing (the black foam is to insulate some water pipes in the ceiling):\n
\n\n4-5 inches of concrete. We used cement and sand without rocks to not damage the tubes.\nWe decided to not use Fly Ash in any of the cement because even though fly ash makes a better mix and is also recycling material I had doubts about the heavy metal content of fly ash.\n\nPassing the concrete into the cellar along a chute we made out of plywood:\n
\n\n
\n\n
\n\n
\n\nColoring. We scattered a cement/sand/color mixture and troweled it in. I\'m not sure I like the coloring. I wanted something warm and sunny for the cellar but it turned out a little too dramatic. I might sand it down a bit to remove some of the intensity. We might also cut grout lines and put some lighter grout to also cut down on the intensity. \n\n
\n\n
\n\n
', 'Experimenting with the concrete slab', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '436-revision', '', '', '2008-12-31 09:31:09', '2008-12-31 15:31:09', '', 436, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/436-revision/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (452, 1, '2008-11-27 14:13:56', '2008-11-27 20:13:56', '
\r\nEco Brooklyn Inc. is an alternative GREEN REAL ESTATE, RENOVATION & DEVELOPMENT company in the Brooklyn area.\r\n\r\nEco Brooklyn Inc is a green builder. It focuses on building high quality energy efficient structures that last a long time and cost little to run. Attention is put on using sustainable products, recycling, and creating a structure that uses the least amount of energy possible. \r\n\r\nThe company is fully licensed and insured to do Home Improvement work in the state of NY. Insurance includes: Liability, Disability and Workers Compensation. Liability is up to $2 Million.\r\n\r\nIt invests in houses and renovates them as well as helps others renovate their homes.\r\n
\r\nEco Brooklyn Inc is run by Gennaro Brooks-Church, a NY Licensed Real Estate Broker, Certified EcoBroker® and lifetime builder. \r\n\r\nGennaro\'s knowledge of home values means all building is done with the value of the home in mind so that not only is the building of high quality but it is also of highest possible monetary value should the owners decide to sell or refinance. Special attention is paid to long terms trends so houses are built to increase in value over time.\r\n\r\nWe adhere to the ethics outlined in its membership with Sustainable Business Network New York City. The ethical sustainable business practices are specified in the triple bottom line - People, Planet, and Profit.\r\n\r\n
\r\nWe are building a green show house to highlight our skills as well as make an educational contribution to the community. Visit the house\'s blog for ongoing details. Visitors are welcome to come see the work in progress. Please call for an appointment: Gennaro - 347 244 3016.\r\n\r\nThe building is a brick row house in Carroll Gardens, Brooklyn. The last renovation was cheaply done in the 1950\'s so it made a lot of green sense to gut most of it. We are installing an upper triplex and a lower duplex unit,\r\n\r\nWe are rebuilding it using the strictest green concepts we know of. The main green tenet involves consuming as little as possible. We reduce the impact on the earth by reusing and salvaging all possible materials. This means less material has to be made for the job. If that is not possible we use recycled and green products.\r\n\r\nWe will feature some green products in partnership with certain green companies we believe in.\r\n\r\nSome green elements are:\r\n\r\nAs much as possible the joists, studs, and other woods are either recycled from the structure or salvaged from other houses that were gutted. This means we are working with wood that is over 100 years old that otherwise would have been sent to the landfill.\r\n\r\nThe windows are fiberglass frame and of the highest energy efficiency. Windows are arranged to maximize solar gain on the south side and minimize heat loss on the north side.\r\n\r\nThe fire escape is recycled back into the building as walkways and stairs.\r\n\r\nThe roof has a "green roof" and bee hive. The roof and south wall have solar PV and hot water panels.\r\n\r\nRainwater is strategically routed to water the garden. The gardens, both on the roof and in the front and back of the house, will have all the required flora to recreate a wildlife sanctuary and attract local fauna.\r\n\r\nRadiant heat is in all floors and some bathroom walls.\r\n\r\nThe floors are either buffed and colored concrete, salvaged stone and slate, salvaged wood flooring or newly made floors from salvaged beams.\r\n\r\nAll electrical is being laid out to minimize the magnetic exposure to the occupants. Main shut off switches are located near the entrance doors to minimize usage when tenants are out.\r\n\r\nWe are using LOTS of high R value insulation to make the house air tight and warm. All exterior wall insulation is salvaged Poly ISO board. All interior walls and floors are hard packed cellulose insulation for both insulation and sound proofing benefits.\r\n\r\nStones from the cellar that we dug out and bricks from walls we removed are re-used as retaining walls and patios. The chain link fence from the yard is used instead of rebar in the cellar concrete slab.\r\n\r\nAll appliances and the boiler are the most energy efficient we could find. \r\n\r\nThe list goes on.', 'Show House', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '401-revision-4', '', '', '2008-12-19 17:07:09', '2008-12-19 23:07:09', '', 401, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/401-revision-4/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (455, 1, '2008-12-31 10:33:52', '2008-12-31 16:33:52', '
\r\nWe are building a green show house to highlight our skills as well as make an educational contribution to the community. Visit the house\'s blog for ongoing details. Visitors are welcome to come see the work in progress. Please call for an appointment: Gennaro - 347 244 3016.\r\n\r\nThe building is a brick row house in Carroll Gardens, Brooklyn. The last renovation was cheaply done in the 1950\'s so it made a lot of green sense to gut most of it. We are installing an upper triplex and a lower duplex unit,\r\n\r\nWe are rebuilding it using the strictest green concepts we know of. The main green tenet involves consuming as little as possible. We reduce the impact on the earth by reusing and salvaging all possible materials. This means less material has to be made for the job. If that is not possible we use recycled and green products.\r\n\r\nWe will feature some green products in partnership with certain green companies we believe in.\r\n\r\nSome green elements are:\r\n\r\nAs much as possible the joists, studs, and other woods are either recycled from the structure or salvaged from other houses that were gutted. This means we are working with wood that is over 100 years old that otherwise would have been sent to the landfill.\r\n\r\nThe windows are fiberglass frame and of the highest energy efficiency. Windows are arranged to maximize solar gain on the south side and minimize heat loss on the north side.\r\n\r\nThe fire escape is recycled back into the building as walkways and stairs.\r\n\r\nThe roof has a "green roof" and bee hive. The roof and south wall have solar PV and hot water panels.\r\n\r\nRainwater is strategically routed to water the garden. The gardens, both on the roof and in the front and back of the house, will have all the required flora to recreate a wildlife sanctuary and attract local fauna.\r\n\r\nRadiant heat is in all floors and some bathroom walls.\r\n\r\nThe floors are either buffed and colored concrete, salvaged stone and slate, salvaged wood flooring or newly made floors from salvaged beams.\r\n\r\nAll electrical is being laid out to minimize the magnetic exposure to the occupants. Main shut off switches are located near the entrance doors to minimize usage when tenants are out.\r\n\r\nWe are using LOTS of high R value insulation to make the house air tight and warm. All exterior wall insulation is salvaged Poly ISO board. All interior walls and floors are hard packed cellulose insulation for both insulation and sound proofing benefits.\r\n\r\nStones from the cellar that we dug out and bricks from walls we removed are re-used as retaining walls and patios. The chain link fence from the yard is used instead of rebar in the cellar concrete slab.\r\n\r\nAll appliances and the boiler are the most energy efficient we could find. \r\n\r\nThe list goes on.', 'Show House', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '401-revision-5', '', '', '2008-12-31 10:33:52', '2008-12-31 16:33:52', '', 401, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/401-revision-5/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (456, 1, '2008-12-31 17:26:04', '2008-12-31 23:26:04', 'A "new" construction style coming out of Germany creates houses that barely need energy to run. They don\'t even have heating systems. In the dead of winter they might need a little space heater but that is is. What is the secret? Here is a list from their site:\r\n\r\nCompact form and good insulation: \r\nAll components of the exterior shell of the house are insulated to achieve a U-factor that does not exceed 0.15 W/(m²K) (0.026 Btu/h/ft²/°F).\r\n\r\nSouthern orientation and shade considerations: \r\nPassive use of solar energy is a significant factor in passive house design.\r\n\r\nEnergy-efficient window glazing and frames: \r\nWindows (glazing and frames, combined) should have U-factors not exceeding 0.80 W/(m²K) (0.14 Btu/h/ft²/°F), with solar heat-gain coefficients around 50%.\r\n\r\nBuilding envelope air-tightness: \r\nAir leakage through unsealed joints must be less than 0.6 times the house volume per hour.\r\n\r\nPassive preheating of fresh air: \r\nFresh air may be brought into the house through underground ducts that exchange heat with the soil. This preheats fresh air to a temperature above 5°C (41°F), even on cold winter days.\r\n\r\nHighly efficient heat recovery from exhaust air using an air-to-air heat exchanger: \r\nMost of the perceptible heat in the exhaust air is transferred to the incoming fresh air (heat recovery rate over 80%).\r\n\r\nHot water supply using regenerative energy sources: \r\nSolar collectors or heat pumps provide energy for hot water.\r\n\r\nEnergy-saving household appliances: \r\nLow energy refrigerators, stoves, freezers, lamps, washers, dryers, etc. are indispensable in a passive house.', 'Passiv Haus (Passive House)', 0, '', 'publish', 'open', 'open', '', 'passiv-haus-passive-house', '', '', '2008-12-31 17:26:04', '2008-12-31 23:26:04', '', 0, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/?p=456', 0, 'post', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (457, 1, '2008-12-31 17:25:58', '2008-12-31 23:25:58', 'A "new" construction style coming out of Germany creates houses that barely need energy to run. They don\'t even have heating systems. In the dead of winter they might need a little space heater but that is is. What is the secret? Here is a list from their site:\n\nCompact form and good insulation: \nAll components of the exterior shell of the house are insulated to achieve a U-factor that does not exceed 0.15 W/(m²K) (0.026 Btu/h/ft²/°F).\n\nSouthern orientation and shade considerations: \nPassive use of solar energy is a significant factor in passive house design.\n\nEnergy-efficient window glazing and frames: \nWindows (glazing and frames, combined) should have U-factors not exceeding 0.80 W/(m²K) (0.14 Btu/h/ft²/°F), with solar heat-gain coefficients around 50%.\n\nBuilding envelope air-tightness: \nAir leakage through unsealed joints must be less than 0.6 times the house volume per hour.\n\nPassive preheating of fresh air: \nFresh air may be brought into the house through underground ducts that exchange heat with the soil. This preheats fresh air to a temperature above 5°C (41°F), even on cold winter days.\n\nHighly efficient heat recovery from exhaust air using an air-to-air heat exchanger: \nMost of the perceptible heat in the exhaust air is transferred to the incoming fresh air (heat recovery rate over 80%).\n\nHot water supply using regenerative energy sources: \nSolar collectors or heat pumps provide energy for hot water.\n\nEnergy-saving household appliances: \nLow energy refrigerators, stoves, freezers, lamps, washers, dryers, etc. are indispensable in a passive house.', 'Passiv Haus (Passive House)', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '456-revision', '', '', '2008-12-31 17:25:58', '2008-12-31 23:25:58', '', 456, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/456-revision/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (458, 1, '2008-12-31 17:36:33', '2008-12-31 23:36:33', 'One technology I have my eyes on is developed by Isomax.\r\n\r\nThey build homes that require basically no heating or cooling at all, regardless of where the house it. How do they do it?\r\n\r\nThey use a series of air and water tubes and ducts to pass heat and cold around. They have tubes in the roof and walls that pass either into the earth outside the house or into the earth beneath the house. The area outside the house cools the tubes and the area beneath the house heats the house. The same happens with the air ducts.\r\n\r\nThe area beneath the house becomes a heat storage area as hot water from the roof and walls during the summer passes under the house and leaves the heat. Then during the winter that very same heat is still there but only now it is taken out of the earth and put back into the house.\r\n\r\nThe house takes two or three years to really get going because you need one or two summers to get the ground under the house warmed up but after that you can expect a house that stays the same constant temperature throughout the whole year.\r\n\r\nIt is a very interesting technology.', 'Zero Energy Houses', 0, '', 'publish', 'open', 'open', '', 'energy-houses', '', '', '2008-12-31 17:36:33', '2008-12-31 23:36:33', '', 0, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/?p=458', 0, 'post', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (459, 1, '2008-12-31 17:36:10', '2008-12-31 23:36:10', 'One technology I have my eyes on is developed by Isomax.\n\nThey build homes that require basically no heating or cooling at all, regardless of where the house it. How do they do it?\n\nThey use a series of air and water tubes and ducts to pass heat and cold around. They have tubes in the roof and walls that pass either into the earth outside the house or into the earth beneath the house. The area outside the house cools the tubes and the area beneath the house heats the house. The same happens with the air ducts.\n\nThe area beneath the house becomes a heat storage area as hot water from the roof and walls during the summer passes under the house and leaves the heat. Then during the winter that very same heat is still there but only now it is taken out of the earth and put back into the house.\n\nThe house takes two or three years to really get going because you need one or two summers to get the ground under the house warmed up but after that you can expect a house that stays the same constant temperature throughout the whole year.\n', 'Zero Energy Houses', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '458-revision', '', '', '2008-12-31 17:36:10', '2008-12-31 23:36:10', '', 458, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/458-revision/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (460, 1, '2009-01-05 12:29:55', '2009-01-05 18:29:55', '
\r\nAbove: Facade with planter and recycled joists.\r\n\r\nOriginally the top facade of the building had a lot of rotted wood. And there was a great view. So in the heat of the summer I tore down the wall and planned on adding a wall of glass. It would have been magnificent. \r\n\r\nBut then as the cooler weather came I came to my senses and realized the large window was on the north side. To have it would be a huge heat drain on the house. I basically made a colossal mistake. This is green building 101.\r\n\r\nSo I took the windows I had already bought for the space and put them on the south side of the house. This creates a very powerful passive heating element as the sun pours into the house and heats it. Solar gain to the max.\r\n\r\nThen I was faced with doing something with the gaping hole on the north side. Some of the old slate had been broken when we took down the wall so we had a problem. We didn\'t have enough slate to built it back nor could we buy similar stuff. Do we take down the rest of the remaining slate and replace it or what? Taking it down is so not green.\r\n\r\nSo I decided to get a little artsy and use the slate we have for the lower part of the facade. For the upper part we are going to create siding out of salvaged wood joists. We are going to shape it in a "V" shape and at the base of the V we will put a large planter that will collect the water from the siding above it. \r\n\r\nThe planter will be made of two triangular sides attached to the facade to create a harmony of triangular shapes with the larger triangle formed by the siding.\r\n\r\nEven though the planter box will be very well insulated and one of its three sides will be against a heated house we will use plants that don\'t need sun or warmth since the cold winds can be harsh up there. Water probably won\'t be an issue since we\'ll use water retaining materials in the earth.\r\n\r\nThe planter will help insulate the north wall, provide greenery, allow us to recycle old joists and keep the existing slate. This is a great example of green building.\r\n\r\nPre Construction:\r\nThe truly green thing would have been to repair the damaged wood and leave the windows as they are in this picture. But in the heat of renovation we got these grand ideas to make a wall of glass. Being in an environment you love is green to but not at the expense of wasted energy when you can have just as nice windows but on the south side....\r\n
\r\n\r\nAnd so we tore the facade off:\r\n
\r\n\r\nBut then we realized our mistake and tore the south wall down to put the already ordered windows there. The sun shines in wonderfully making a fantastic space and heating us up. In the summer this heat can be a problem so we plan on having good passive ventilation, blinds, and solar panels above the windows that will also act as awnings when the sun\'s angle is high in the sky during the summer months. During the winter months the sun\'s angle will be low enough to pass under the panels.\r\nThe south opening:\r\n
', 'Adding Solar gain and recyclables to Facade', 0, '', 'publish', 'open', 'open', '', 'adding-solar-gain-recyclables', '', '', '2009-01-06 18:39:43', '2009-01-07 00:39:43', '', 0, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/?p=460', 0, 'post', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (461, 1, '2009-01-05 12:15:15', '2009-01-05 18:15:15', '', 'google-maps-image2', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'google-maps-image2', '', '', '2009-01-05 12:15:15', '2009-01-05 18:15:15', '', 460, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/google-maps-image2.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (462, 1, '2009-01-05 12:18:09', '2009-01-05 18:18:09', '', 'img_0107zzzz', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'img_0107zzzz', '', '', '2009-01-05 12:18:09', '2009-01-05 18:18:09', '', 460, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/img_0107zzzz.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (463, 1, '2009-01-05 12:21:32', '2009-01-05 18:21:32', '', 'p1000978', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'p1000978', '', '', '2009-01-05 12:21:32', '2009-01-05 18:21:32', '', 460, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/p1000978.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (464, 1, '2009-01-05 12:27:22', '2009-01-05 18:27:22', '', 'facade-top', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'facade-top', '', '', '2009-01-05 12:27:22', '2009-01-05 18:27:22', '', 460, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/facade-top.gif', 0, 'attachment', 'image/gif', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (465, 1, '2009-01-05 12:28:55', '2009-01-05 18:28:55', 'Originally the top facade of the building had a lot of rotted wood. And there was a great view. So in the heat of the summer I tore down the wall and planned on adding a wall of glass. It would have been magnificent. \n\nBut then as the cooler weather came I came to my senses and realized the large window was on the north side. To have it would be a huge heat drain on the house. I basically made a colossal mistake. This is green building 101.\n\nSo I took the windows I had already bought for the space and put them on the south side of the house. This creates a very powerful passive heating element as the sun pours into the house and heats it. Solar gain to the max.\n\nThen I was faced with doing something with the gaping hole on the north side. Some of the old slate had been broken when we took down the wall so we had a problem. We didn\'t have enough slate to built it: Do we take down the rest of the remaining slate and replace it or what? Taking it down is so not green.\n\nSo I decided to get a little artsy and use the slate we have for the lower part of the facade. For the upper part we are going to create siding out of salvaged wood joists. We are going to shape it in a "V" shape and at the base of the V we will put a large planter that will collect the water from the siding above it. \n\nThe planter will be made of two triangular sides attached to the facade to create a harmony of triangular shapes with the larger triangle formed by the siding.\n\nEven though the planter box will be very well insulated and one of its three sides will be against a heated house we will use plants that don\'t need sun or warmth since the cold winds can be harsh up there. Water probably won\'t be an issue since we\'ll use water retaining materials in the earth.\n\nThe planter will help insulate the north wall, provide greenery, allow us to recycle old joists and keep the existing slate. This is a great example of green building.\n\nPre Construction:\nThe truly green thing would have been to repair the damaged wood and leave the windows as they are in this picture. But in the heat of renovation we got these grand ideas to make a wall of glass. Being in an environment you love is green to but not at the expense of wasted energy when you can have just as nice windows but on the south side....\n
\n\nAnd so we tore the facade off:\n
\n\nBut then we realized our mistake and tore the south wall down to put the already ordered windows there. The sun shines in wonderfully making a fantastic space and heating us up. In the summer this heat can be a problem so we plan on having good passive ventilation, blinds, and solar panels above the windows that will also act as awnings when the sun\'s angle is high in the sky during the summer months. During the winter months the sun\'s angle will be low enough to pass under the panels.\nThe south opening:\n
\n\nAnd on the north side we will construct what hopefully will turn out to be a beautiful facade that is also smart energy wise. Here is my sketch:\n
', 'Adding Solar gain and recyclables to Facade', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '460-revision', '', '', '2009-01-05 12:28:55', '2009-01-05 18:28:55', '', 460, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/460-revision/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (468, 1, '2009-01-05 18:07:15', '2009-01-06 00:07:15', '
\r\nI\'m experimenting with a transparent heat transfer wall. \r\nIt would be a transparent wall attached to the outer south wall, leaving about one inch between them. The out wall would be painted a dark color. Ideally it would be black but that would be too much of an eye sore. So dark brown would be fine. This way it would attract maximum heat from the sun.\r\n\r\nThe sun would pass through the transparent outer wall and hit the dark inner wall and get hot. The air trapped within the two walls would heat up and rise, pulling more air from below that would in turn heat up.\r\n\r\nDuring the winter we could have an air passage from that area into the house where the hot air could pass. Because of the pressure of rising hot air it would naturally get pushed into the house. This technology works since I\'ve seen similar set ups.\r\n\r\nI have thought of another use for the same system but have yet to run it by engineers to see if my physics is right. In the summer the passage to the house would be closed and another one going outside would be opened. This means, if my theory is correct, that the hot air would pass up and back out into the outside, thus pulling heat from the house into the atmosphere.\r\n\r\nThis seems to be a good natural heating and cooling system using the thermodynamics of simple rising hot air and the sun. The wall could easilly be made out of glass or Plexiglas.', 'External Transparent Heat Transfer Wall', 0, '', 'publish', 'open', 'open', '', 'external-transparent-heat-transfer', '', '', '2009-01-05 18:07:15', '2009-01-06 00:07:15', '', 0, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/?p=468', 0, 'post', '', 3) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (466, 1, '2009-01-05 12:33:40', '2009-01-05 18:33:40', '
\nAbove: Facade with planter and recycled joists.\n\nOriginally the top facade of the building had a lot of rotted wood. And there was a great view. So in the heat of the summer I tore down the wall and planned on adding a wall of glass. It would have been magnificent. \n\nBut then as the cooler weather came I came to my senses and realized the large window was on the north side. To have it would be a huge heat drain on the house. I basically made a colossal mistake. This is green building 101.\n\nSo I took the windows I had already bought for the space and put them on the south side of the house. This creates a very powerful passive heating element as the sun pours into the house and heats it. Solar gain to the max.\n\nThen I was faced with doing something with the gaping hole on the north side. Some of the old slate had been broken when we took down the wall so we had a problem. We didn\'t have enough slate to built it back nor could we buy similar stuff. Do we take down the rest of the remaining slate and replace it or what? Taking it down is so not green.\n\nSo I decided to get a little artsy and use the slate we have for the lower part of the facade. For the upper part we are going to create siding out of salvaged wood joists. We are going to shape it in a "V" shape and at the base of the V we will put a large planter that will collect the water from the siding above it. \n\nThe planter will be made of two triangular sides attached to the facade to create a harmony of triangular shapes with the larger triangle formed by the siding.\n\nEven though the planter box will be very well insulated and one of its three sides will be against a heated house we will use plants that don\'t need sun or warmth since the cold winds can be harsh up there. Water probably won\'t be an issue since we\'ll use water retaining materials in the earth.\n\nThe planter will help insulate the north wall, provide greenery, allow us to recycle old joists and keep the existing slate. This is a great example of green building.\n\nPre Construction:\nThe truly green thing would have been to repair the damaged wood and leave the windows as they are in this picture. But in the heat of renovation we got these grand ideas to make a wall of glass. Being in an environment you love is green to but not at the expense of wasted energy when you can have just as nice windows but on the south side....\n
\n\nAnd so we tore the facade off:\n
\n\nBut then we realized our mistake and tore the south wall down to put the already ordered windows there. The sun shines in wonderfully making a fantastic space and heating us up. In the summer this heat can be a problem so we plan on having good passive ventilation, blinds, and solar panels above the windows that will also act as awnings when the sun\'s angle is high in the sky during the summer months. During the winter months the sun\'s angle will be low enough to pass under the panels.\nThe south opening:\n
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INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (467, 1, '2009-01-05 12:29:55', '2009-01-05 18:29:55', 'Originally the top facade of the building had a lot of rotted wood. And there was a great view. So in the heat of the summer I tore down the wall and planned on adding a wall of glass. It would have been magnificent. \r\n\r\nBut then as the cooler weather came I came to my senses and realized the large window was on the north side. To have it would be a huge heat drain on the house. I basically made a colossal mistake. This is green building 101.\r\n\r\nSo I took the windows I had already bought for the space and put them on the south side of the house. This creates a very powerful passive heating element as the sun pours into the house and heats it. Solar gain to the max.\r\n\r\nThen I was faced with doing something with the gaping hole on the north side. Some of the old slate had been broken when we took down the wall so we had a problem. We didn\'t have enough slate to built it back nor could we buy similar stuff. Do we take down the rest of the remaining slate and replace it or what? Taking it down is so not green.\r\n\r\nSo I decided to get a little artsy and use the slate we have for the lower part of the facade. For the upper part we are going to create siding out of salvaged wood joists. We are going to shape it in a "V" shape and at the base of the V we will put a large planter that will collect the water from the siding above it. \r\n\r\nThe planter will be made of two triangular sides attached to the facade to create a harmony of triangular shapes with the larger triangle formed by the siding.\r\n\r\nEven though the planter box will be very well insulated and one of its three sides will be against a heated house we will use plants that don\'t need sun or warmth since the cold winds can be harsh up there. Water probably won\'t be an issue since we\'ll use water retaining materials in the earth.\r\n\r\nThe planter will help insulate the north wall, provide greenery, allow us to recycle old joists and keep the existing slate. This is a great example of green building.\r\n\r\nPre Construction:\r\nThe truly green thing would have been to repair the damaged wood and leave the windows as they are in this picture. But in the heat of renovation we got these grand ideas to make a wall of glass. Being in an environment you love is green to but not at the expense of wasted energy when you can have just as nice windows but on the south side....\r\n
\r\n\r\nAnd so we tore the facade off:\r\n
\r\n\r\nBut then we realized our mistake and tore the south wall down to put the already ordered windows there. The sun shines in wonderfully making a fantastic space and heating us up. In the summer this heat can be a problem so we plan on having good passive ventilation, blinds, and solar panels above the windows that will also act as awnings when the sun\'s angle is high in the sky during the summer months. During the winter months the sun\'s angle will be low enough to pass under the panels.\r\nThe south opening:\r\n
\r\n\r\nAnd on the north side we will construct what hopefully will turn out to be a beautiful facade that is also smart energy wise. Here is my sketch:\r\n
', 'Adding Solar gain and recyclables to Facade', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '460-revision-2', '', '', '2009-01-05 12:29:55', '2009-01-05 18:29:55', '', 460, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/460-revision-2/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (469, 1, '2009-01-05 18:06:06', '2009-01-06 00:06:06', '', 'transparent-outer-heat-transfer-wall', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'transparent-outer-heat-transfer-wall', '', '', '2009-01-05 18:06:06', '2009-01-06 00:06:06', '', 468, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/transparent-outer-heat-transfer-wall.gif', 0, 'attachment', 'image/gif', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (470, 1, '2009-01-05 18:07:11', '2009-01-06 00:07:11', '
\nI\'m experimenting with a transparent heat transfer wall. \nIt would be a transparent wall attached to the outer south wall, leaving about one inch between them. The out wall would be painted a dark color. Ideally it would be black but that would be too much of an eye sore. So dark brown would be fine. This way it would attract maximum heat from the sun.\n\nThe sun would pass through the transparent outer wall and hit the dark inner wall and get hot. The air trapped within the two walls would heat up and rise, pulling more air from below that would in turn heat up.\n\nDuring the winter we could have an air passage from that area into the house where the hot air could pass. Because of the pressure of rising hot air it would naturally get pushed into the house. This technology works since I\'ve seen similar set ups.\n\nI have thought of another use for the same system but have yet to run it by engineers to see if my physics is right. In the summer the passage to the house would be closed and another one going outside would be opened. This means, if my theory is correct, that the hot air would pass up and back out into the outside, thus pulling heat from the house into the atmosphere.\n\nThis seems to be a good natural heating and cooling system using the thermodynamics of simple rising hot air and the sun. The wall could easilly be made out of glass or Plexiglas.', 'External Transparent Heat Transfer Wall', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '468-revision', '', '', '2009-01-05 18:07:11', '2009-01-06 00:07:11', '', 468, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/468-revision/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (471, 1, '2008-10-17 10:21:56', '2008-10-17 16:21:56', 'In the constant quest for a greener insulation I have considered many options.\r\n- Cellulose is good but messy and dusty.\r\n- Isonyne spray foam or Demilec spray foam is good but not that cheap and quite honestly not as green as they say. It takes huge amounts of energy and petroleum to create the main ingredient isocyanate.\r\n- Formaldehyde free fiberglass is ok but still fiberglass (scratch, scratch).\r\n- Solid foam is good and in my opinion under valued by the green community.\r\n\r\nTHEN you have RECYCLED SOLID FOAM, which I am starting to think is the way to go.\r\nI might buy it from www.InsulationDepot.com. It comes out at the same price as normal fiberglass batts but is way better R value when you air seal the boards correctly. And it is RECYCLED.\r\n\r\nIn my opinion normal (non-green) recycled materials is better than new green material. Why make more when it has already been made.\r\n\r\nALSO, foam board does off gas a little BUT almost all of that happens in the first few months or year. And since it is recycled it has already off gassed! Now that is a fantastic side benefit of recycling!\r\n\r\nFurther info I found on the web \r\n\r\nWhether it takes the form of batt, loose fill, sprayed-in foam, or rigid foam, insulation is an essential part of any housing. Insulation slows the transfer of heat (energy) from warmer areas to colder areas. It can also serve to reduce noise. Insulation effectiveness is typically measured in R-value. A higher R-value for insulation is better. A well-constructed insulation system will help reduce air infiltration and heat transfer and help control moisture. All of these factors need to come together to produce a comfortable and healthy living environment. The following analysis examines the relative economic, energy, and environmental impacts of the following insulation types: fiberglass batt, blown and loose fill cellulose, blown fiberglass, foamed-in-place polyisocyanurate or polyicynene, extruded polystyrene, expanded polystyrene, and rigid polyisocyanurate. \r\n\r\nRecommendations\r\nLoose fill, blown and batt insulation is more cost effective in walls and attics than rigid board insulation. Foamed-in-place insulation should be used when budget permits, its high R-value combined with excellent air sealing increase the overall performance of the assembly. Look for insulation materials that have stable R-values over time. \r\nExtruded polystyrene (XPS) insulation with CFC or HCFC\'s as blowing agents should not be used. Rigid insulation alternatives include: wood fiberboard, (some made entirely from recycled cellulose), expanded polystyrene (EPS), fiberglass board, or cellular glass board. \r\n\r\nInsulation Fact Sheet:\r\n
\r\n
\r\n\r\nCriteria Summaries\r\nCost: Loose fill, blown and batt insulation materials have a low cost per R-value and rigid board materials. Higher first costs associated with increased insulation thickness of any type may be recouped over the life cycle of the building through reduced heating and cooling costs. Premium costs associated with insulation with higher R-values per inch not only reduce operating costs but also use less material. \r\nEnergy: Rigid insulations typically have a higher R-value per inch than batt or blown insulations. \r\nIAQ: If left undisturbed in wall cavities and attic spaces insulation poses no threat to human health. Respiratory masks should be worn when handling fiberglass and mineral wool batts, since they may potentially release fibers into the air during handling. \r\nExpected Product Life: The R-value of most insulation materials decreases with aging. Polyisocyanurate and polyicynene have the longest expected life with the greatest R-value stability. Loss of R-value can be attributed to several different factors. Batt insulation can slump in cavities, or become damaged by moisture. These effects can be limited by proper construction and detailing. Rigid insulation can shrink and or dry over time, while loose fill insulation can settle, decreasing its effectiveness. \r\n\r\nLife Cycle Thinking: \r\n• Energy consumption (non-renewable, fossil fuel energy): The manufacturing process for fiberglass and mineral wool batts is energy intensive although less than for rigid products. Where recycled content is higher, energy impacts related to manufacture are further reduced. Rigid insulations have high embodied energy from extraction through production, though they offer higher R-value per inch thickness, and require less material overall.\r\n• Pollutants generated in production: Extruded polystyrenes still use HCFC\'s, while expanded and some polyisocyanurates use alternative agents.\r\n• Potential for off-gassing: Not an issue when insulation is not exposed to the interior.\r\n• Durability of the product: Prolonged contact with moisture can cause the paper backing on batt insulation to deteriorate, and also mat down batt and blown insulation, reducing the effective R-value of the material. \r\n• Potential for future recycling: Blown insulation suffers from settlement, but can be recovered easily for reuse. Certain expanded polystyrene rigid insulation products use recycled content in their products (or at least reused waste products).\r\nPractice: With the exception of sprayed-in-place insulations, which require training and professional installers, all insulation types are considered common practice. \r\n\r\nEnvironmental Context\r\nReducing the amount of fuel to heat and cool also reduces environmental damage and costs. Insulation effectiveness is usually measured in R-value (thermal resistance) - the higher the R-value, the better the insulation value. Other considerations include the amount of recycled content, the ability to reuse or recycle the insulation, the ability to meet code requirements (in Minnesota amendments to the Uniform Building Code and the residential building code), and off-gassing of the products in place. Batt and blown insulation materials will generally have lower embodied energy than rigid insulation materials. \r\n\r\nHere is some more info on Rigid Foam Board Insulation from my research\r\n\r\nRigid foam board insulation is a popular mass insulation product used to insulate all parts of homes, metal buildings and commercial buildings against the movement of conductive and convective heat transfer. A high insulating value for relatively little thickness makes rigid foam ideal for insulating roofs and exterior walls. Rigid insulation also substitutes well for other forms of insulation like fiberglass blankets and loose-fill cellulose in attics and floors. The water resistant nature of foam makes it well suited for use under slabs and in the ground around foundation walls.\r\n \r\nTypes of Foam Board\r\nRigid insulation is made of air-entrained plastic that is either extruded or pressed into sheets. There are three types of rigid foam insulation: expanded polystyrene (EPS), extruded polystyrene (XPS) and polyisocyanurate (polyiso), each varying in cost and R-value. Boards are available with a reflective foil facing that reduces radiant heat flow when installed next to an air space for total insulation against the three types of heat transfer, conduction, convection and radiation. If properly sealed, foil faced boards can also be used to form a vapor barrier in areas where moisture and condensation are an issue. Alternately, rigid foam can be installed in combination with reflective insulation to add a radiant or vapor barrier.\r\n \r\nR-Values\r\nInsulation is rated by its ability to resist convective heat flow in units called R-value. R-value gives the insulation resistance per inch of material. Construction materials with higher R-value ratings are more effective insulators than materials with lower ratings for the same thickness. The R-value is a function of the material type, thickness and density. The R-value of an insulation system is calculated by adding the R-values of the individual components together to achieve the recommended insulation protection based on climate.\r\n\r\nR-value is helpful in comparing different types of insulation as well as different brands of the same type of insulation. Rigid foam insulation has insulation values that are almost double the R-value per inch of fiberglass or cellulose insulation. R-values for rigid foam range from 3.6 - 8 per inch. Note that R-value is not used to rate a material`s ability to resist radiant heat.\r\n\r\nRigid Insulation Type R-value per inch\r\nExpanded polystyrene board 3.6 to 4\r\nExtruded polystyrene board 4.5 to 5\r\nPolyisocyanurate board, unfaced 5.6 to 6.3\r\nPolyisocyanurate board, foil-faced 7-8\r\n(Source: US Department of Energy Insulation Fact Sheet)\r\n\r\nState and federal agencies recommend insulation R-values for different areas inside of a building based on local climate conditions with the attic requiring the most insulation. Divide the recommended R-value by the R-value per inch of the type of insulation you want to use to determine the necessary insulation thickness. If you use reflective insulation in combination, you can add in up to an additional 14.5 R depending on whether the reflective insulation has foam, plastic bubbles or fiberglass for its central layer. Foam core reflective insulation (like foam board insulation) has the highest R-value. If you use foil faced rigid insulation facing an air space, you can add an additional R-value of 2.8 without increasing the insulation thickness.\r\n\r\nMoisture Considerations\r\nPreventing condensation in building cavities is a major consideration for an insulation system. Rigid foam board insulation resists absorption of moisture from the atmosphere in the form of humidity and also has a low water vapor transmission rate. However, rigid foam alone cannot be used as a vapor barrier. A vapor barrier should have a permeance rating of less than 1. The permeance of 1 inch of expanded polystyrene is 2 and the permeance of 1 inch of extruded polystyrene board is 1.2. In contrast, the permeance of aluminum foil is .001. Reflective insulation or foil facing is commonly used in combination with rigid insulation to create the vapor barrier necessary to keep moisture out of the walls and ceilings where it can cause rot, mold, mildew, odors, condensation and dripping. To create the vapor barrier, all seams are tightly sealed with aluminum tape.\r\n\r\nMoisture also creates a heat transfer problem of decreasing efficiency when insulation gets wet as water is a good conductor of heat. Rigid foam board has been shown to retain its structural integrity through freeze-and-thaw cycles. It retains very little moisture in comparison with other types of insulation like fiberglass or cellulose. The Energy Division of the Minnesota Department of Public Service found that Expanded polystyrene used in exterior foundation insulation showed moisture levels of only 0.13% after 7 years of use. They concluded that the damp insulation board still maintained between 95 and 97 percent of its original thermal efficiency and compressive strength.\r\n \r\nBenefits of using Rigid Foam Board Insulation\r\n\r\n * Density - Density provides hi R-value with minimum thickness making rigid insulation more resistant to air and water vapor movement than fiberglass batts or cellulose.\r\n * High compressive strength - rigid insulation provides a solid structure under the roof deck that can withstand the weight of both equipment and light foot traffic.\r\n * Low weight makes rigid insulation boards easy to install and less expensive to ship.\r\n * Resists outside air infiltration when joints are sealed with tape or caulk.\r\n * New products are made without ozone depleting chemicals for virtually no global warming impact.\r\n * Can be installed with full coverage over studs instead of just between them to eliminate the heat loss path through framing members.\r\n * Non-hazardous to install - no fibers or fumes to inhale, non-irritating to skin.\r\n * No deterioration of R-value over time - rigid insulation does not lose R-Value over its service life.\r\n * Green - A manufacturing study showed that the energy required producing polystyrene foam insulation is 24 percent less than the energy required to make the equivalent R-value of fiberglass insulation.\r\n * Rigid insulation "breathes" instead of trapping moisture like fiberglass or cellulose and therefore does not require the venting methods used for other insulation materials to prevent trapped moisture within walls, ceilings and roofs.\r\n * Highly resistant to mold\r\n * Not a food for insects\r\n * Good acoustical insulation properties\r\n * Can be used in structural insulated panels or for insulating concrete forms. \r\n\r\nExpanded polystyrene (EPS) or beadboard, has been used as common household insulation since the 1950s. EPS is environmentally friendly as it is not manufactured using CFCs or HCFCs- both ozone-depleting chemicals. In addition to insulation, EPS is commonly used to make coffee cups and packing peanuts for shipping.\r\n\r\nEPS is closed-cell foam made from polystyrene (a type of plastic) beads mixed with pentane and steam, used as a blowing agent, to expand the beads under pressure into foam, which forms thousands of tiny air pockets in the finished board. As air is a poor conductor of heat, these tiny air pockets will block the transfer of heat through the foam and trap expanding warm air.\r\n\r\nEPS is molded into large sheets with R-values ranging from 3.8 to 4.4 per inch, depending on the density of the material. However, air spaces in EPS can accumulate and retain water. Because water is a good conductor of heat, some form of moisture barrier may be required to prevent this problem in high humidity areas, especially when EPS is used around foundations. To make the insulation more waterproof, EPS boards are available with optional thin foil or plastic facings.\r\n\r\nExtruded polystyrene (XPS) or blueboard, is also a closed-cell foam insulation made from polystyrene plastic beads mixed with chemicals to turn them into a liquid before using a blowing agent to turn it into foam. The foam is forced through a shaping die, cooled and cut into panels.\r\n\r\nXPS is more consistent in density and has a higher compressive strength than EPS making it better suited for use in roof assemblies and structural insulation panels. Higher density makes it more resistant to moisture than EPS, and XPS has a slightly higher R-value of R-5 per inch. Because of its superior properties, XPS is more expensive than EPS.\r\n\r\nPolyisocyanurate or Polyiso, has the highest R-value per inch of thickness of the different rigid foam insulation types with an average R-value between 5.6 and 8 depending on the facing material. Facings such as plastic or aluminum foil increase its resistance to both moisture and radiant heat transfer. Polyiso is commonly used in roofs and cavity walls because of its thinness.\r\n\r\nPolyiso is touted for being an economical choice. Its higher R-values per inch allow for savings on other building materials like thinner walls and roofs and their associated shorter fasteners.\r\n\r\nAccording to the Polyisocyanurate Insulation Manufacturers Association, polyiso is a completely green building product as it no longer is made with either of the ozone depleting chemicals - CFC and HCFC. In addition, construction site waste can be recycled. Other beneficial characteristics of polyiso include its resistance to solvents in common construction adhesives and high fire test ratings.\r\n\r\nFoil faced polyiso insulation has the highest R-value per inch of any type of mass insulation currently produced. When installed facing an air space of at least 1", the R-value will increase by 2.89. ASHRAE assigns a 1" air space R- 2.77. The Masonry Advisory Council adds an additional R-2.89 to polyiso insulation for a foil facing.\r\n\r\nRigid foam insulation boards used to insulate the interior of masonry walls do not require an additional vapor barrier. Wood strapping is attached to the wall and the insulation is installed over the strapping. If a foil-faced board or reflective insulation is used also, the foil side should face the room and an additional layer of wood strapping is needed under the drywall to create an air space. Fire safety codes require that at least ½-inch thick gypsum board (dry-wall) be placed over rigid foam insulation. The drywall is then attached to the wood strapping or underlying masonry with nails or screws. For insulating an unventilated crawlspace, rigid insulation boards can be glued directly to the wall. ', 'Choosing Green Insulation - consider recycled foam board.', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '207-revision-6', '', '', '2008-10-17 10:21:56', '2008-10-17 16:21:56', '', 207, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/207-revision-6/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (472, 1, '2008-09-07 19:04:25', '2008-09-08 01:04:25', 'I love old bricks. They have great character. I got these from a job site. The contractor couldn\'t believe I wanted to take them. He was actually insulted and called the whole thing "stupid".\r\n\r\nIt took me ten minutes to do. The bricks will cover a 100 square foot patio at 22 2nd street. No landfil. No cost. No making new bricks. And the contractor didn\'t have to pay to ship them off to the dump (bricks cost almost as much to throw out as to buy since the main cost is hauling the heavy bastards). Think about it! People are actually paying to throw things out! And others are paying to buy the very same thing! It is out of a comedy of errors. Mother Earth isn\'t laughing.\r\n\r\n\r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n\r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n\r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n\r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n\r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n\r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n\r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n\r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n\r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n\r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n\r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n ', 'I got the stupid bricks', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '102-revision-2', '', '', '2008-09-07 19:04:25', '2008-09-08 01:04:25', '', 102, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/102-revision-2/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (473, 1, '2008-09-07 18:30:15', '2008-09-08 00:30:15', 'I found a building company that was throwing out some perfectly good steel studs. The studs were just sitting behind a building so I asked if I could take them. \r\n\r\nThey were like, "Why?"\r\nI was like, "Uh, to reuse them."\r\nThe were like, "But they are used."\r\n"So? Are they damaged?"\r\n"No but they are trash."\r\n\r\nAnd so on. Nice guys but they didn\'t get what I was doing. They humored me a let me take them. There are so many good reasons to re-use good material but if you aren\'t thinking in those terms it is a completely alien concept. If you don\'t think about it you can even come up with a lot of good reasons not to reuse material. But with a little thought all the reasons come up short.\r\n\r\nThe best reason I like to poke holes in is the concept that reusing materials takes away jobs. Think about it. If everyone recycled all the millions of tonnes of good material that gets trashed each year that would be millions of tonnes that wouldn\'t have to made next year. That would put people out of work. \r\n\r\nAnd in a society where work is the main goal of living, to do something that puts people out of work is akin to being unpatriotic. Its all about "job stimulus", increasing spending to revitalize the economy, keeping unemployment low, creating a brisk economy etc....\r\n\r\nBUT! What about creating an economy where you needed less to live on, where you needed to work less for the same amount of buying power. Less work would mean more time watching the clouds with your children...\r\n\r\nHere is how from my limited knowledge of macroeconomics:\r\n\r\nIf society reuses materials we spend less on new materials. This means more money in the consumers\' pockets. But, they say, if everyone does this then less will need to be produced which means less jobs (currently interpreted as bad). But, I say, the consumer does not need to work as much anymore anyway because now that they are reusing materials they aren\'t spending as much. \r\n\r\nReusing materials creates a slower economy. Not slow in today\'s definition, but slow in the pre-industrial definition where we produced and wasted less. The life cycle of a product lasted longer. In a slower economy the consumer gains because they still get stuff but just don\'t have to work as hard to get it. \r\n\r\nWho loses in a slower economy? The people who benefit from extreme consumption and waste: the Walmarts of the world, The McDonalds, inefficient car makers, weapons makers, legal drug makers, mass entertainment. All the companies whose business model is based on people consuming their product feverishly for the sake of consumption only.\r\n\r\nThese are people who buy a certain car for a million idiotic reasons, none the reasons being to fulfill the need to move from place A to place B efficiently.\r\n\r\nAnyway. Here are the studs I got. The reasons for getting them are many but here are some:\r\nI needed studs for my 22 2nd Street house.\r\nThey were free (saving me about $75).\r\nThey are spared from taking up landfill space.\r\nLess pollution due to less production.\r\nI can work $75 less in my life.\r\n\r\n[caption id="attachment_89" align="alignnone" width="500" caption="salvaged steel studs"]
[/caption]', 'Got some steel joists', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '88-revision-3', '', '', '2008-09-07 18:30:15', '2008-09-08 00:30:15', '', 88, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/88-revision-3/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (474, 1, '2008-10-04 19:35:17', '2008-10-05 01:35:17', 'Here is a useful Q & A on LEED for homes.\r\n\r\nPresented by O’Brien & Company. \r\n\r\nHow does the “no additional lumber” address cases of historic/cultural design, in\r\nparticular on an infill project in a historic neighborhood or a gut rehab of a historic\r\nbuilding.?\r\nThis credit has been revised to a 10% cap on the waste factor in the lumber order, so the\r\n“additional lumber” language is no longer moot.\r\nHow does LEED for Homes apply to historic homes?\r\nThe LEED for Homes rating system can be used for gut rehabs of homes, including\r\nhistoric homes. LEED for Homes is evaluating innovation applications for deconstruction\r\nof existing (e.g., historical) homes on a case-by-case basis and may consider\r\nestablishing some performance threshold for deconstruction in a future version of LEED\r\nfor Homes. In addition, wood salvaged from historic homes may be reused in new\r\nconstruction.\r\nHow is material salvaged from deconstruction treated (is it salvaged? Resource\r\nreuse?)\r\nSalvaged or reused material is eligible for recognition under MR5, Environmentally\r\nPreferable Products; in cases where it is not listed as an alternative for a given building\r\ncomponent, the builder should submit a credit interpretation request for consideration by\r\nthe MR-TASC. If the quantity of materials being reused in substantial enough (i.e.,\r\ncomparable in magnitude to the other measures in MR 5), the request for an ID credit will\r\nbe granted.\r\nIs a list of builders participating in the pilots available? If not now, when?\r\nUSGBC has asked the pilot builders if they are open to having their contact information\r\nmade public; a response is expected in coming weeks. USGBC plans to post this\r\ninformation on the LEED for Homes website at www.usgbc.org/leed/homes.\r\nWhat are the registration fees?\r\nThere is a $150 fee for project registration, with $50 per unit for certification.\r\nThose are fees due to USGBC from builder. Other applicable fees (e.g., for certification\r\nservices) are at the discretion of the Provider. Fees for the third-party certification will\r\nvary with the level of experience of the green home builder, the home size, the desired\r\ncertification level (i.e., Certified, Silver, Gold, or Platinum), and the distance that the third\r\nparty has to travel to conduct site visits at the LEED Home. Earth Advantage (EA),\r\nPortland is the Provider in the Northwest. O’Brien & Company has been contracted by EA\r\nto represent perform ratings on its behalf in Washington.\r\nCan verification be done by the same person doing technical\r\nassistance/consulting? (Who’s doing quality control of verifiers?)\r\nThe official certifier of LEED Homes is an authorized LEED for Homes Provider. All\r\nLEED raters or verifiers must be contracted to a LEED for Homes Provider. It is up to the\r\ndiscretion of the Provider to determine who is qualified to deliver on-site verification\r\nservices. Providers are responsible for recruiting, training, and supervising qualified\r\nLEED raters in their local markets. LEED Home raters must meet qualifying criteria. In\r\nparticular, since LEED for Homes requires ENERGY STAR for Homes qualification, the\r\nrater must be qualified by ENERGY STAR NW through its performance testing and\r\nverification training.\r\nAlso, all individuals offering verification services related to LEED for Homes are required\r\nto submit a declaration stating possible conflicts of interest. This declaration needs to be\r\nprovided to the builder and any other parties who might be affected by potential conflicts\r\nof interest.\r\nAs pilot raters in Washington, O’Brien & Company is providing some guidance to design\r\nteams to help them leverage integration opportunities and optimize their design. O’Brien\r\nand Company works under the supervision of the LEED for Home Provider Earth\r\nAdvantage.\r\nWhy won’t LEED Home Builders be able to hang their hats on a LEED AP? We\r\nshould be able to use that Brand.\r\nThe current LEED AP designation does not indicate any familiarity with LEED for Homes;\r\nrather, it represents knowledge of other LEED rating systems, which relate to commercial\r\nbuildings. USGBC is considering whether to develop a comparable exam and\r\ncredential for professionals who are conversant with LEED for Homes. Currently,\r\nqualified LEED for Homes support is available to builders via their local Providers. LEED\r\nAPs that are qualified in green home building are encouraged to develop business\r\nrelationships with the LEED for Homes Provider in the markets that they serve.\r\nWill there be a LEED for remodels?\r\nThe challenge with a LEED program for remodeling is that remodeling by its nature is a\r\n"one-off" business, with few economies of scale and in most cases, no buyer (in most\r\ncases, the client already owns the home). Thus, the remodeling market poses challenges\r\nwith respect to the creation of a viable (i.e., sustainable) business model for USGBC.\r\nFurther, the LEED Rating Systems are generally used to assess the whole of a building.\r\nIn remodeling, only parts of the home are affected. Thus, it is difficult to asses the greenness\r\nof a building when only part of it has been upgraded. For the time being, we\r\nsuggest that remodelers use LEED for Homes to provide guidance with respect to the\r\ngoals and principles -- and in some cases, e.g., plumbing fixtures, performance\r\nspecifications -- that can be referred to in the remodeling process. USGBC may tackle\r\nthe remodeling market sometime in the future. Note that LEED for Homes can be used\r\nfor gut rehabs.\r\nWill there be a LEED for existing homes (recertification process) given frequent\r\nturnover?\r\nThis represents a challenge similar to remodeling; and besides the fact that there are no\r\neconomies of scale, it remains to be seen whether there is any significant demand\r\npotential. Since the seller is the homeowner and not a builder, s/he stands to gain no\r\nprofessional reputation benefit by offering the LEED brand. In the future LEED may\r\nachieve sufficient consumer brand recognition that prospective buyers will look for a\r\nLEED label on a used home as well as a new one -- and be willing to pay for it -- but it\'s\r\nlikely to be quite a few years before that happens.', 'LEED for Homes Q and A', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '162-revision-4', '', '', '2008-10-04 19:35:17', '2008-10-05 01:35:17', '', 162, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/162-revision-4/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (475, 1, '2009-01-05 12:34:01', '2009-01-05 18:34:01', '
\r\nAbove: Facade with planter and recycled joists.\r\n\r\nOriginally the top facade of the building had a lot of rotted wood. And there was a great view. So in the heat of the summer I tore down the wall and planned on adding a wall of glass. It would have been magnificent. \r\n\r\nBut then as the cooler weather came I came to my senses and realized the large window was on the north side. To have it would be a huge heat drain on the house. I basically made a colossal mistake. This is green building 101.\r\n\r\nSo I took the windows I had already bought for the space and put them on the south side of the house. This creates a very powerful passive heating element as the sun pours into the house and heats it. Solar gain to the max.\r\n\r\nThen I was faced with doing something with the gaping hole on the north side. Some of the old slate had been broken when we took down the wall so we had a problem. We didn\'t have enough slate to built it back nor could we buy similar stuff. Do we take down the rest of the remaining slate and replace it or what? Taking it down is so not green.\r\n\r\nSo I decided to get a little artsy and use the slate we have for the lower part of the facade. For the upper part we are going to create siding out of salvaged wood joists. We are going to shape it in a "V" shape and at the base of the V we will put a large planter that will collect the water from the siding above it. \r\n\r\nThe planter will be made of two triangular sides attached to the facade to create a harmony of triangular shapes with the larger triangle formed by the siding.\r\n\r\nEven though the planter box will be very well insulated and one of its three sides will be against a heated house we will use plants that don\'t need sun or warmth since the cold winds can be harsh up there. Water probably won\'t be an issue since we\'ll use water retaining materials in the earth.\r\n\r\nThe planter will help insulate the north wall, provide greenery, allow us to recycle old joists and keep the existing slate. This is a great example of green building.\r\n\r\nPre Construction:\r\nThe truly green thing would have been to repair the damaged wood and leave the windows as they are in this picture. But in the heat of renovation we got these grand ideas to make a wall of glass. Being in an environment you love is green to but not at the expense of wasted energy when you can have just as nice windows but on the south side....\r\n
\r\n\r\nAnd so we tore the facade off:\r\n
\r\n\r\nBut then we realized our mistake and tore the south wall down to put the already ordered windows there. The sun shines in wonderfully making a fantastic space and heating us up. In the summer this heat can be a problem so we plan on having good passive ventilation, blinds, and solar panels above the windows that will also act as awnings when the sun\'s angle is high in the sky during the summer months. During the winter months the sun\'s angle will be low enough to pass under the panels.\r\nThe south opening:\r\n
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INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (476, 1, '2008-12-29 18:04:38', '2008-12-30 00:04:38', '
\r\nOnly in USA are dumpsters so full of wonderful stuff. And you can\'t get fancier than a Corcoran dumpster. There is one in front of the Corcoran condos on President St in Carroll Gardens. I had the good luck to check them out today and found 1000 sq.ft. of once used wide plank maple flooring!\r\n\r\nThe builder was there and he said they were installed six months ago in the summer. Probably because they weren\'t acclimatized correctly they warped a little. But my carpenter says it\'s nothing the correct nails and some sanding can\'t fix.\r\n\r\nSo it looks like the green show house will have 100% salvaged flooring. We salvaged some oak from another reno a couple months ago.\r\n\r\n
', 'Wood Flooring courtesy of Corcoran', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '419-revision-2', '', '', '2008-12-29 18:04:38', '2008-12-30 00:04:38', '', 419, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/419-revision-2/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (477, 1, '2009-01-06 18:38:30', '2009-01-07 00:38:30', '
\r\nAbove: Facade with planter and recycled joists.\r\n\r\nOriginally the top facade of the building had a lot of rotted wood. And there was a great view. So in the heat of the summer I tore down the wall and planned on adding a wall of glass. It would have been magnificent. \r\n\r\nBut then as the cooler weather came I came to my senses and realized the large window was on the north side. To have it would be a huge heat drain on the house. I basically made a colossal mistake. This is green building 101.\r\n\r\nSo I took the windows I had already bought for the space and put them on the south side of the house. This creates a very powerful passive heating element as the sun pours into the house and heats it. Solar gain to the max.\r\n\r\nThen I was faced with doing something with the gaping hole on the north side. Some of the old slate had been broken when we took down the wall so we had a problem. We didn\'t have enough slate to built it back nor could we buy similar stuff. Do we take down the rest of the remaining slate and replace it or what? Taking it down is so not green.\r\n\r\nSo I decided to get a little artsy and use the slate we have for the lower part of the facade. For the upper part we are going to create siding out of salvaged wood joists. We are going to shape it in a "V" shape and at the base of the V we will put a large planter that will collect the water from the siding above it. \r\n\r\nThe planter will be made of two triangular sides attached to the facade to create a harmony of triangular shapes with the larger triangle formed by the siding.\r\n\r\nEven though the planter box will be very well insulated and one of its three sides will be against a heated house we will use plants that don\'t need sun or warmth since the cold winds can be harsh up there. Water probably won\'t be an issue since we\'ll use water retaining materials in the earth.\r\n\r\nThe planter will help insulate the north wall, provide greenery, allow us to recycle old joists and keep the existing slate. This is a great example of green building.\r\n\r\nPre Construction:\r\nThe truly green thing would have been to repair the damaged wood and leave the windows as they are in this picture. But in the heat of renovation we got these grand ideas to make a wall of glass. Being in an environment you love is green to but not at the expense of wasted energy when you can have just as nice windows but on the south side....\r\n
\r\n\r\nAnd so we tore the facade off:\r\n
\r\n\r\nBut then we realized our mistake and tore the south wall down to put the already ordered windows there. The sun shines in wonderfully making a fantastic space and heating us up. In the summer this heat can be a problem so we plan on having good passive ventilation, blinds, and solar panels above the windows that will also act as awnings when the sun\'s angle is high in the sky during the summer months. During the winter months the sun\'s angle will be low enough to pass under the panels.\r\nThe south opening:\r\n
', 'Adding Solar gain and recyclables to Facade', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '460-revision-4', '', '', '2009-01-06 18:38:30', '2009-01-07 00:38:30', '', 460, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/460-revision-4/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (478, 1, '2008-09-27 18:03:17', '2008-09-28 00:03:17', '
\r\nAs a licensed real estate broker I wanted to get as much ecological training as possible in the real estate field. The typical broker training, although extensive, only touches on the green aspect of real estate and I wanted more.\r\n\r\nAfter looking around it seemed that the EcoBroker® accreditation program seemed like the best choice. They are highly regarded in the real estate community.\r\n\r\nThey were listed in 2008 as a "Top Green Building & Business Certifications" by Lifestyle of Health and Sustainability (LOHAS) Journal.\r\n\r\nREALTOR Magazine says they are one of the top "25 Trends Driving Today\'s Market."\r\n\r\nIn 2006 they were awarded "Education Program of the Year" by the Real Estate Educators Association.\r\n\r\nHere is a spot they got on CNBC.\r\n\r\nHaving taken the course I am happy with what I learned. They offer a comprehensive training that educates you in the many aspects of green real estate.\r\n\r\nThese involve better understanding:\r\n\r\n- The energy efficiency elements of a home, from types of boilers, insulation, windows, solar panels, water heating and materials used to insulate a home.\r\n\r\n- The effects of the surrounding environment on a home, from solar direction, tree positions, shaddows, and any other physical elements that might effect the heating/cooling of a home.\r\n\r\n- Potential health hazards and how to deal with them, such as radon, lead, asbestos, mold, and pests.\r\n\r\n- Understanding what steps to take in order to make a home more eco-friendly\r\n\r\n- Knowing the benefits of an eco-friendly home and how to market those elements effectively\r\n\r\n- Knowing what professionals to team up with in order to provide a better service to the customer. These professionals can be green pest control people, solar panel installers, radiant heat installers, ecologically aware painters and so on.\r\n\r\nI am always scheptical of potential greenwashing (pretending to be green for financial gain) but I was satisfied with the course offered by EcoBroker®. I feel they genuinely do want to improve the invironment.\r\n\r\nWhenever consumer opinions are poled Real Estate Brokers compete with Used Car Salesmen for the MOST despised group of professionals. That is really a brutal position to be in and not one I\'m proud of. The truth is that real estate is a game of sales and sales is a game of psychology.\r\n\r\nSo a lot of psychological manipulation goes on between brokers and customers and it is not always appreciated. \r\n\r\nBut now with the new focus on green, brokers can offer a really great service that is not only dependent on the sale. It is dependent on how well they help the customer in understanding the green elements of a home. It is more a role of an educator than a salesman.\r\n\r\nI think this added value will be appreciated by customers.\r\n\r\n\r\n', 'Gennaro Brooks-Church is a Certified EcoBroker®', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '131-revision-3', '', '', '2008-09-27 18:03:17', '2008-09-28 00:03:17', '', 131, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/131-revision-3/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (479, 1, '2008-10-04 19:37:35', '2008-10-05 01:37:35', 'Here is my answer to "Why should I use your real estate services?"\r\n\r\nI am a real estate professional with additional EcoBroker training on the energy and environmental issues that affect real estate transactions. There are tremendous green resources available in the market and as part of my service commitment to my clients, I help you identify and make sense of these invaluable green opportunities. I am a great facilitator in this regard. \r\n\r\nEducation makes me uniquely qualified to present the eco features of the home and help attract qualified buyers. I\'m not a specialist or an expert on energy and environmental issues, but I have additional training on these issues and I have a better handle on the basics and the available resources than your standard real estate licensee. I understand the relationship between Energy Star and quality, and I can help\r\n\r\nI look forward to working with you. Please call me at ………347 244 3016. Gennaro Brooks-Church.', 'Why should you use my real estate services?', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '121-revision-5', '', '', '2008-10-04 19:37:35', '2008-10-05 01:37:35', '', 121, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/121-revision-5/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (480, 1, '2009-01-08 19:47:12', '2009-01-09 01:47:12', 'Green building is not mainstream. The systems and habits are not in place. Doing a green job is part construction part education part experimentation because once you start thinking off the grid there are very few reference points to guide you.\r\n\r\nI had a plumber walk out of my job today before even giving a bid. He couldn\'t get his head around some of the things I\'m doing. His last words were, "I hope what you are doing works out, but it\'s not the way I do it."\r\n\r\nIt is definitely not business as usual. We have different ways of installing our pex tubing and they were at odds with what he knew. I believe our way is better and I\'m betting on it. We\'ll see.\r\n\r\nI had to go through several carpenters before I found one who was willing to do things my way. They are used to reaching out and grabbing a perfectly clean and sized piece of wood for their work. They have no part in preparing the wood. It comes from the lumber yard and all they have to do is put it in the house like Lego. There is something to be said for the efficiency of this.\r\n\r\nBut on my job they have to pick through a nasty pile of salvaged ugly wood, pull the nails and wires off, rip it to size and only then can they get back to their job. It takes some getting used to and there is no end of grumbling about it.\r\n\r\nBut I point out to them that I can pay them to do that or pay the lumber yard to get clean wood. From that perspective they have no problem with me paying them instead and the grumbling lessens. \r\n\r\n I don\'t pay for the wood. I pay a little more for the labor. In terms of my costs it comes out to the same, maybe a little cheaper. But it is not purely a financial issue. \r\n\r\nBy salvaging the wood I lessen the impact on land fill. I also lessen the amount of wood being cut down. I also get much better quality wood, since the salvaged wood is old growth and miles better than the crap you buy today.\r\n\r\nIT COSTS PRETTY MUCH THE SAME FOR ME TO DO THIS YET THE BENEFITS IN MY EYES ARE MUCH HIGHER. This for me is a revolutionary concept. Clearly from the initial resistance I get from industry professionals it is a change from the status quot.\r\n\r\nGoing from this scrap to wall:\r\n
\r\n\r\n
', 'Doing Things Differently', 0, '', 'publish', 'open', 'open', '', 'differently', '', '', '2009-01-08 19:48:47', '2009-01-09 01:48:47', '', 0, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/?p=480', 0, 'post', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (481, 1, '2009-01-08 17:33:07', '2009-01-08 23:33:07', '', '66-april-20-2008-221xxxxxxx', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '66-april-20-2008-221xxxxxxx', '', '', '2009-01-08 17:33:07', '2009-01-08 23:33:07', '', 480, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/66-april-20-2008-221xxxxxxx.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (482, 1, '2009-01-08 19:45:40', '2009-01-09 01:45:40', '', 'p1010473', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'p1010473', '', '', '2009-01-08 19:45:40', '2009-01-09 01:45:40', '', 480, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/p1010473.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (483, 1, '2009-01-08 19:46:31', '2009-01-09 01:46:31', '', 'p1010507', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', 'p1010507', '', '', '2009-01-08 19:46:31', '2009-01-09 01:46:31', '', 480, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/p1010507.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (484, 1, '2009-01-08 19:47:05', '2009-01-09 01:47:05', 'Green building is not mainstream. The systems and habits are not in place. Doing a green job is part construction part education part experimentation because once you start thinking off the grid there are very few reference points to guide you.\n\nI had a plumber walk out of my job today before even giving a bid. He couldn\'t get his head around some of the things I\'m doing. His last words were, "I hope what you are doing works out, but it\'s not the way I do it."\n\nIt is definitely not business as usual. We have different ways of installing our pex tubing and they were at odds with what he knew. I believe our way is better and I\'m betting on it. We\'ll see.\n\nI had to go through several carpenters before I found one who was willing to do things my way. They are used to reaching out and grabbing a perfectly clean and sized piece of wood for their work. They have no part in preparing the wood. It comes from the lumber yard and all they have to do is put it in the house like Lego. There is something to be said for the efficiency of this.\n\nBut on my job they have to pick through a nasty pile of salvaged ugly wood, pull the nails and wires off, rip it to size and only then can they get back to their job. It takes some getting used to and there is no end of grumbling about it.\n\nBut I point out to them that I can pay them to do that or pay the lumber yard to get clean wood. From that perspective they have no problem with me paying them instead and the grumbling lessens. \n\n I don\'t pay for the wood. I pay a little more for the labor. In terms of my costs it comes out to the same, maybe a little cheaper. But it is not purely a financial issue. \n\nBy salvaging the wood I lessen the impact on land fill. I also lessen the amount of wood being cut down. I also get much better quality wood, since the salvaged wood is old growth and miles better than the crap you buy today.\n\nIT COSTS PRETTY MUCH THE SAME FOR ME TO DO THIS YET THE BENEFITS IN MY EYES ARE MUCH HIGHER. This for me is a revolutionary concept. Clearly from the initial resistance I get from industry professionals it is a change from the status quot.\n\nGoing from this:\n
\n\n
', 'Doing Things Differently', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '480-revision', '', '', '2009-01-08 19:47:05', '2009-01-09 01:47:05', '', 480, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/480-revision/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (485, 1, '2009-01-08 19:47:12', '2009-01-09 01:47:12', 'Green building is not mainstream. The systems and habits are not in place. Doing a green job is part construction part education part experimentation because once you start thinking off the grid there are very few reference points to guide you.\r\n\r\nI had a plumber walk out of my job today before even giving a bid. He couldn\'t get his head around some of the things I\'m doing. His last words were, "I hope what you are doing works out, but it\'s not the way I do it."\r\n\r\nIt is definitely not business as usual. We have different ways of installing our pex tubing and they were at odds with what he knew. I believe our way is better and I\'m betting on it. We\'ll see.\r\n\r\nI had to go through several carpenters before I found one who was willing to do things my way. They are used to reaching out and grabbing a perfectly clean and sized piece of wood for their work. They have no part in preparing the wood. It comes from the lumber yard and all they have to do is put it in the house like Lego. There is something to be said for the efficiency of this.\r\n\r\nBut on my job they have to pick through a nasty pile of salvaged ugly wood, pull the nails and wires off, rip it to size and only then can they get back to their job. It takes some getting used to and there is no end of grumbling about it.\r\n\r\nBut I point out to them that I can pay them to do that or pay the lumber yard to get clean wood. From that perspective they have no problem with me paying them instead and the grumbling lessens. \r\n\r\n I don\'t pay for the wood. I pay a little more for the labor. In terms of my costs it comes out to the same, maybe a little cheaper. But it is not purely a financial issue. \r\n\r\nBy salvaging the wood I lessen the impact on land fill. I also lessen the amount of wood being cut down. I also get much better quality wood, since the salvaged wood is old growth and miles better than the crap you buy today.\r\n\r\nIT COSTS PRETTY MUCH THE SAME FOR ME TO DO THIS YET THE BENEFITS IN MY EYES ARE MUCH HIGHER. This for me is a revolutionary concept. Clearly from the initial resistance I get from industry professionals it is a change from the status quot.\r\n\r\nGoing from this:\r\n
\r\n\r\n
', 'Doing Things Differently', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '480-revision-2', '', '', '2009-01-08 19:47:12', '2009-01-09 01:47:12', '', 480, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/480-revision-2/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (486, 1, '2008-11-24 13:13:05', '2008-11-24 19:13:05', 'There are a lot of radiant heat companies out there. The abundance can be confusing. We have found that certain stores offer the best of certain products.\r\n\r\nHere is an example for an order form from one of our vendors:\r\n\r\n
', 'Ordering Radiant Heat Materials', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '320-revision-2', '', '', '2008-11-24 13:13:05', '2008-11-24 19:13:05', '', 320, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/320-revision-2/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (487, 1, '2008-10-28 12:36:12', '2008-10-28 18:36:12', 'When talking heat there are three ways heat or cold moves through space. Knowing these ways is important because it determines what kind of insulation you use or on the opposite end what kind of heating to use.\r\n\r\nConvective heat transfer is what most of us are familiar with. This is how our forced air heating system or our baseboard system transfers energy (heat) to a space. Air moves over a heating element, becomes warmer and expands into the space. In a forced air environment, most of the hot air is at the ceiling, much the same way the hot air balloon rises, so will the warm air in a room heated with forced air. Convective heat transfer is the least efficient means to transfer energy.\r\n\r\nIn terms of insulation convection happens when thee is a crack in the window or a hole in the insulation. Hot and cold air passed through the space via convection. Stop convection by sealing all holes in the house, aka seal the envelope.\r\n\r\nConductive heat transfer refers to two surfaces touching each other. Imagine a metal pan on the stove. If your hand is positioned an inch above the hot handle, you really won\'t feel much from the handle, and you can keep your hand there as long as you wish. But, when the handle is touched, your hand instantly begins to feel hot. This is conductive heat transfer. The pot is giving off the energy (heat) in the handle to your hand in a very fast, efficient manner. \r\n\r\nConduction is one of the more efficient modes of heat transfer. In home insulation you reduce it by putting bad conductors between good ones. Wood conducts heat well so you would put a material like foam that conducts poorly over the wood studs to reduce heat loss.\r\n\r\nRadiant heat transfer is the best because it isn\'t slowed down by air. Radiant energy is only felt when the energy wave strikes another surface. This means the surrounding surfaces all reach set temperature. By enclosing your body by warm surfaces, we can better control how our bodies lose heat. Radiant floor heat means better comfort with higher efficiency.\r\n\r\nTo reduce radiant heat loss the best materials are ones that literally reflect the heat. These are foil covered insulation and types of silica that also reflects heat.', 'Three Types of Heat Transfer', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '230-revision-4', '', '', '2008-10-28 12:36:12', '2008-10-28 18:36:12', '', 230, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/230-revision-4/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (488, 1, '2009-01-09 13:28:25', '2009-01-09 19:28:25', '
\r\nAbove: A tomato plant growing out of the sidewalk at the green show house. You can\'t get more local than that!\r\n\r\nMNN.com, a pretty cool "Mother Nature Network" featured Brooklyn as a green destination of the week. Eco Brooklyn was mentioned in the article:\r\n\r\n"Brooklyn residents can now stretch out in new green-friendly living quarters through Eco-Brooklyn Inc. The green real estate, renovation and developmen..." read more.\r\n\r\nIt is nice to get the positive attention. Eco Brooklyn Inc. was specifically named to represent a local focus. Being green is very much about being local. Local materials, local labor, and local community. \r\n\r\nIf we make a wonderful place where we live then we don\'t need to take "escapism vacations" (I just coined that :) away from our home. Who would want to escape from something wonderful!\r\n\r\nLong Live Eco in Brooklyn!', 'Eco Brooklyn Featured at MNN.com', 0, '', 'publish', 'open', 'open', '', 'eco-brooklyn-featured-mnncom', '', '', '2009-01-09 13:36:28', '2009-01-09 19:36:28', '', 0, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/?p=488', 0, 'post', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (489, 1, '2009-01-09 13:27:37', '2009-01-09 19:27:37', '', '66-april-20-2008-300xxxxx', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '66-april-20-2008-300xxxxx', '', '', '2009-01-09 13:27:37', '2009-01-09 19:27:37', '', 488, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/66-april-20-2008-300xxxxx.jpg', 0, 'attachment', 'image/jpeg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (490, 1, '2009-01-09 13:27:57', '2009-01-09 19:27:57', '
\nAbove: A tomato plant\n\nMNN.com, a pretty cool "Mother Nature Network" featured Brooklyn as a green destination of the week. Eco Brooklyn was mentioned in the article:\n\n"Brooklyn residents can now stretch out in new green-friendly living quarters through Eco-Brooklyn Inc. The green real estate, renovation and developmen..." read more.\n\nIt is nice to get the positive attention. Eco Brooklyn Inc. was specifically named to represent a local focus. Being green is very much about being local. Local materials, local labor, and local community. \n\nIf we make a wonderful place where we live then we don\'t need to take "escapism vacations" (I just coined that :) away from our home. Who would want to escape from something wonderful!\n\nLong Live Eco in Brooklyn!', 'Eco Brooklyn Featured at MNN.com', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '488-revision', '', '', '2009-01-09 13:27:57', '2009-01-09 19:27:57', '', 488, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/488-revision/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (491, 1, '2009-01-09 13:28:25', '2009-01-09 19:28:25', '
\r\nAbove: A tomato plant growing out of the sidewalk at the green show house. You can\'t get more local than that!\r\n\r\nMNN.com, a pretty cool "Mother Nature Network" featured Brooklyn as a green destination of the week. Eco Brooklyn was mentioned in the article:\r\n\r\n"Brooklyn residents can now stretch out in new green-friendly living quarters through Eco-Brooklyn Inc. The green real estate, renovation and developmen..." read more.\r\n\r\nIt is nice to get the positive attention. Eco Brooklyn Inc. was specifically named to represent a local focus. Being green is very much about being local. Local materials, local labor, and local community. \r\n\r\nIf we make a wonderful place where we live then we don\'t need to take "escapism vacations" (I just coined that :) away from our home. Who would want to escape from something wonderful!\r\n\r\nLong Live Eco in Brooklyn!', 'Eco Brooklyn Featured at MNN.com', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '488-revision-2', '', '', '2009-01-09 13:28:25', '2009-01-09 19:28:25', '', 488, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/488-revision-2/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (492, 1, '2009-01-13 19:03:06', '2009-01-14 01:03:06', 'Eco Brooklyn is listing itself in GreenPeople.org because this is the kind of customer we want to work with.', 'Eco Brooklyn is listed in Green People.Org', 0, '', 'publish', 'open', 'open', '', 'eco-brooklyn-listed-green-peopleorg', '', '', '2009-01-13 19:03:06', '2009-01-14 01:03:06', '', 0, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/?p=492', 0, 'post', '', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_posts` VALUES (493, 1, '2009-01-13 19:03:03', '2009-01-14 01:03:03', 'Eco Brooklyn is listing itself in GreenPeople.org because this is the kind of customer we want to work with.', 'Eco Brooklyn is listed in Green People.Org', 0, '', 'inherit', 'open', 'open', '', '492-revision', '', '', '2009-01-13 19:03:03', '2009-01-14 01:03:03', '', 492, 'http://ecobrooklyn.com/492-revision/', 0, 'revision', '', 0) ;
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INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (385, 8, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (394, 8, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (407, 8, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (88, 32, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (95, 32, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (102, 32, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (115, 32, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (217, 32, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (272, 32, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (407, 32, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (226, 52, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (279, 52, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (25, 138, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (38, 138, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (279, 138, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (416, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (417, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (415, 31, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (415, 95, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (420, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (421, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (422, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (419, 7, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (419, 31, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (419, 142, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (484, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (423, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (425, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (426, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (424, 7, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (424, 45, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (427, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (424, 141, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (424, 143, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (429, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (430, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (428, 7, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (428, 144, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (428, 145, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (432, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (431, 45, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (431, 146, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (434, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (435, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (431, 147, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (437, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (438, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (439, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (440, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (441, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (442, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (443, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (444, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (445, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (446, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (447, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (448, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (449, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (450, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (436, 7, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (451, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (436, 148, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (452, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (453, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (454, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (455, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (457, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (456, 45, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (456, 149, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (459, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (458, 45, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (458, 150, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (458, 151, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (461, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (462, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (463, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (464, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (465, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (460, 45, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (460, 7, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (460, 31, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (460, 51, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (419, 34, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (460, 152, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (480, 34, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (460, 8, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (466, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (467, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (469, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (470, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (468, 45, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (468, 153, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (424, 44, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (431, 44, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (456, 44, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (458, 44, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (460, 44, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (468, 44, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (416, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (417, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (420, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (421, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (422, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (423, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (425, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (426, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (427, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (429, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (430, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (432, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (434, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (435, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (437, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (438, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (439, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (440, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (441, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (442, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (443, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (444, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (445, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (446, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (447, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (448, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (449, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (450, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (451, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (452, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (453, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (454, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (455, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (457, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (459, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (461, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (462, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (463, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (464, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (465, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (466, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (467, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (469, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (470, 122, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (419, 8, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (424, 8, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (428, 8, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (436, 8, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (415, 32, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (419, 32, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (460, 32, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (460, 52, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (460, 138, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (121, 45, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (124, 45, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (124, 20, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (240, 51, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (485, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (486, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (320, 156, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (487, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (230, 156, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (489, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (488, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (488, 24, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (492, 15, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (490, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (488, 7, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (488, 56, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (488, 157, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (488, 158, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (488, 159, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (488, 8, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (491, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (488, 15, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (493, 1, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_relationships` VALUES (492, 160, 0) ;
#
# End of data contents of table `wp_term_relationships`
# --------------------------------------------------------
# --------------------------------------------------------
# Table: `wp_term_taxonomy`
# --------------------------------------------------------
#
# Delete any existing table `wp_term_taxonomy`
#
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `wp_term_taxonomy`;
#
# Table structure of table `wp_term_taxonomy`
#
CREATE TABLE `wp_term_taxonomy` (
`term_taxonomy_id` bigint(20) NOT NULL auto_increment,
`term_id` bigint(20) NOT NULL default '0',
`taxonomy` varchar(32) NOT NULL default '',
`description` longtext NOT NULL,
`parent` bigint(20) NOT NULL default '0',
`count` bigint(20) NOT NULL default '0',
PRIMARY KEY (`term_taxonomy_id`),
UNIQUE KEY `term_id_taxonomy` (`term_id`,`taxonomy`)
) ENGINE=MyISAM AUTO_INCREMENT=161 DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8 ;
#
# Data contents of table `wp_term_taxonomy`
#
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (1, 1, 'category', '', 0, 3) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (2, 2, 'link_category', '', 0, 7) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (3, 3, 'post_tag', '', 0, 2) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (4, 4, 'post_tag', '', 0, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (5, 5, 'post_tag', '', 0, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (60, 53, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (6, 6, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (7, 7, 'category', '', 0, 29) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (8, 7, 'post_tag', '', 0, 29) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (9, 8, 'post_tag', '', 0, 2) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (11, 10, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (12, 11, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (13, 12, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (14, 13, 'post_tag', '', 0, 3) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (15, 14, 'category', '', 0, 14) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (16, 15, 'post_tag', '', 0, 2) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (17, 16, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (18, 17, 'post_tag', '', 0, 2) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (19, 18, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (20, 19, 'category', '', 0, 6) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (21, 20, 'category', '', 0, 6) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (22, 21, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (23, 19, 'post_tag', '', 0, 6) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (24, 22, 'category', '', 0, 9) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (25, 20, 'post_tag', '', 0, 7) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (26, 23, 'post_tag', '', 0, 2) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (27, 24, 'category', '', 0, 5) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (157, 145, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (29, 26, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (30, 27, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (31, 28, 'category', '', 0, 18) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (32, 28, 'post_tag', '', 0, 17) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (33, 29, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (34, 30, 'category', '', 0, 6) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (35, 31, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (36, 32, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (38, 34, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (39, 35, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (40, 36, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (41, 37, 'post_tag', '', 0, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (42, 38, 'post_tag', '', 0, 2) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (43, 39, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (44, 40, 'post_tag', '', 0, 21) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (46, 41, 'post_tag', '', 0, 2) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (45, 40, 'category', '', 0, 21) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (47, 42, 'post_tag', '', 0, 2) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (48, 43, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (49, 44, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (50, 45, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (51, 46, 'category', '', 0, 7) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (52, 46, 'post_tag', '', 0, 7) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (53, 47, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (54, 48, 'post_tag', '', 0, 3) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (55, 49, 'post_tag', '', 0, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (56, 50, 'post_tag', '', 0, 2) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (58, 51, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (156, 144, 'category', '', 0, 2) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (61, 54, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (62, 55, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (63, 56, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (64, 57, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (65, 58, 'category', '', 0, 3) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (66, 59, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (67, 60, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (68, 61, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (69, 62, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (160, 147, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (71, 63, 'post_tag', '', 0, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (155, 143, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (74, 66, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (75, 67, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (76, 68, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (77, 69, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (78, 70, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (79, 71, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (80, 72, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (81, 73, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (82, 74, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (83, 75, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (84, 76, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (85, 77, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (86, 78, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (87, 79, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (88, 80, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (89, 81, 'category', '', 0, 3) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (90, 82, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (91, 83, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (92, 84, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (93, 85, 'post_tag', '', 0, 2) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (94, 86, 'post_tag', '', 0, 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (95, 87, 'post_tag', '', 0, 2) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (96, 88, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (97, 89, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (98, 90, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (99, 91, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (100, 92, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (101, 93, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (102, 94, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (103, 95, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (104, 96, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (105, 97, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (107, 99, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (108, 98, 'post_tag', '', 0, 2) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (109, 100, 'category', '', 0, 6) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (110, 101, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (111, 102, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (112, 103, 'category', '', 0, 4) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (113, 104, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (114, 105, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (115, 106, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (116, 107, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (117, 108, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (118, 109, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (158, 22, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (159, 146, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (120, 111, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (121, 112, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (122, 1, 'post_tag', '', 0, 2) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (123, 113, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (124, 114, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (125, 115, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (126, 116, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (127, 117, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (128, 118, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (129, 119, 'post_tag', '', 0, 2) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (130, 120, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (131, 121, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (132, 122, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (133, 123, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (134, 124, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (135, 125, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (136, 126, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (137, 127, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (138, 9, 'post_tag', '', 0, 5) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (139, 128, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (140, 129, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (141, 130, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (142, 131, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (143, 132, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (144, 133, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (145, 134, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (146, 135, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (147, 136, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (148, 137, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (149, 138, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
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INSERT INTO `wp_term_taxonomy` VALUES (153, 142, 'post_tag', '', 0, 1) ;
#
# End of data contents of table `wp_term_taxonomy`
# --------------------------------------------------------
# --------------------------------------------------------
# Table: `wp_terms`
# --------------------------------------------------------
#
# Delete any existing table `wp_terms`
#
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `wp_terms`;
#
# Table structure of table `wp_terms`
#
CREATE TABLE `wp_terms` (
`term_id` bigint(20) NOT NULL auto_increment,
`name` varchar(200) NOT NULL default '',
`slug` varchar(200) NOT NULL default '',
`term_group` bigint(10) NOT NULL default '0',
PRIMARY KEY (`term_id`),
UNIQUE KEY `slug` (`slug`),
KEY `name` (`name`)
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#
# Data contents of table `wp_terms`
#
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INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (2, 'Blogroll', 'blogroll', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (3, 'green real estate', 'green-real-estate', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (4, 'web site theme', 'web-site-theme', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (5, 'wordpress', 'wordpress', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (6, 'Projects', 'projects', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (7, 'Green Show House', 'green-show-house', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (8, 'brownstoner.com', 'brownstonercom', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (9, 'Windows', 'windows', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (10, 'window', 'window', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (11, 'aluminium. fiberglass', 'aluminium-fiberglass', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (12, 'vinyl', 'vinyl', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (13, 'wood', 'wood', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (14, 'Press', 'press', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (15, 'USGBC', 'usgbc', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (16, 'broker', 'broker', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (17, 'contractor', 'contractor', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (18, 'Roland Arnall', 'roland-arnall', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (19, 'Mortgage', 'mortgage', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (20, 'Ethics', 'ethics', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (21, 'Ameriquest', 'ameriquest', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (22, 'Green', 'green', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (23, 'links', 'links', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (24, 'Resource Links', 'resource-links', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (146, 'travel', 'travel', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (26, 'pattern language', 'pattern-language', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (27, 'christopher alexander', 'christopher-alexander', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (28, 'Recycled', 'recycled', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (29, 'lumber', 'lumber', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (30, 'Salvaged', 'salvaged', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (31, 'steel', 'steel', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (32, 'studs', 'studs', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (147, 'GreenPeople.org', 'greenpeopleorg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (34, 'oak', 'oak', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (35, 'flooring', 'flooring', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (36, 'bricks', 'bricks', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (37, 'NSEA', 'nsea', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (38, 'sustainable', 'sustainable', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (39, 'sustainable energy', 'sustainable-energy', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (40, 'Energy', 'energy', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (41, 'nesea', 'nesea', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (42, 'green financing', 'green-financing', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (43, 'utility bills', 'utility-bills', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (44, 'cost', 'cost', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (45, 'references', 'references', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (46, 'Solar', 'solar', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (47, 'photo voltaic', 'photo-voltaic', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (48, 'Eco Broker', 'eco-broker', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (49, 'ecobroker', 'ecobroker', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (50, 'eco', 'eco', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (51, 'alliance', 'alliance', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (145, 'brookly', 'brookly', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (53, 'magnetic radiation', 'magnetic-radiation', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (54, 'stressors', 'stressors', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (55, 'electricity', 'electricity', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (56, 'LEED for HOMES', 'leed-for-homes', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (57, 'LEED', 'leed', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (58, 'Finance', 'finance', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (59, 'value engineering', 'value-engineering', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (60, 'co-op', 'co-op', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (61, 'Solar Energy Industries Association', 'solar-energy-industries-association', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (62, 'seia', 'seia', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (63, 'radiation', 'radiation', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (143, 'salvage', 'salvage', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (66, 'triple bottom line', 'triple-bottom-line', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (67, 'earth', 'earth', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (68, 'people', 'people', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (69, 'planet', 'planet', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (70, 'profit', 'profit', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (71, 'music', 'music', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (72, 'jack johnson', 'jack-johnson', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (73, 'SBNYC', 'sbnyc', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (74, 'BALLE', 'balle', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (75, 'co-op america', 'co-op-america', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (76, 'The Northeast Sustainable Energy Association', 'the-northeast-sustainable-energy-association', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (77, 'bailout', 'bailout', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (78, 'tax incentive', 'tax-incentive', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (79, '$700 billion', '700-billion', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (80, 'green solutions', 'green-solutions', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (81, 'Insulation', 'insulation', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (82, 'sealant', 'sealant', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (83, 'foam board', 'foam-board', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (84, 'EPS', 'eps', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (85, 'POLYISO', 'polyiso', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (86, 'Rick Fedrizzi', 'rick-fedrizzi', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (87, 'recycling', 'recycling', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (88, 'consumption', 'consumption', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (89, 'department of buildings', 'department-of-buildings', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (90, 'Idealist.org', 'idealistorg', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (91, 'solar tax cuts', 'solar-tax-cuts', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (92, 'policy', 'policy', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (93, 'tax incentives', 'tax-incentives', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (94, 'heat transfer', 'heat-transfer', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (95, 'ases', 'ases', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (96, 'green building', 'green-building', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (97, 'energy efficiency', 'energy-efficiency', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (98, 'Soundproofing', 'soundproofing', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (99, 'accoustics', 'accoustics', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (100, 'Design', 'design', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (101, 'bio-biologie', 'bio-biologie', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (102, 'Dr. Anton Schnieder', 'dr-anton-schnieder', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (103, 'House', 'house', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (104, 'green house cleaning', 'green-house-cleaning', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (105, 'fly ash', 'fly-ash', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (106, 'termites', 'termites', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (107, 'steel studs', 'steel-studs', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (108, 'oak floor', 'oak-floor', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (109, 'old wood', 'old-wood', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (144, 'Radiant Heating', 'radiant-heating', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (111, 'DOB idiots', 'dob-idiots', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (112, 'XEPS', 'xeps', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (113, 'renovation', 'renovation', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (114, 'space', 'space', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (115, 'storage', 'storage', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (116, 'feng shui', 'feng-shui', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (117, 'building tips', 'building-tips', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (118, 'environment', 'environment', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (119, 'Materials', 'materials', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (120, 'hemp cement', 'hemp-cement', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (121, 'cement', 'cement', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (122, 'house wrap', 'house-wrap', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (123, 'tar paper', 'tar-paper', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (124, 'roof', 'roof', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (125, 'green roof', 'green-roof', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (126, 'underpinning', 'underpinning', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (127, 'cellar', 'cellar', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (128, 'fiberglass', 'fiberglass', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (129, 'recycled tires', 'recycled-tires', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (130, 'Radiant Heat', 'radiant-heat', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (131, 'maple', 'maple', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (132, 'concrete slab', 'concrete-slab', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (133, 'winter', 'winter', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (134, 'brooklyn', 'brooklyn', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (135, 'house envelope', 'house-envelope', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (136, 'heat transfer plate', 'heat-transfer-plate', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (137, 'cement slab', 'cement-slab', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (138, 'Passiv haus', 'passiv-haus', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (139, 'zero energy homes', 'zero-energy-homes', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (140, 'isomax', 'isomax', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (141, 'slate', 'slate', 0) ;
INSERT INTO `wp_terms` VALUES (142, 'heat wall', 'heat-wall', 0) ;
#
# End of data contents of table `wp_terms`
# --------------------------------------------------------
# --------------------------------------------------------
# Table: `wp_usermeta`
# --------------------------------------------------------
#
# Delete any existing table `wp_usermeta`
#
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `wp_usermeta`;
#
# Table structure of table `wp_usermeta`
#
CREATE TABLE `wp_usermeta` (
`umeta_id` bigint(20) NOT NULL auto_increment,
`user_id` bigint(20) NOT NULL default '0',
`meta_key` varchar(255) default NULL,
`meta_value` longtext,
PRIMARY KEY (`umeta_id`),
KEY `user_id` (`user_id`),
KEY `meta_key` (`meta_key`)
) ENGINE=MyISAM AUTO_INCREMENT=49 DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8 ;
#
# Data contents of table `wp_usermeta`
#
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#
# End of data contents of table `wp_usermeta`
# --------------------------------------------------------
# --------------------------------------------------------
# Table: `wp_users`
# --------------------------------------------------------
#
# Delete any existing table `wp_users`
#
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS `wp_users`;
#
# Table structure of table `wp_users`
#
CREATE TABLE `wp_users` (
`ID` bigint(20) unsigned NOT NULL auto_increment,
`user_login` varchar(60) NOT NULL default '',
`user_pass` varchar(64) NOT NULL default '',
`user_nicename` varchar(50) NOT NULL default '',
`user_email` varchar(100) NOT NULL default '',
`user_url` varchar(100) NOT NULL default '',
`user_registered` datetime NOT NULL default '0000-00-00 00:00:00',
`user_activation_key` varchar(60) NOT NULL default '',
`user_status` int(11) NOT NULL default '0',
`display_name` varchar(250) NOT NULL default '',
PRIMARY KEY (`ID`),
KEY `user_login_key` (`user_login`),
KEY `user_nicename` (`user_nicename`)
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#
# Data contents of table `wp_users`
#
INSERT INTO `wp_users` VALUES (1, 'admin', '$P$B2K35syztbKgLFkemCb3WGmldGB/QR/', 'admin', 'gennaro@brookschurch.com', 'http://', '2008-08-18 03:35:58', '', 0, 'Gennaro Brooks-Church') ;
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#
# End of data contents of table `wp_users`
# --------------------------------------------------------