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Archive for the ‘Sustainability’

Hemp Building Symposium

June 28, 2009 By: greenbuilder Category: Building Energy Rating, Building with Hemp & Lime, Conference, Green Architecture, Green Design, Natural Building, Sustainability, Sustainable Building, Upcoming Events

Hemp Symposium, Kenmare, Ireland 2009 2009

Hemp Symposium, Kenmare, Ireland 2009

The site has recently been updated with new information on the speakers giving presentations at the Symposium.

The Symposium will offer a broad insight into the wide ranging possibilities of the Hemp Building

system and the contribution hemp materials can make to the world of Low carbon and Natural building.

As we search for ways of reducing our CO2 emissions and addressing the issues of energy peak and food security, Hemp is proving it has a lot to offer to the production of resources.

The 1st International Hemp Building Symposium will highlight the innovative ways in which hemp materials can be used to make Hemp Fibre insulation, Hempcrete made of Hemp-lime or Hemp-clay, and Hemp Plasters, together with the design, construction and the lifestyle benefits of living in such buildings.

16-18th September 2009 in Kenmare Bay Hotel, Kenmare. Co. Kerry, Ireland.

• Presentations

• Talks

• Demonstration

• Q & A Sessions

• Displays

• Networking & Education

For More information – click on picture below

For more information - click here

For more information - click here

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Sustainable Design

June 25, 2009 By: greenbuilder Category: Design, Green Architecture, Green Design, Passive House, Renewable Energy, Resilience, Sustainability, Sustainable Building, insulation

Designing and building sustainably is often an afterthought or at most a “consideration” for many people. “We would like to have an ecological house but ….” Solar panels for water heating are sometimes given the same consideration as a sun roof in a car, “would be nice”.

Renewable energy technologies and type of building materials need to be part of the design package. If they get relegated to “add on” status, then they no longer become useful and may well just appear as expensive optional extras.

One of the essential considerations when designing a home for yourself is “future-proofing” at design stage. We may, for example like to plan for a time in our life when we are not as agile as we are now so that we have fewer steps and good space at ground level or consider possibility of changes in lifestyle enforced by the global economic downturn, where prehaps a space could be easily converted to a workspace for home office or for childcare.

Similarily our design needs to enable our family home to be more resilient to a time when we will no longer afford be dependent on fossil fuels to meet our energy needs.

Picture yourself and you family, where you will be in a decade or so from now and to consider what you need to include at design stage now.

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Eco Living Festival

June 08, 2009 By: greenbuilder Category: Building Energy Rating, Building with Hemp & Lime, Design, Eco-village, Green Architecture, Green Design, Natural Building, Renewable Energy, Resilience, Straw bale building, Sustainability, Sustainable Building, Wind Energy, building with Cob, green books

Build your own Wind Turbine

Build your own Wind Turbine

Congratulations to Peter, Alanna and all involved in the Eco Living Festtival which took place over the weekend.  The festival took place in the scenic little village of Drumsna on the banks of the majestic Shannon River near Carrick-on-Shannon in Co. Leitrim.

There was something of interest for anyone interesting in ways to live more sustainably. I was particularly interested in a demonstration on how to build your own wind turbine. Suprisingly, it doesn’t seem to be so difficult, especially when explained by the people at Eirbyte.

Is it practical? Is it affordable? Is it sustainable? Yes to all, I would say. Lets all step out of the mode of mass production for a moment. Yes we could order something like these from China. But what is every local community started to teach local people how to build turbines locally.

The blades are manufactured using timber and many of the other componnents could be derived from recycled materials.

According to the people at Eirbyte, one doesn’t need to be an expert, many of the skills are taught at workshops throughout the country.

Within most local communities  however, we havethe expertise, We have carpenters, welders, electricians, mechanics and engineers, many of whom are underemployed at the moment. By consolidating these skills, local communities could become more resilient.

For more information on the Eco Living Festival and on building your own wind turbine, please follow the links below:

EIRBYTE

ECO LIVING FESTIVAL

BUILD YOUR OWN WIND TURBINE

SCORAIG WIND ELECTRIC

There are also a number of books which might be of interest:

 

ENERGY: USE LESS, SAVE MORE

WIND ENERGY BASICS

 

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Eco-village on BBC TV

May 18, 2009 By: greenbuilder Category: Eco-village, Green Design, Natural Building, Passive House, Resilience, Sustainability, Sustainable Building

County Tipperary’s “Little Belfast” is going green in the hope of attracting some new residents.In these challenging times, what with the economic meltdown and global warming, you might find yourself searching for simpler way of life.

Residents of a village in the Republic called Cloughjordan think they have found a way to escape the rat race.

They are building their own eco-village and hope the venture will breath new life into the area.

WATCH ITEM HERE

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Eco Living Festival

May 14, 2009 By: greenbuilder Category: Courses, Design, Green Design, Natural Building, Resilience, Sustainability, Sustainable Building, Upcoming Events

mini eco fest poster Eco Living Festival

ECO LIVING FESTIVAL
JUNE 6th/7th 2009

The first Eco Living Festival will take place on the weekend of June 6th/7th at the Drummsna Community Resource Centre, Drumsna, Co. Leitrim (on the N4 near Carrick on Shannon).

The weekend event will have a packed program, with many speakers from across the country, as well as demonstrations, local produce stalls, nature walks, field trips and hands-on permaculture gardening practice in store.

It will be the showcase event for Permaculture Ireland this year, where we offer the public many positive solutions to global problems – solutions that can start in our own homes and backyards.

With admittance pricing at a meagre €5 Euros (€10) and many sustainable living ideas to be had, who cannot afford to come along to our Festival?.

Peter Cowman BArch.,
Director

Living Architecture Centre

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Eco-bling

May 14, 2009 By: greenbuilder Category: Conference, Design, Green Architecture, Green Design, Heat Recovery, Passive House, Renewable Energy, Solar Water Heating, Sustainability, Sustainable Building, Wind Energy, Wood Pellets

Do we really need all these new “green technologies” in order to be more energy efficient?

Not necessarily is the view of a group of academics and sustainable energy practitioners who suggest that money spent on micro-renewable energy systems would be put to better on extra insulation and draught-proofing

Speaking in Trinity College at the Trinity Week Academic Symposium “Low Carbon Society: Waste Not Want Not in association with Trinity Haus, it was suggested that attempts to make buildings more energy-efficient by installing expensive “green technologies” have resulted in the rise of “eco-bling”.

The symposium heard some expensive technologies such as photo-voltaic cells, which take energy from sunshine, can take up to 50 years to pay for themselves in saved energy costs. However, photo-voltaic cells often have a useful life of just 20 years, making them effectively “eco-bling”.

In his lecture, “Nega Watts – the antidote to Eco-bling” Howard Liddell of Gaia Architects said preventing heat loss was by definition among the best ways to achieve energy efficiency.

He said he had never seen a heat pump in operation which offered a return as good as three units of energy output for each unit which went in, yet these were regularly advertised as “four units of output for one unit in”.

Photo-voltaic cells which make energy from sunshine offered a 50-year payback, but all too often have a 20-year useful life.

He was critical of new housing schemes which advertised “10 percent of energy from renewables” when research showed clearly the best way to achieve energy efficiency was simply to reduce waste.

This is valuable advice if you are designing your own house. Be wary about what companies out there are trying to tell you. Always ask from where salespeople are getting their figures and check them out yourself.

For More information click these links

Green energies give rise to ‘eco-bling’ – Irish Times May 14, 2009

Trinity Week Academic Symposium

Trinity Haus

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Alternative economic vision of Spirit of Ireland

May 13, 2009 By: greenbuilder Category: Renewable Energy, Sustainability, Wind Energy

An organisation entitled the Spirit of Ireland is developing an alternative economic vision for Ireland.

From the Irish Times Monday, May 11, 2009

They are planning to capitalise on Ireland’s capacity to jointly harness Ireland’s uniquely favourable wind-flow, and the potential for hydro-electric generation offered by ice-sculpted valleys running into the Atlantic. (more…)

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Eco Experience Holidays

May 05, 2009 By: greenbuilder Category: Building with Hemp & Lime, Courses, Green Design, Resilience, Sustainability, Sustainable Building, Upcoming Events, building with Cob, eco holidays

A unique opportunity to learn some practical natural building skills and have a holiday experience of a lifetime would be an Eco Holiday at the Boghill Centre at the foot of the Burren  in beautiful North County Clare on the West Coast of Ireland

The Boghill Centre is a residential activity centre situated off the beaten track, in a natural bog land setting between Lisdoonvarna and Kilfenora. SEE www.boghill.com
Although it is only two miles from Lisdoonvarna and four miles from Kilfenora it has a quiet and secluded atmosphere, making it the perfect place to relax and unwind.

They are running a series of Eco Experience weeks during June, July and August 2009.  This summer the series of Eco Experience weeks will centre around Cob building.   Cob is an ancient building material that has been used for construction since prehistoric times. It is made by mixing clay-based subsoil with straw, sand and water. This earthen mixture is then ladled onto a stone foundation and trodden onto the wall by workers in a process known as cobbing.

For more information click … ECO EXPERIENCE WEEKS

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Energy Show 2009

April 21, 2009 By: greenbuilder Category: Building Energy Rating, Building Regulations, Conference, Courses, Design, Electric Transport, Electric Vehicles, Green Architecture, Heat Recovery, Planning Permission, Renewable Energy, Seminar, Solar Water Heating, Sustainability, Sustainable Building, Transport, Upcoming Events, Wind Energy, Wood Pellets, electric bicycles

The Energy Show 2009 Organised by Sustainable Energy Ireland (SEI) will be held at the RDS Main Hall, Dublin

This business to business event is a must for anyone with a professional interest in or responsibility for energy use.

Registration for the Exhibition has now closed. You can register on the day. Entrance is free to the Exhibition on production of trade ID.

Now firmly established as the showcase event for Ireland’s energy sector, this year’s event follows the highly successful format of previous years. A cutting edge technology and trade exhibition with leading Irish and European product and service suppliers will showcase the very latest in energy innovation offering visitors a unique experience in seeking low energy solutions for buildings and the opportunity to engage those experts leading the energy sector both here and abroad. (more…)

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Outside the Box TV

April 18, 2009 By: greenbuilder Category: Design, Green Architecture, Green Design, Natural Building, Renewable Energy, Sustainability

House Design Online has launched a new service “Outside the Box TV”. As the page title suggests, we want to suggest ways to think outside the box when it comes to “design” and “architecture”. Many of the homes that we live in are no more than boxes, whose primary function is to contain us, supply us with bedding, water, food processing and sanitation. Of course there are many who lack even these essential elements but our homes, no matter how basic have many other roles which have been neglected in modern architecture.

Out of the Box TV features video clips of innovative green architecture and sustainable building design. The clips are from around the world.

Oustide the Box features Ireland’s first EcoVillage which is under development at Cloughjordan, Co Tipperary as well as some of the work of architects Peter Cowman, Joachim Mitchell and others who are challenging the preceptions of modern architecture.

for more click here OUTSIDE THE BOX
Home & Garden blogs


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Weekend in the Woods

April 14, 2009 By: greenbuilder Category: Courses, Green Design, Natural Building, Resilience, Sustainability, Upcoming Events

Location: CELT (Centre for Environmental Living & Training)

Bealkelly Oak Woods, Tuamgraney, Co. Clare – 9th & 10th May 2009

Traditional Skills & Heritage Crafts incl youngsters courses (8yrs +).
Courses include:

  • Herblore
  • Sugan Chair
  • Greenwood Furniture
  • New Course! Fishing for Beginners
  • Dry Stone Walling
  • Woodcarving
  • Silversmithing
  • Felting
  • New Course! Tool Restoration
  • Natural Building
  • Basketry
  • Blacksmithing
  • Spinning & Weaving
  • Coppersmithing
  • Stonecarving
  • Woodcrafts & Felting & Rustic Art for 8-14yrs

For More Information: Contact CELT

Cost: €150/€100 15 euro annual membership
See:     www.celtnet.org for detailed info & online booking
Email: info@celtnet.org
Tel : 061 640765

Next Events: 11/12th July & 19th/20th September

CELT Centre for Environmental Living and Training
Main St, Scariff, Co.Clare, Ireland
www.celtnet.org info@celtnet.org Tel: 061-640765

Woodland Crafts

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The Green Palette

April 11, 2009 By: greenbuilder Category: Design, Green Architecture, Green Design, Sustainability

Going Green without Compromise

House Design Online is delighted to welcome another new addition to the online community for green architecture.

The Green Palette provides an “Architectural Information Centre”  where green architects can post details of their “Green Projects”.

The Site will ultimately act as a networking site for green architects.

Presently the site offers a portfolio of some excellent green architecture projects and a facility for green architects to upload details of their projects to the green projects gallery.

These very innovation green projects are mainly based in the United States of America at present but there is a facility for green architects anywhere in the world to upload.

For more information CLICK HERE

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Build a Baking Oven

April 10, 2009 By: greenbuilder Category: Courses, Natural Building, Resilience, Sustainability, Sustainable Building, Upcoming Events

Two independent 1 1/2 day courses with Thomas and Ulrike Riedmuller
Dates:Sat/Sun April 25th/26th and
June 30th/31th at The Hollies
Cost per course:€100

For great outdoor fun and the real Italian taste these wood fired Bread and Pizza Ovens built with Cob are hard to beat. Learn how to build your own in just 1 1/2 days from firebricks, clay, sand, earth and straw. After this course you’ll be equipped with enough skill to go home and build your own in the garden and cook in it.

For More Information Check out THE HOLLIES

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Rethinking the Country: The Transition from Dependency to Resilience

April 07, 2009 By: greenbuilder Category: Conference, Design, Renewable Energy, Resilience, Sustainability, Sustainable Building, Transport, Upcoming Events

Date: Monday 27th April, 2009

Location: Tipperary Institute, Thurles, North Tipperary

Price: Free but booking essential by Friday 17th of April

Booking:                              Tel. 01 674 5773

More Information CLICK HERE

Organised by Cultivate, Tipperary Institute, The Village, Irish Rural Link and Carnegie Trust

Supported by COMHAR, the National Sustainable Development Council, Dublin City Council, Department of Environment Heritage and Local Government, Sustainable Energy Ireland and the Carnegie Trust

Over the last couple of decades policy makers have tended to regard Irish rural communities as dependent on urban centers rather than as drivers for change. This conference brings together stakeholders from a wide variety of sectors to explore how we can work together to build resilience in a future of energy, climate and economic uncertainty.

What are the actions and positive changes we will need to make to enhance the quality of life of our communities? How will we provide livelihoods and strong rural economies? How will communities of the future provide for their food needs? What are the opportunities for sustainable transport and how will we heat and power our communities?

What do we do to engage people to address the ever more complex problems facing us today? All of this will require for us to work purposefully together to build resilience in these challenging times.

10.00 Registration

10.30 Opening

Representative from North Tipperary County Council

Conversation Starters

10.35 Towards Sustainable Rural Communities
Ciaran Lynch – Tipperary Institute

10.45 From Vulnerability to Resilience
Prof. Peader Kirby

10.55 Regional Food
Helen Lawrenson – Falkland Centre for
Stewardship, Scotland

11.05 Rural Transport
Seamus Boland – Irish Rural Link

11.15 Break

11.30 World Café (view YouTube clip about World Café)

“Given where we are at, what are you already doing to build resilience in your communities?”

12.00 World Café plenary

13.00 Lunch (not provided)

Conversation Starters

14.00 Entreprise, Livelihoods ands Jobs
Ben Whelan – Cultivate and the Village

14.10 The Power of One Community
Seamus Hoyne – Tipperary Energy Agency, Paul Allen, Centre for Alternative Technology and Zero Carbon Britain

14.30 Planning For Rural Sustainability
Bridget Kirwan and Catherine Corcoran,
Tipperary Institute

14.50 Education and Training for Local Resilience
Davie Philip, Cultivate and the Village, Michael Kenny NUIM

15.10 Break

15.20 World Café (view YouTube clip about World Café)

“How do we work together now to build resilience in our communities”

Beyond The Talking Shop

16.20 Making the Transition

Chris Chapman, Change Exploratory and Nick Wilding, Carnegie Trust

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