Snowcem Paints " No.1 Exterior Solutions Company "
 

Archive for the ‘news’ Category

Beautiful Eco-Friendly Wooden House Made From Special Bamboo Elements

Friday, September 3rd, 2010

 

( via - silentfunblog.blogspot.com )

 

Tips to Improve Home Interior Design and Space

Friday, August 20th, 2010

 Most of the time it has been seen that people have been dreaming of big lavish houses but due to some limitations end up buying small place, but this does not mean that small place can not be decorated. There are some simple home interior design ideas that can make the place look better and bigger.

Color Combinations

People with little space in their bedroom, kitchen and living room need not worry much as simple designing patterns will help to give a great appearance and style to their home. The technique of using colors and accessories needs to be given a wise thought as this will affect the look of home. The use of neutral shades will brighten up place and give an appeal of more space. Employing home interior design accessories like the furniture, curtains and lights will give a contemporary look.

While adding colors to the walls one can flaunt with multiple shades. Gone are those traditional days when all the walls of the room had to be uniform. The recent interiors suggest that adding diverse colors to walls of same room will put in grace. Apart from colors the various patterns and designs are also picking up trends. While selecting furniture it is not necessary that only wood work would charm the place, metals and leather furniture is the latest trends in home interior design.

In case of living rooms it is always suggested to match the colors of walls, accessories and furniture as this would give an organized look. Using glass and metal will enhance the living room area. Adding some spotlights and lamps in dining area, bedroom and lobby will modify the space and environment. The hanging type lights are completely out, but installing some small chandelier in the living room and bedroom is always a good option.

Accessories for Embellishment

One more excellent option to enhance the home interior design is by adding decorative pictures and paintings to the walls. People who wish to make rooms of their kids a great playing place can use those double floor beds with safety railing. Using the vacuum type sofas would make a child’s room even better. While designing the kitchen it is always good to include cabinets to give a clean look.

People who love to give a natural feel to their home can think of adding room plants. This will not only give a green look, but would also make the environment healthier. The use of large size windows will allow more sunlight and make the place appear bright. Home interior design and patterns will not only help to redecorate the area, but would also add a contemporary look to the traditional home.

( via - interiorexteriorplan.com )

Amazing Green Building: The ACROS Fukuoka

Saturday, July 10th, 2010

 In Fukuoka City in Japan, they have an amazing building called “ACROS Fukuoka” with two very distinct sides: one side looks like a conventional office building with glass walls, but on the other side there is a huge terraced roof that merges with a park. The garden terraces, which reach up to about 60 meters above the ground, contain some 35,000 plants representing 76 species. A huge semicircular atrium and the triangular lobby provide contrast to the greenery, in this space is a symphony hall, offices and shops.

The building was constructed on the last remaining green space in the city center, so the architects, Emilio Ambasz & Associates, created a design to preserve the green space as much as possible, while still fitting in a large office building. In addition, a green roof reduces the energy consumption of a building, because it keeps the temperature inside more constant and comfortable. Green roofs also capture rainwater runoff, and support the life of insects and birds.

The building is a success in Japan, its terraced south facade utilized by many in the area for exercise and rest, affording views of the city and the harbor beyond. Unfortunately it has received little press overseas, especially in the United States.

This building was also featured in a book showcasing green roofs. Published last year, this visually attractive book has photos and descriptions of forty case studies of exemplary green roof projects — from Mexico City to Malmo, Sweden to Fukuoka, Japan to Dearborn, Michigan. It includes contributions from many of the leading people in the field. The book is intended to inform and inspire communities, designers, building owners by showcasing the environmental and aesthetic potential of large-scale green roofs. 

 
 
( via - myatma.blogspot.com )

Most Creative Buildings of the World

Saturday, July 10th, 2010

 

( via - worthgem.blogspot.com ) 

Nanhe River Landscape Bridge from WXY Architecture

Friday, July 2nd, 2010

 New York studio WXY Architecture have won a competition to build the Nanhe River Landscape Bridge in Xinjin County, China. This red bridge is due to begin later this year and will cross the river in two interlaced strands. As WXY Architecture wrote “Xinjin is a historical town that has attracted many residents and visitors over the years. It is geographically centered where five rivers converge, and for centuries poets have exalted its natural beauty. Our design draws inspiration from Xinjin’s breathtaking landscape and rich cultural history, and reflects the city’s modern prosperity.

( via -xpertcollection.blogspot.com )

National Library of Minsk – one architectural diamond

Thursday, July 1st, 2010

 

( via - xcitefunblog.blogspot.com )

world’s most sustainable building ever

Thursday, July 1st, 2010

 Winner of an international design competition for the Wuhan New Energy Center in Wuhan, China, the “Wuhan Energy Flower” by Grontmij and Soeters Van Eldonk Architects is essentially a research institute in the field of new energy sources and sustainability. Inspired by the Calla lily, the zero energy building is gonna be the first to receive the BREEM outstanding accreditation in the world. Powered by solar and wind energy, the flower-shaped building is 140m tall and is surrounded by a number of laboratories resembling the leaves.

Harnessing natural resources, the sustainable building collects rainwater in the bowl to fulfill its water requirements, and the solar panels enclosing the roof produces renewable electricity to fulfill the energy needs of the structure. Featuring pistil made in vertical axis wind turbines to collect renewable energy, the building integrates a solar chimney in the middle to maximize natural ventilation, while the rim of the bowl works as sunroof to heat and cool the building. 

( via - worthgem.blogspot.com )

Can Earth Hour Galvanize the global warming fight?

Monday, March 30th, 2009
   Every successful social movement has its defining images. Think of the civil rights movement, and the photos of protesters being attacked by police dogs and pummeled by high-pressure fire hoses. Or the Vietnam anti-war movement, and the video of body bags being beamed back to America’s living rooms. Even environmentalism has its iconic images, like Cleveland’s heavily polluted CuyahogaRiver catching fire in the 1960s, smog wreathing Los Angeles’s skyline during the next decade and even the stark hole in the ozone over Antarctica. To help galvanize public support — especially around a complex issue — the right picture really can be worth a thousand words. 

When it comes to climate change, however, that picture hasn’t yet been found. Hurricane Katrina’s destruction, drowning polar bears, spreading deserts — these images are powerful in their own right, but they’re not the sorts of pictures that can drive a movement. Precisely because global warming is so, well, global, potentially touching just about every corner of the world and every aspect of our lives, encapsulating it in a single image has proven elusive. You can’t connect climate change to a natural disaster as simply as you can connect a napalm bomb, a running child and the war in Vietnam. That’s made building and sustaining a movement against global warming so challenging. We can’t see it yet, not quite — and we can’t see its victims. But by the time we can, it will be too late.

That hasn’t stopped environmental groups from trying, however. On Saturday at 8:30 pm local time — beginning on Chatham Island in New Zealand, one of the first places on Earth that the dawn strikes — towns and cities in over 80 countries across the world will shut off their lights for 60 minutes, to draw attention to climate change. The National Stadium in Beijing, the Great Pyramids in Egypt, the EmpireStateBuilding in New York and even the Strip in Las Vegas — all will go dark for an hour to raise awareness of climate change and show that there is a worldwide constituency out there eager for action. "This is the only event regarding climate change that is truly global," says Carter Roberts, the president of the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) in the U.S., which is coordinating the event. "Climate change is the most global of problems, and the global community needs to come together to solve it." (Read "Earth Hour ‘08: Did It Matter?"

This is the second year in a row that WWF has helped run a worldwide Earth Hour — the event began two years ago just in Australia) — and participation has grown tremendously, from 400 cities in 2008 to some 4,000 this year. The image, at least, will be spectacular — monuments and skyscrapers switching off, a ring of darkness passing across the face of the planet. Though WWF is loosely overseeing Earth Hour, the protest — for lack of a better term — is a product of the age of social media, organized at the grassroots, with word spreading via Twitter and Facebook. "This is an open source thing," says WWF spokesperson Leslie Aun. "We lit the spark, but everyone is owning this."

Earth Hour itself is easy to make fun of — skeptics will say that turning out the lights won’t make but a light ding in our carbon emissions, and critics will claim it proves that environmentalists really do want to send us straight to the dark ages. The Competitive Enterprise Institute, a conservative think tank, is holding a counter-protest during the same time period called Celebrate Human Achievement Hour, which will "salute the people who keep the lights on and produce the energy that helps make human achievement possible." (So if you’ve ever wanted to throw a party for your local coal plant, this will be your chance.) But Earth Hour is a symbolic act, and as WWF’s Roberts points out, "history is littered with symbolic acts that became tipping points."(Read "Solar Power: Eco-Friendly or Environmental Blight?")

Is Earth Hour going to become such a tipping point, or the movement’s defining image? It’s possible, but as important as pictures are, we’ll need more. When President George W. Bush was in charge, knocking away climate change action like an NHL goalie, symbolism mattered because it was all we had. Now there’s a new President who has made very green promises, and who needs to be kept to them, even in the teeth of the worst economic crisis most of us have ever known. The new battle will be fought in the nitty gritty of policy, and the protests that matter will be political ones.

Global warming may never get its perfect picture — Earth Hour, a globe gone dark, may be the closest thing we’ll have. That’s all right — at a time when a recent Gallup poll reports that a record-high 41% of Americans think global warming is exaggerated, green groups need to do everything they can to keep this issue on the front burner, here and in the rest of the world. "The take home message from Earth Hour should be that we are not alone," says Roberts. "I want people to go to the website, but after, I want them to send a letter to their congressman." So think of it this way; turning off your lights Saturday night is all well and good — but remember that the work really starts when you turn them back on.

(Via Time.com)

 

Robotic Chair that cannot be destroyed

Wednesday, March 25th, 2009

In world’s first global election, vote for Earth

Monday, March 23rd, 2009

 

This year, Earth Hour has been transformed into the world’s first global election, between Earth and global warming. For the first time in history, people of all ages, nationalities, race and background have the opportunity to use their light switch as their vote – Switching off your lights is a vote for Earth, or leaving them on is a vote for global warming. WWF are urging the world to VOTE EARTH and reach the target of 1 billion votes, which will be presented to world leaders at the Global Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen 2009. This meeting will determine official government policies to take action against global warming, which will replace the Kyoto Protocol. It is the chance for the people of the world to make their voice heard.

Earth Hour began in Sydney in 2007, when 2.2 million homes and businesses switched off their lights for one hour. In 2008 the message had grown into a global sustainability movement, with 50 million people switching off their lights. Global landmarks such as the Golden GateBridge in San Francisco, Rome’s Colosseum, the Sydney Opera House and the Coca Cola billboard in Times Square all stood in darkness.

In 2009, Earth Hour is being taken to the next level, with the goal of 1 billion people switching off their lights as part of a global vote. Unlike any election in history, it is not about what country you’re from, but instead, what planet you’re from. VOTE EARTH is a global call to action for every individual, every business, and every community. A call to stand up and take control over the future of our planet. Over 74 countries and territories have pledged their support to VOTE EARTH during Earth Hour 2009, and this number is growing everyday.

We all have a vote, and every single vote counts. Together we can take control of the future of our planet, for future generations.

On March 28 you can VOTE EARTH by switching off your lights for one hour.
Or you can vote global warming by leaving your lights on.



Disclaimer
©2007 Snowcem Paints. All right reserved.