Archive for May, 2009

Heat Therapy Products Create Multi-Sensory Spa Experience

Friday, May 22nd, 2009

From jetted tubs to steam showers and saunas, today’s hottest heat therapy products have moved well beyond the basics, to incorporate numerous multisensory amenities and wellness benefits. While baths may not be getting larger in size, consumers still want amenities that will create a home spa experience, and they are willing to invest in products that improve their health and wellbeing.

Below are some of the hottest trends in whirlpools, saunas, spas and steambaths right now:

  • The home spa experience continues to drive the trend toward heat therapy products that provide a soothing escape – and consumers continue to invest in these products, not only because they help to create a private sanctuary, but because they also promote greater health and well being.
  • Both air jets and water jets remain popular, with many products offering a combination of fixed jets and adjustable jets so that users can create the perfect, personalized massage.
  • Today’s jetted tubs are focusing on wellness features, including hydrotherapy – with both water and air – chromatherapy, aromatherapy and even audiotherapy.
  • In keeping with the green trend, there’s a growing movement toward whirlpools and air baths that are smaller in size, and therefore mindful of water conservation.
  • Walk-in tubs that address access and safety issues for the 55+ market - while also offering the option of body and/or skin therapy – are gaining in popularity, with sleeker, more stylish designs that are anything but utilitarian.

Steam showers and saunas are evolving into more feature-laden products, with wireless remote controls, energy saving features and increased design options.

Freestanding Air Massage Tub from
MTI Whirlpools

 

Updated Steambath Controls from
Mr.Steam

 


The Marilyn transitional-design freestanding tub from MTI Whirlpools is offered with a thermo-air massage system – the System Aria or Aria Elite, each of which produces millions of tiny air bubbles. The air flow rate is adjustable from gentle to vigorous to a pulsating wave effect. Also available on the tub is the company’s Radiance heating system, which warms the bath shell, as well as underwater LED lighting.

 

 


Mr.Steam’s In-Shower eTEMPO Control Series is comprised of two interior controls – eTEMPO/PLUS and eTEMPO, and two exterior controls – TEMPO/Start and eTEMPO/Remote Control. The eTEMPO/Plus control features a programmable memory for up to two steambathing preferences. Its microprocessor for temperature mapping ensures even heat, ChromaSteam and AromaSteam activation at the touch of a button. Outside the enclosure, the eTEMPO/Start control activates the system from any room in the house, while the remote triggers all of the features.

Freestanding Air Massage Tub from
MTI Whirlpools

 

Updated Steambath Controls from
Mr.Steam

 


The Marilyn transitional-design freestanding tub from MTI Whirlpools is offered with a thermo-air massage system – the System Aria or Aria Elite, each of which produces millions of tiny air bubbles. The air flow rate is adjustable from gentle to vigorous to a pulsating wave effect. Also available on the tub is the company’s Radiance heating system, which warms the bath shell, as well as underwater LED lighting.

 

 


Mr.Steam’s In-Shower eTEMPO Control Series is comprised of two interior controls – eTEMPO/PLUS and eTEMPO, and two exterior controls – TEMPO/Start and eTEMPO/Remote Control. The eTEMPO/Plus control features a programmable memory for up to two steambathing preferences. Its microprocessor for temperature mapping ensures even heat, ChromaSteam and AromaSteam activation at the touch of a button. Outside the enclosure, the eTEMPO/Start control activates the system from any room in the house, while the remote triggers all of the features.

 

Aquatic Presents Smaller-Scale Air Bath

 

ThermaSol Provides Remote Control of
Steam Shower

 


Aquatic Industries has added the Serenity 13, a smaller scale version of the Serenity 11, to its Serenity Air Bath Series. Measuring 66″x38″, the bath features 1 HP variable speed air blower with a 600 watt air heating system. Three massage settings – continuous bubble action, wave and pulse modes – can be adjusted via a waterproof remote control. Up to three acrylic colors can be featured on one tub – one each on the base, outer shell and inner bathing well.

 

 


ThermaSol’s Easy Start Control for the steam shower allows the user to program the steam session from up to 50 feet away. The control, which works with the Signature or Temp-Touch control, allows for one or two user settings. It can control temperature adjustment, variable session times, sound system volume control and chromatherapy light type intensity. It is available with a traditional or contemporary edge, and is offered in 14 designer finishes.

Pearl Baths/MAAX Showcase Therapy Baths

 

Helo Upgrades Infrared Saunas

 


The Eterne Series by Pearl Baths/MAAX features a contemporary design, with rectangular shape and ergonomic armrests. Available in two sizes, the tub offers a range of therapies, including the True Whirlpool Rest quiet massage hydrotherapy system, Aerofeel air therapy, a combination of both therapies, chromatherapy, heat therapy and aromatherapy. Other amenities include integrated handles, cushioned head pillow, ozonator whirlpool system and back massage.

 

 


The E-Series of infrared saunas from Helo Sauna and Steam is an upgrade to the Helo’s CarbonFlex B-Series, and incorporates the company’s CarbonFlex infrared heating technology. Exclusive features includes: overhanging ceiling with recessed fluorescent lighting, drop-down television screen with DVD player, western red cedar interior and exterior, heated in-floor ceramic tiles, heated bench, chromatherapy lighting system and inside and outside controls.

Source:  Kitchen & Bath Design News – May, 2009

To create a spa like experience in your own home contact Emily Norris, ASID at Inspired Interiors - 773.728.0419

Can Big Kitchens Be Green???

Sunday, May 17th, 2009

We thought you might find the following article from Treehugger.com to be interesting.  It explains that while some think bigger isn’t better, going big in your kitchen doesn’t mean you have to sacrifice being green.  Enjoy!

by Lloyd Alter, Toronto on 10. 3.07
Buzz up!

chongkitchen.jpg
Donald Chong: Small Fridges Make Good Cities

We have often stated that it is hard to call big houses green, but can big kitchens be considered green? We were asked by Kitchen and Bath Business Green- a trade publication serving “the business of building eco-friendly kitchens and baths” (there truly is a magazine for everything!) Read the edited version here or the full version below.

KBBGreen: Are big, open kitchen layouts environmentally friendly, and how so or how not?

LA: In an era of global warming and peak oil, we have to think about using fewer resources both in building and operating. Even the greenest of materials have embodied energy so the bigger a kitchen, the less environmentally friendly it is. The key to our future is to live with less, and the best way to live with less is to design things well.

chongkitchen2.jpg
Donald Chong kitchen: note that the sink and range for this entire kitchen is a free-standing Buthaup “kitchen workbench” at the end instead of the usual monster Viking or Aga.

KBBGreen: Do they cost more to heat or cool? Does heat from cooking raise temperatures in other rooms of the house because there aren’t walls to contain it?

LA: The bigger a room, the more it costs to heat or cool. However the biggest problem is that big kitchens seem to always get big appliances; in the upscale kitchen everyone wants the big honking commercial ranges with 20,000 BTU burners, salamanders and professional exhaust systems to cope with it. And fridges that can hold two weeks worth of food. The nicest kitchen I ever saw (very big and open) was by Donald Chong in Toronto, who says “small fridges make good cities”

chongkitchenpreserves.jpg
Donald Chong Kitchen: Lots of room for preserves

KBBGreen: If green, how can designers market this to clients?

LA: Local food, fresh ingredients, the slow food movement; these are all the rage these days. A green kitchen will have big work areas and sinks for preserving, tons of storage to keep it in, but will not have a four foot wide fridge or a six burner Viking range. It will open to outdoors to vent the heat in summer, to the rest of the house to retain the heat in winter. The dining area will be integrated into it, perhaps right in the middle. A green kitchen will be like grandma’s farm kitchen- big, open, the focus of the house and no energy from the appliances will be wasted in winter or kept inside in summer.

KBBGreen: If not green, how can you make open kitchens green without sacrificing design and style? (Radiant heat flooring? Vent systems?)

LA: There is nothing inherently “not green” about a big open kitchen, if it is not filled with monster appliances, formaldehyde and vinyl. If it is where you live and not repeated with accessory breakfast rooms and empty dining rooms, it probably can and should be the biggest room in the house. ::K+BBB Green

Source:  www.treehugger.com  published 10.3.07.

If you would like to incorporate these ideas into your kitchen, call Emily Norris(ASID) at Inspired Interiors — 773.728.0419.

 

 

Green Strategies: Crystal Cabinet Works specializes in sustainable products

Tuesday, May 5th, 2009

Crystal Cabinets

A leader in the custom cabinet market, Crystal Cabinet Works Inc also is quickly becoming an industry leader in sustainable initiatives.

An innovative and forward-thinking company, Crystal Cabinet Works Inc introduced in 2006 Green-Core, a product “made with materials that have a reduced effect on human health and the environment.” Just one year later, the company became one of the first cabinetmakers to achieve certification under the Kitchen Cabinet Manufacturers Assn.’s Environmental Stewardship Program (ESP).
Crystal Cabinet meets the requirements for sound environmental business practices, including: air quality, resource management of its products and processes, stewardship and community relations. The company also is certified sustainable under the Composite Panel Assn.’s Environmentally Preferable Product (EPP) Downstream Program.“

Crystal Cabinet has always been in pursuit of best practices in corporate responsibility, simply because it fits with who we are as a company and as people,” says Boyd Hedin, COO. “People ask ‘why now?’ We believe everything has its time in business, usually driven by the consumer. While we might have had the desire to be more ‘green’ in the past, the lack of consumer-driven initiatives held back many of our efforts.”“We are FSC chain-of-custody certified and offer FSC-certified cabinetry in maple, heartwood maple, birch, cherry, rustic cherry, hickory, rustic hickory, red oak and quartersawn white oak, plus others by special request,” says Angela Ewald, Environmental Health and Safety manager.  All of the aspen used in its dovetailed drawer boxes is FSC certified as well, she adds.
In addition to using environmentally sustainable products, Ewald estimates the company has recycled more than 30 tons of paint, cardboard, mixed paper, plastic transport packaging and scrap metal in a year through its aggressive waste-saving strategies. An additional 3,000 tons of wood waste is down-cycled each year for use as animal bedding or as a biofuel energy source.

“We have installed optimizing, computerized equipment in our rough mill and machining areas in order to reduce our wood consumption. We also use wood recovered from our own processes to create unique accessory designs,” Ewald says.

In an effort to further reduce its carbon footprint, hybrid cars recently were added to the fleet of company vehicles and by converting factory lighting to energy-efficient products, the company estimates it has saved enough energy to power 40 homes a year. The return on investment from using energy-efficient air compressors installed at one facility was just nine months.

Challenges in going green
There are unique challenges involved in being green. First and foremost, Ewald says, “We wanted to determine what made a green product. We are aware that companies attempt to ‘greenwash’ their products. Our corporate ethic dictated that we needed to research and be able to verify that the products in our GreenQuest product line were actually green — meaning healthier or more sustainable than their conventional counterparts.”

GreenQuest cabinetry uses UV water-based, self-seal topcoats, which are ultra-low VOC water-based finishes that meet strict California VOC requirements. The company says it also plans to change its standard clearcoats to ultra-low- emitting finish formulations in the near future. In addition, the cabinetry is constructed from FSC-certified lumber and GreenCore plywood and particleboard, made from renewable wood fiber, with no added urea-formaldehyde resins.

GreenQuest earns points under green building rating systems, including LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) and the National Green Building Standard, as well as some local programs. Under LEED-2009, GreenQuest cabinetry can earn points for: recycled content (particleboard and MDF); use of regional materials if from within a 500-mile radius; the rapid renewability of products (use of bamboo); use of low-emitting wood coatings and composite panel products; and use of FSC-certified species.

Time, effort and expense were involved in Crystal Cabinet’s pursuit of the FSC chain-of-custody certification. “This involved many months of planning, a thorough analysis of our lumber and sheet stock supply chain, and an extensive two-day audit at our facility,” Ewald says.

Although Ewald admits the FSC certification process is very expensive, “It is a cost we must continue to incur every year to maintain our certification. Due to research and development investment, cost of low-emitting resins and process changes, we pay more for our green products, [and] some of this increased cost must be passed along to our customers.” However, she adds, “We expect increased sales, due to a new market niche, as well as improved profitability and financial strength due to better and less wasteful practices.“

Crystal Cabinet actively works to educate others on the benefits of green products. On the Web site are user-friendly materials explaining the company’s green products and processes, how certification is earned, as well as a 12-page brochure entitled: Earth Matters: Better Company. Better Product. Better World.

The educational push extends to its own staff. “Ensuring that our national sales team, our dealers and our internal staff are properly trained and understand the attributes of our green products has been, and will continue to be a challenge, but a critical issue as we grow our green product sales,” she says.

Ewald adds the company’s focus on environmental sustainability is a long-term one. “It is our intent to continue pursuing all avenues to ‘green’ until it truly becomes a way of life. We have a strategic objective to be a leader in green, both in terms of our product offerings and our manufacturing processes.”
She says that they are evaluating additional measures for waste, emissions and the use of reportable chemicals. “We intend to set goals to better utilize our wood waste back into the product as well as reduce our wastes and emissions per cabinet.”

Source:  www.iswonline.com   published April 9, 2009

Contact Emily Norris, ASID, at Inspired Interiors to learn more about how Crystal Cabinet Works GreenQuest cabinetry can be incorporated into your home —- 773.728.0419.