Recycled homes Part 3 of 3

There is an ever growing selection of recycled materials that can be used in remodeling or building a home today. Before we look at those though, let's consider another form o recycling. I touched upon this is REUSE but if we consider recycling to be using an object or the materials from which an object is constructed to make a new object or the materials for a new object what about recycling a building for another purpose?

There are examples all across the country of churches, hospitals, barns and lighthouses that have been transformed into living spaces. Firehouses, grain silos and 1950's era bomb shelters (talk about a unique underground home) have all been candidates for transformation into housing after their original use has been discontinued. I have occasionally wondered if it is possible to convert a deserted strip mall into condos--cohousing maybe? There would be plenty of parking...... Just because a structure was originally built for a different purpose doesn't mean it can't become useful as shelter. Witness the apartment houses, lofts and condominiums that now occupy what were once warehouses, manufacturing plants or hospitals.

Here is an example of a bathroom in a converted warehouse for those of us who have always craved a large bathroom and been stuck with a 7 foot by 6 foot cubicle.

Home of the week 

 This is the outside view of a warehouse conversion in London.

This interior view could probably use some staging,but you get the idea

In terms of using recycled materials for renovation there are carpets made from recycled milk cartons and soft drink bottles and the padding to go with them. The last clients I helped with choosing carpet were amazed to find that the recycled carpet and padding was less expensive than the same grade of "regular" carpet and padding. Using lumber recovered from another building in construction or or flooring is a good form of reuse and recycling. Counter tops can be purchased that are made from recycled paper, glass, and aluminum shavings. One of my favorites, just because of the sheer outrageous nature of it is this one, made from porcelain terrazzo created by recycling tubs, toilets and sinks.

    Kitchen with EnviroSLAB counters

Tile from recycled glass, aluminum, ceramic, cement and reclaimed brick are all available. You can buy recycled pipe  and most metal roofs contain a minimum of 25% recycled material. In addition, they can be recycled over and over again.

  These are metal shingles for those who want a shingle roof!


This looks like tile, a very popular roofing choice here in the southwest, but it's made of steel coated with aluminum-zinc alloy, and surfaced with stone chips. The stone resists fading and ultraviolet light, and the roof is rated non-combustible, Photo:Decra RoofingRed Spanish tiles look like small waves across a roofline

6 commentsDeb Hurt, ABR, e-Pro,Green, TRC • February 05 2009 03:39PM

Comments

Very nicely supported with photos - love that huge bath photo!   Adaptive reuse of commercial spaces is the way to go, especially in urban areas like Lancaster City, PA.

Posted by Jeff Geoghan MBA, Green - Lancaster PA Real Estate Expert (The Jeff Geoghan Realty Group, Coldwell Banker Lancaster PA) about 1 year ago

Jeff,- I too am a huge fan of urban infill and adaptive use of commercial space. My personal favorite projects are the ones I have heard of in several places across the country that have turned former "insane asylums" into condos. ...I am also big fan of cohousing. Within the cohousing niche there is a movement of retrofitted cohousing that takes existing buildings to create cohousing neighborhoods. I think it holds great promise not only for urban areas but for some neighborhoods that have lots of foreclosed homes in one area. It is going to take the involvement of many more people doing things similar to what you have done- getting involved on the city council or on the planning and zoning board to facilitate more of these kinds of changes.

Posted by Deb Hurt, ABR, e-Pro,Green, TRC (Flat Rate Realty Albuquerque) about 1 year ago

Deb, excellent article, I love the way you think!

I am going to reblog it to:

http://activerain.com/blogsview/918198/FEBRUARY-Spread-the-Link-Love-CHALLENGE

Joanne O'Donnell, Chic Home Interiors

Posted by Joanne O'Donnell (Chic Home Interiors - Stager, Trainer & EcoProfessional) about 1 year ago

Joanne, Thanks! Sometimes I think we get in our own way by making the whole thing too complex. Simple solutions do not always work but a series of simple steps can mean enormous change.

Posted by Deb Hurt, ABR, e-Pro,Green, TRC (Flat Rate Realty Albuquerque) about 1 year ago

On your website you have a photo of metal shingles..  Can you tell me who makes them and if they have a dealer in Georgia.

Thank you

skip Jones

770.301.6100 cell

Posted by Skip Jones 9 months ago

Skip, I can't tell you who makes these particular ones- the photo is from a builder who s no longer building in the area and the homeowner doesn't know, but there are a lot of manufacturers of metal shingles out there. Any large roofing company in your area shuld be able to guide you to a local source.

Posted by Deb Hurt, ABR, e-Pro,Green, TRC (Flat Rate Realty Albuquerque) 9 months ago

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