10 posts categorized "Magazines"

July 26, 2008

Bonus Giveaway: Natural Home Magazine 1 YR Subscription

Nh2 Nh1 Nh3

This is part of the Jetson Green birthday giveaway, so make sure to leave a comment by midnight Tuesday, July 29, 2008, if you want to be considered for the contest.*

With the Jetson Green birthday givaway wrapping up and winners soon to be announced, I want to announce this bonus giveaway which we're offering by the generosity of Natural Home Magazine and its editorial team.  As a reader of Natural Home Magazine myself, I'm pretty psyched to be able to giveaway a year's subscription to this high-quality publication.  Natural Home focuses on sustainable home design and materials, earth-friendly decoration, and natural lifestyles.

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April 16, 2008

Architectural Record's Unbuilt Houses 2008

Unbuilt Houses 2008

Eight houses were chosen for Architectural Record's special, web-exclusive list of Unbuilt Houses.  They're all green.  If you take a look, you might notice something familiar.  You've probably seen many of them before.  Five of the eight homes have been featured on Jetson Green previously (links below).  I guess that means we're doing something right (and fast), too.  My favorite would have to be Adjaye Associates' design for the Make It Right Project in New Orleans. 

December 17, 2007

Consumers Spend $3 Billion/Year on Nothing!

Vampireenergy

Vampire energy, aka phantom loads, is estimated to cost U.S. consumers about $3 billion per year.  I know, it's not really that much ... I mean, if you break it down to the individual level, that's only $10 per person ($3 billion / 300 million).  But the point is, it's money that goes in the pocketbook of energy companies and their shareholders -- it's not going in yours.  The chart above is courtesy of GOOD, the magazine that always brings a full-page spread to otherwise obfuscatory information.

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November 09, 2007

[Video] Dwell Design Leaders Video + More

It's Friday and as I like to say, why not watch a little video?  If you've been to Dwell lately, you'll know they just unveiled their new, completely overhauled website.  It's super nice now, with easy access to images and information from their archives.  There's also a new video page with content of some very interesting leaders in design.  Hence, the name for their new video series, Dwell Design Leaders.  I've embedded the video of Michelle Kaufmann above talking about prefab and the mkLotus.  The next video below is of David Baker.  I found his comments extremely interesting.  The last video below is Christopher Deam talking about his modern interpretation and design of the Airstream and his collaboration with Design Within Reach.  Very compelling, really inspiring.

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October 10, 2007

Kiplinger's, The Green Issue - October 2007

Kiplinger's The Green Issue "This issue is a big departure for us.  In fact, I don't think we've ever devoted as many pages of an edition to a single topic.  But then, you seldom encounter a subject so full of possibilities for making money as an investor and for saving money as a consumer.  To date, global warming has been debated as a matter of government policy, and the economic fallout has usually revolved around costs and sacrifices -- pretty depressing stuff, actually.  It occurs to us, however, that confronting global warming will produce winners as well as losers.  Which would you rather be?" - Fred W. Frailey, Editor

I couldn't have said it better myself.  There is a business case for environmentalism, for sustainable progress.  Here are a few articles worth a read:

July 13, 2007

The Jetson Green Sustainability Bookstore

Sustainability Bookstore

If you know me, you know I like to read.  You name it, I read it.  Books.  Magazines.  Newspapers.  Online.  Actually, I have a theory on book reading, which goes like this:  if you don't pay reasonable market value for it, you won't be motivated to read it.  It's like a gym membership.  With this in mind, I've put together an online shop of sustainable books, The Jetson Green Sustainability Bookstore, in case anyone is searching for good material on environmentalism.  There's a lot out there.  Let me know if I left something out that you think merits inclusion.  Here are the categories:

++ Magazines + Prefab/Small + Architecture/Design ++
++ Non-fiction/Business + Green Lifestyle ++

This isn't a money maker for JG, I've never made more than $10 /quarter from Amazon...this is more intended to be a resource library for those of us at all levels in the journey towards living and working in a greener way.  Again, let me know if I left a good book out.  Also, I've gotten into Eco-Libris thanks to Victoria-E.  Eco-Libris plants a tree for every book that you purchase an offset for.  I'm not going to get into the offset controversy, but suffice it to say, I like the idea and will do it from now on.

May 17, 2007

GreenSource: The Magazine of Sustainable Design

Greensource Do you read GreenSource? There's a free read of the April 2007 edition of GreenSource online.  I highly recommend it, if you have a little free time and a fast connection.  It's a quarterly production, supported by the editors of McGraw-Hill Construction, BuildingGreen, Inc., and the United States Green Building Council (USGBC).  GreenSource has a circulation of about 42,000 readers.  In March 2007, it was given the prestigious Neal Award for Best Start-Up Publication.  I spent way too much time online reading the articles...it just sucked me right in. 

Good Links:
+GreenSource, April 2007
+GreenSource Online Page
+GreenSource Magazine Wins a Neal Award [PRNewswire]

May 04, 2007

Hearst Tower + The Daily Green (F2)

Hearst Tower

I thought I would share this picture of Hearst Tower, which is a LEED Certified Gold building in NYC.  Hearst Tower is probably one of the first, ostensible steps for Hearst Corporation in going green, but they've also launched a new green website, in beta right now, called The Daily Green.  Next step, the greening of its magazines (not the content, the paper)? 

"F2" is short for "Flickr Friday," a weekly short posted on Friday with an image from Flickr and a quick description.  Feel free to email me your F2 ideas.

April 12, 2007

It's a Green Spring...You Choose

Time April 9, 2007 Cover Outside April Cover Eco-Structure May/June Cover Newsweek April 16, 2007 Cover The New American City Spring 2007

I take my oldies to 1/2-Price when I'm done, it's better than trash.  You?

August 09, 2006

Tower of (Solar) Power - EnviroMission

Enviromission_2 A few years ago, my brother sent me an email link to a couple hundred acres of land in the middle of Nowhere, Nevada. Seriously, it was the ugliest land in the world with no development—no lines, no fences, no roads? I told him that there was a reason the land there was selling for such a cheap price, and while I couldn’t put my finger it, I’m sure there was a real good one (like aliens or nuclear waste dumping). He said, “don’t be dumb, dude, land’s land, there’s always value in it.” Well, not really, but I’m starting to think this land might have been a good deal. Here’s why…

EnviroMission
is on the verge—it’s tested and ready to go—of breaking ground on the world’s first commercial solar tower power station. Todd Woody from Business 2.0, did an awesome article on this technology. It’s so serious that a half-mile tall solar tower is in planning for China and EnviroMission is hunting for land in the Southwestern United States.

Here are some of the pluses: (1) there’s no fuel (no exploration, transport, disposal, smog, or landscaping costs), (2) you can put it in the desert and it will be perfect—no one will live out there anyway, (3) the primary cost is in the initial development as operating costs are minimal, (4) it produces enough energy to power 100,000 homes sans pollution or planet-warming gases, (5) as compared to wind farms, the sun is more consistent (in the right locations), and (6) a large version of the tower could produce energy for the same cost (or better) as conventional power plants. Oh yeah, it looks good, too.

Enviromission The cool thing about this technology is its potential to be disruptive. When you consider the costs of using coal, you can’t just think in terms of the purchase price (if you’re a commercial entity, the government, or public person). Why? Because there are hidden costs associated with things like coal: smog, mining deaths/accidents/health concerns, and transportation costs. With China and Australia on board with the solar tower, the global supply for other varieties of energy increases. They stop using coal as much as before. Ex: if China uses the solar tower instead of coal, then there’s more coal for other people to use. Coal will then get cheaper to use for those people that can’t use/afford the solar tower (or other alternative energy). My economics might be a little jacked, but I still think this will be an interesting business to follow.

Extra Links:
+Solar Mission Technologies, Inc.

+Wentworth Shire Council Solar Tower Web Page

+19th World Energy Congress, Sydney, Australia, September 5-9, 2004

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