Green Building Materials and Remodeling Portland OR

If you’re going to be remodeling, it pays to invest in the environment. Think about it logically (just for a second), how many ways are there to make a house stand out in tomorrow’s housing market? There’s already a surplus of homes with shiny chrome kitchen appliances, marble counters, and recently remodeled bathrooms. If you’re going to remodel, do it in a way that not only pays you back in years of enjoyment but also pays you back as a green investor. Please scroll down for more information and get access to the best home remodeling contractors in Portland, OR listed below.

Woodcrafters
(800) 777-3709
212 NE 6th Ave
Portland, OR

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Gilmer Wood Company
(503) 274-1271
2211 NW Saint Helens Road
Portland, OR

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The Home Depot
(503)261-8543
10120 SE Washington St
Portland, OR
Hours
Mon-Sat: 6:00am-10:00pm
Sun: 7:00am-8:00pm

Columbia Riverwood
(503) 224-9924
1017 SW Morrison St P.O. Box 10461
Portland, OR

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The Home Depot
(503)639-3500
14800 SW Sequoia Parkway
Tigard, OR
Hours
Mon-Sat: 6:00am-10:00pm
Sun: 7:00am-8:00pm

Goby Walnut Products
(503) 477-6744
5315 NW St. Helens Rd.
Portland, OR

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The Home Depot
(503)289-9200
1728 N Jantzen Beach Ctr
Portland, OR
Hours
Mon-Sat: 6:00am-10:00pm
Sun: 7:00am-8:00pm

The Home Depot
(503)252-0188
11633 NE Glen Widing Dr
Portland, OR
Hours
Mon-Sat: 6:00am-10:00pm
Sun: 7:00am-8:00pm

Woodcraft - Portland, OR
(503) 684-1428
12020 SW Main Street
Tigard, OR

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Rockler Woodworking and Hardware #17
(503) 672-7266
Beaverton Town Square Mall
Beaverton (Portland), OR

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Green Building Materials and Remodeling Part 1: Kitchens

Green Building Materials and Remodeling Part 1: Kitchens

October 1, 2009   AK

As much as we all might want to build our green dream home from scratch, it might be more realistic to think about green remodeling. For one thing, it’s debatable which is greener but considering the reduce, reuse, recycle mantra, doesn’t remodeling just feel greener? Equally important, that’s what most of us are more likely to wind up doing. It might seem like a great way to go to hire the best green building consultant, but if you’re more the DIY or quasi-DIY type, you’re simply better off making improvements on what you have.

If you’re going to be remodeling, it pays to invest in the environment. Think about it logically (just for a second), how many ways are there to make a house stand out in tomorrow’s housing market? There’s already a surplus of homes with shiny chrome kitchen appliances, marble counters, and recently remodeled bathrooms. If you’re going to remodel, do it in a way that not only pays you back in years of enjoyment but also pays you back as a (green) investor.

Green or not, remodeling for smart homeowners begins in the kitchen and bathrooms (particularly the master bath):

Green Kitchen Remodeling Basics

First things first: Hire a kitchen/bath designer every time. These people have more knowledge of the latest trends, best fixtures, and most sensible layouts than other professionals. Architects are not Kitchen Designers. Those Sales Clerks in the big box stores are not Kitchen Designers (at all). The contractor who is putting an addition on your home or remodeling your kitchen is not a Kitchen Designer. Your brother-in-law who installed his own kitchen is not a Kitchen Designer.

The kitchen is the most energy-intensive room in your house, which means a kitchen remodel is the best place to try conserving energy. Also consider that the cabinets, counters, et cetera where we store and prepare food can have a measurable effect on the toxicity levels of the items that go into your body. Yes, really. You can read more about green counter materials: recycled glass, corian, granite, and concrete here .

Green Kitchen Appliances

Next comes the best green appliances for your kitchen . What makes an appliance green? Efficiency. That’s the bottom line, the appliance is designed to save energy for both you and the planet. EnergyStar is the top governmentally controlled rating in the efficiency business. Be sure to tell your kitchen designer that you’re planning to install a recycling organizer, composter, etc. so they can help you plan accordingly to reduce waste.

Cabinets

Another reason to hire a kitchen designer is their services — with any number of certifications from AKBA to CKD to CMKBD — are free (ahhhem, built in) when you buy their cabinets. If you just hire the services of a kitchen designer, their fee is usually 10% o...

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