Choosing Healthy Building Materials
August
2007
By Linda Mason Hunter
©
2007 Linda Mason Hunter. May not be reprinted without
written permission of the author.
When specifying healthy building
materials, use the following as a guide. Remember to read
product labels and study material safety data sheets (MSDS)
to find out exactly what is in a product before you buy it.
Don't assume government is protecting you from harmful
products. In fact, government can barely keep up with
labeling. It's up to you to be an informed consumer.
CAULK & ADHESIVES
Caulk and adhesive may seem like a small
part of a building project, but they can make a big impact
on air quality. Solvent-based adhesives have high levels of
volatile organic compounds (VOCS), making them harmful to
work and live with. Epoxy adhesives are noxious during
application but relatively nontoxic when fully cured. White
glue (polyvinyl acetate) and carpenter's glue (yellow
aliphatic resin) are safe when dry.
Healthy adhesives are solvent-free or
water-based. Caulk with a VOC content of 30 grams per liter
or less is acceptable.
CABINETS, DOORS, MOLDING, SHELVING, TRIM
These days conventional cabinets, doors,
molding, shelving, and trim are often composite wood covered
with veneer to make them look like wood. These products
contain large amounts of formaldehyde. In a healthy home,
cabinetry, doors, and built-ins are made of solid wood or
formaldehyde-free wheat board (a rapidly renewable resource)
and finished with a low-VOC paint or stain.
Formaldehyde-free exterior-grade plywood is an acceptable
material choice, or use alternative materials, such as metal
with a baked-on finish, for cabinets.
SUBFLOORS, SHEATHING, UNDERLAYMENT
Subfloors, wall sheathing, countertop
underlayments, and some types of wall coverings use plywood
or other composite wood products containing
urea-formaldehyde binders that can offgas for years. When
using sheetgoods choose low-emission boards such as
wheatboard, strawboard, isoboard, Fiber Tech™, Homastote™
(made from wheat, straw, sugarcane, or recycled paper bonded
with nontoxic agents), or exterior-grade plywood. Seal it
with a low-VOC vapor barrier sealant and finish with low-VOC
paint.
Though plywood is not a healthy choice,
exterior-grade is preferable over interior-grade. The phenol
formaldehyde binders of exterior-grade are waterproof and
more stable than the urea formaldehyde binders of
interior-grade, which are only water resistant. It is best
to seal exposed surfaces with a vapor-retardant sealer.
COUNTERTOPS
In a healthy house, countertop finish
material is installed over formaldehyde-free underlayment
and fastened and fastened mechanically, when possible, to
avoid the issue of adhesives. Avoid high-pressure plastic
laminates. They contain PVCs and are often attached using
high-VOC adhesives. Though more expensive, materials like
marble, granite, concrete, ceramic tile, and stone are
healthy choices. Solid-surface synthetics don't offgas, but
they are manufactured from petroleum, so they are not
"green."
Butcher block makes an attractive kitchen
countertop, does not require underlayment, and can be
mechanically fastened to cabinets. The porous surface,
however, can encourage mold and bacteria growth. Be sure
seams aren't glued with formaldehyde-based adhesives. Finish
with odorless nontoxic oil, such as walnut oil.
Stainless steel and copper are excellent
choices but present issues with creating electromagnetic
fields.
New eco-products are available. Vetrazzo®
(made of recycled glass from curbside recycling programs) is
touted as a sustainable alternative to granite, quartz, and
other quarried stone. IceStone® (composed of recycled glass
and concrete) is another option. Both come in an array of
colors, are strong like granite, yet not as porous as marble
and heat-resistant like stone.
DRYWALL
Though economical and convenient,
gypsum-based drywall (also known as Sheetrock®) is not a
healthy material for two reasons: (1) adhesives and joint
compounds offgas irritating fumes (including formaldehyde),
and (2) drywall is subject to moisture damage and mold.
Chemically sensitive people often react to offgassing of
inks used in the recycled newsprint comprising the paper
facing. A less toxic solution is drywall primed with
specialty paint or primer to seal off toxic fumes, and
joined with no-tox joint and texture compound, such as Murco
M-100 Ni-Po, made with inert fillers and without
formaldehyde and preservatives.
A new type of paperless drywall by
Georgia-Pacific (DensArmor Plus®) is a highly mold resistant
gypsum panel, ideal for basements and bathrooms. The
glass-mat surface front and back make it a healthy
replacement for paper-faced greenboard.
The most natural wall finish (short of
adobe) is additive-free plaster. Plaster has the added
advantage of blocking VOC offgassing present in the gypsum
and taped joints of modern construction. As an added bonus,
colored plaster never needs painting. Traditional plaster
and lath construction is many times more expensive than
drywall-if you can find someone to do it. Fortunately,
veneer plaster systems (often called skim plaster) are
available that provide many of the same benefits of
traditional plaster for a price similar to standard drywall.
Veneer plaster is simply a layer or two of plaster installed
over special drywall for a smooth, seamless, and impermeable
finish.
FLOORING
Because it covers such a large surface,
nontoxic floor coverings are essential in a healthy home.
There are more choices than ever before, so it's essential
to do your homework.
No matter what type of flooring you
choose, if it would ordinarily be finished on-site, consider
a factory-finished product instead of one you finish
yourself. The factory finish allows it to cure outside the
home, thus lowering in-home emissions. IF you choose to
finish it on-site, select a low- or no-VOC water-based
adhesive.
Healthy flooring choices include ceramic
tile, slate, terrazzo, brick, hardwood, pine, natural
rubber, "true" linoleum, and colored concrete. Instead of
wall-to-wall carpet, cover these floors with easy-to-clean
natural fiber area rugs.
Avoid vinyl flooring. Vinyl chloride
fumes are a known carcinogen. Vinyl also traps moisture
which can promote delamination of subfloors and mold growth
or rot, especially in hot, humid climates. In older houses,
be careful removing vinyl flooring; they may be a source of
asbestos.
Instead of vinyl, choose "true" linoleum
(made from wood and cork "flour," limestone dust, pine
resin, and colorants mixed with linseed oil from flax seeds
and baked onto jute backing). It's durable, resilient,
thermally insulating, quiet, and low maintenance with
natural antibacterial properties. Available in sheets or
tiles, it doesn't show scratches or cuts and comes with a 30
to 40 year lifespan. One type, Marmoleum®, looks and feels
like old-fashioned linoleum, is cushy underfoot, available
in a variety of colors, and can be cut and inlaid to create
one-of-a-kind patterns.
Similar to linoleum is natural rubber.
It's durable, resilient, and easy to clean. Newer types of
rubber flooring come in either rolls or tiles and cost $3 to
$5 per square foot installed. Be leery of manufactured
rubber flooring, though. Some are made of recycled tires
which can outgas for a long time.
If you choose a hardwood floor, pay
attention to the type of wood. The environmental choice is
Forest Stewardship Council-certified wood (FSC). Be sure the
underlayment doesn't contain formaldehyde. An installation
that requires no glue (as in most traditional hardwood
floors) is best, but if the floor must be glued use
water-based glues. Finish the floor with a low- or no-VOC
finish. Or, you may find a great deal on recycled wood in
salvage yards and neighborhood teardowns, thus reducing the
$3 to $8 per square foot cost of installing a conventional
hardwood floor.
As a substitute for hardwood, check out
renewable products such as cork and bamboo. Bamboo resists
warping better than other types of wood floors and is
surprisingly firm. Be careful, though. Most bamboo flooring
is manufactured in China and may have adhesives and finishes
that contain formaldehyde. Do your homework and select
formaldehyde-free bamboo. Cork has natural give, thus
cushioning the foot, is durable, sustainable, provides
acoustic and thermal insulation, and has antimicrobial
benefits. When using cork, make sure it it not encased in
vinyl. The price of installed cork is at the upper end of
the range for wood flooring, and bamboo will cost $1 to $2
more than cork per square foot.
Beware of laminated flooring. The backing
may be composite wood. Some are bonded with PVCs, which are
harmful throughout their life cycle. Look for laminated
floors using natural materials and biodegradable resins.
INSULATION
When it comes to insulation, there's a
mind-boggling array of choices, so you need to be informed.
If anyone in the house is chemically
sensitive, stay clear of batt insulation backed with
asphaltic coatings. Batts are not the most effective
insulation, anyway. Blown-in loose-fill insulation is the
better option because it doesn't settle as much as spray-in
insulation does. IF you want batt-type insulation, try a new
product made of recycled blue jeans. UltraTouch NaturalFiber
Insulation® by Bonded Logic is safe to handle and install,
contains no formaldehyde binders, and provides better
acoustics than fiberglass.
Though fiberglass is the most popular
insulation, home ecologists discourage blown-in fiberglass
insulation unless it is formaldehyde-free (such as Climate
Pro® or Attic Protector® by Johns Manville Corporation, and
Insulsafe 4® from CertainTeed Corporation).
Cellulose insulation has high energy and
acoustic performance, and isn't harmful to the installer,
but chemicals in the ink of shredded newsprint make
cellulose bothersome to some chemically sensitive people. If
using dry or damp sprayed cellulose:
-
Choose a product made of recycled
cardboard; second best is newspaper.
-
Fire retardant should be boron, not
ammonia-based.
-
Damp applied cellulose must be
allowed to fully dry to under 25% moisture content.
In general, avoid polyurethane-based
expanding foams for indoor air quality issues. Cementious
expanding and plant-based expanding foams (such as Air Krete®
and BioBase 501®) are healthy options, but must be installed
by an experienced local installer per manufacturer's
instructions.
Similarly, avoid spray polyurethane foam
(SPF), which can outgas if not sealed by drywall or plaster,
and some chemically sensitive people may react to it. Rigid
foam insulation, popular in the 1980s, outgases badly and
should not be used on interior applications.
Other no-tox, high R-value solutions
include cork and wool (check out wool batts by Good Shepard
Wool Insulation).
PAINTS, SEALANTS, STAINS
More than 10,000 synthetic chemicals are
used in conventional paints, sealers, and stains; many are
toxic solvents, mildewcides, and fungicides. Such
chemical-overburdening is unnecessary. You can now find low-
and no-VOC paints, stains, thinners, and waxes made from
naturally derived raw materials. Choose water-based
materials with a low VOC content of 150 grams per liter or
less. Ventilate well during and immediately after painting
or sealing.
A WORD ABOUT CARPET
The healthy home avoids chemically
treated carpets. Choose natural fiber carpets and rugs,
instead, particularly those made of pure wool, cotton, hemp,
jute, ramie, sisal, seagrass, or coir, with a natural
backing such as felt or jute. The best are certified organic
and undyed. Natural fiber modular carpet tiles (which can be
installed wall to wall or as a rug) are decent options. If
you damage on tile, you can pick it up to clean it or
replace it. Just be certain the product hasn't been
chemically treated.
If you choose carpet, ask the retailer to
unroll it in the warehouse and leave it unrolled for a
couple of weeks. When in comes time for installation, tack
it down instead of using glue. For carpet that needs glue,
choose a low-VOC adhesive. After installation, keep windows
open and a fan going for two or three days.
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PROJECT:
Calculate Your Ecological Footprint |
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How much space does your lifestyle require? Find out.
Calculate your own ecological footprint by taking the quiz
at
www.myfootprint.org.
Then, you can compare your Ecological Footprint to what the
planet can sustain.
Adjusting your entries or playing with the “Reduce Your
Footprint” calculator will show how lifestyle changes affect
the Footprint size. Enter simple goals for your life on the
Action Calculator (such as a pledge to eat less meat) and
find out how many acres of land you could save just by
implementing that goal. Post your goals in a place where you
can see and review them every day. |
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