By
Annalea Krebs
| Image:
Flickr | Jeff Werner |
Published: May 28, 2010
Food, fashion, cars and shopping—Vancouver's EP!C expo offers an epic spread of eco options for living the life sustainable
EP!C: The Vancouver Sun Sustainable Living Expo, May 28–30, 2010, Vancouver’s annual sustainable living expo, offers plenty of green inspiration and valuable education through speakers, workshops, cooking stages and exhibitors’ booths—plus, plenty of deals you can’t get anywhere else on a variety of eco-products.
By
Jennifer Robinson
| Image:
courtesy Intelligent Forms Design |
Published: November 25, 2008

It may look like you’re doing nothing poolside while your cabana boy (or significant other) is off scouring the bar for that third strawberry daiquiri you demanded, but in reality you’re doing more than just working on your tan. Nearby, under your sweating—and empty—drink glass, you’re recharging your cellphone, checking email and listening to your iPod—all in an environmentally friendly way.
The SOLo Lounge Table, designed by Intelligent Forms Design Inc., harnesses the power of the sun through silicon solar cells sandwiched between its glass surfaces. Created for casual lounge-type environments on rooftop decks and poolside patios, the sleek, modern table stands at coffee table height and has a built-in audio jack for personal music devices, a Bluetooth module and internal LEDs for gentle mood lighting, says company partner and designer Innes Yates.
Hidden inside a stainless steel drawer are four outlets—two USB 2.0, one 12-volt DC and a 120-volt AC—that power your mobile devices and keep their clutter out of sight. SOLo, which can nab more than 73 kilowatt hours of solar energy a year, is CSA approved and costs $14,000.
Intelligent Forms ?Design Inc.
304 - 1300 Richards St.
Vancouver, BC
1-800-405-9430
intelligentforms.net
By
John Bucher
| Image:
Solar, the film
|
Published: September 26, 2008

Solar is a short animated film that explores environmental themes. It was made by English computer-graphics guys Ian Wharton and Edward Shires. I watched it today, after finding a link to Ian Wharton's site on DesignCharts, a weekly compendium of the best-designed (according to designers) websites on the Internet.
The makers of Solar describe the film, cryptically, as a "tale of the sun, moon, and two characters who inhabit a planet that relies on day and night perhaps more than it would seem."
I've been deliberately preserving my ignorance, like a sequestered jury, about the meaning of Solar. (Thankfully, the pursuit comes to me easily.) I have my thoughts, but they are unmolested by the reading of reports or reviews, or the watching of "how it was made" videos, although you can find all of those here.
My ideas about the piece are still congealing, and I didn't want to reading anything that told me What It Means before I'd thought about it more. That, and I'm interested to know what you guys make of it.
So do this: Click "play" at left, watch the two-minute film and then answer this question:
What does it mean?
Many thanks to Ian Wharton and Edward Shires
Solar: The film website
IanWharton.com
EdShires.co.uk
By
Christopher Pollon
| Image:
Peter Holst |
Published: February 26, 2008

Imagine a future where kilometre-wide solar arrays orbit the planet, beaming the sun’s energy to transmission stations on Earth.
In October 2007 the U.S. Pentagon’s National Security Space Office announced it was interested in exploring just such a concept. While the Pentagon’s interest is related to supporting global military operations remotely, the development of solar space technology could change the way the world uses energy.
There is just one problem: even if future studies and funding are forthcoming, the launch of the first satellite could be as far away as 2030, or more realistically, 2050. Finding abundant, non-polluting energy by tapping into space-based solar panels is just one of many promising ideas popularized by the mass media each year.
There are ubiquitous and glowing stories about fuel cells, wind farms, geothermal energy and solar technology. But more often than not, the technologies in question are decades away from practical implementation.
So what alternatives are available right now to homeowners seeking to wean themselves from the communal power grid? British Columbians enjoy some of the lowest energy prices on the continent, and as a result, the financial incentive is practically non-existent. That said, real incentives do exist. We currently rely on importing some of our energy from polluting sources, and the province’s goal of energy self-sufficiency by 2016 depends on small hydro projects, whose effect on the environment is subject to debate, and includes coal and natural gas as fuel sources.
A few local energy pioneers make it clear that the answer involves experimenting with new ways to produce heat and electricity at home, and more importantly, making our homes less reliant on power of any kind in the first place.
A visit to the semi-rural Highlands area, just north of Victoria, provides an early glimpse of what alternative energy might look like one day in Vancouver. The nearly completed home of Gordon and Ann Baird sits on three acres. Within a cob structure of their own design, the Bairds are experimenting with future energy alternatives that are so novel that the couple have struggled to get local electrical and plumbing inspectors to recognize them as legal.
The floor is earthen, and the walls are made from an insulating mixture of straw, clay and sand. The family’s grey water is recycled, all rainwater is collected, and the composting toilet literally digests its own waste. Handling 85 per cent of the work themselves, the Bairds expect their home to cost $258,000 (including labour) by the time it is completed in May this year.
Yet these features are secondary to the combination of solar and wind energy technologies that have been incorporated into the design. For at least eight months a year, solar energy will power their appliances and heat their house and water. Twelve solar photovoltaic panels on their roof feed into an inverter, at which point a small battery bank ties in to the BC Hydro electrical grid.
The solar panel feeds the batteries until they are full, after which point the excess solar energy is fed to BC Hydro, which will buy any power the Bairds do not use as part of Hydro’s Net Metering program. During cloudy winter months, the couple will be able to draw on the BC hydro grid as they need to.
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