Greening Your Home
How lessons-learned from a state-of-the-art net-zero project can help us all reduce our impact
Now that everyone is finally talking about green buildings, the question becomes “Where do we need to go from here?”
The answer? Net-zero.
That’s what a panel of experts told an audience assembled last month at Rocky Mountain Institute’s symposium in San Francisco, RMI2009.

Would you use green home products if the cost to your family was a whole lot less?
What if the green products worked better than your highly chemicalized versions?
Naturally. Green is better. Only a fool wouldn’t
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I would continue to use them. We are environmentally consious as it is…
I do believe our homemade cleaners work better than any commercial cleaners.
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I’m not going green cause I can’t afford it. I already use way under what I should be as a human. And, I do without a lot of things and have already sat down and made a plan as to where I can make the cuts.
It depends on exactly which products you’re talking about.
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I’m willing to pay more as long as it works
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I like homemade "old fashioned" cleaning remedies the best. There is no sense in buying the "green" cleaners from stores. They are way to costly. I use vinegar water to clean almost everything. It’s a natural disinfectant, cleans glass without the streaks, and deodorizes. Don’t like the smell, lemon works just as nice!
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