Sustainable Interior Styling Guide and Design Directory 1 | Page 6

WHY STYLE IT GREEN? There really is no place like home. It’s our sanctuary, our castle, a place where families are raised and memories made. Home is where we relax - a special place where we can just...well, be. Houses are not homes until we add to the four walls, things to sit on, sleep in, and to cook and eat with. We add our own identity and personality to home spaces, through the decoration and special treasures we display in them, making it our own. Homes are where we escape the world and expect to be safe. Due to pressures on energy and water resources, we are seeing a growth in green- built houses, that essentially are having a lower footprint on the environment. It makes sense to be conscious of this, when we are also going through the process of decorating our interior spaces. Plus, toxic and harmful chemicals are often added to furniture and furnishings for bonding or flame resistance, for example. These chemicals, can, and often do have affects on our short and long-term health as the off-gases are released into the air we breathe inside our homes. There are two main reasons we should be mindful and thoughtful of the choices we make when designing and styling our homes. Harmful Toxins In Your Home Have you ever heard of VOCs? It stands for Volatile Organic Compounds and it’s an umbrella term for the various chemical toxins found in everyday furnishing and household items. At room temperature, VOCs are released as a colourless gas that contaminate the air that we breath and are exposed to every day. Two of the worst VOCs are formaldehyde and PVC. Formaldehyde is a colourless, flammable, strong-smelling chemical that is used in building materials and to produce many household products. It is used in pressed-wood products such as particleboard, plywood and fibreboard; glues and adhesives; permanent-press fabrics; paper product coatings; and certain insulation materials. It is commonly used in flame retardants applied to carpets and sofas. Formaldehyde is a known human carcinogen with suspected links to naso- pharyngeal cancer and certain blood cancers, like myeloid leukemia. Polyvinyl Chloride (PVC), or vinyl, also known as ‘poison plastic’, is one of the most environmentally hazardous consumer materials ever produced. PVC is dangerous to human health throughout its entire life cycle of production, use and dis- posal, mainly because so much chlorine is used in making it. When chlorine is used in industrial processes to make PVC plastic, or products made with PVC are burned as trash, a dangerous by-product called dioxin is formed. Dioxin is a known human carcinogen. 06