
Kitchen & Bath Sustainable Design
Conservation, Materials, Practices
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
Kitchen & Bath Sustainable Design is the National Kitchen and Bath Association's complete guide to "greening" these important rooms. The first book to focus exclusively on kitchen and bath sustainability, this full color guide covers every consideration for both remodels and new construction, making it a handy reference for any kitchen and bath professional. Case studies of award-winning projects demonstrate how space, budget, and sustainability can come together to create beautiful, functional, efficient rooms, and illustrations throughout provide visual examples of the techniques discussed. The book includes information on greening one's practice for the client's benefit, plus an appendix of additional resources and instructional materials for classroom use.
Outside of general heating and cooling, kitchen appliances use the bulk of a household's energy. Kitchens and baths together use an average of 300 gallons of water per day for a family of four, and both rooms are high-use areas that require good air quality. Kitchen & Bath Sustainable Design provides a handbook to designing these rooms for sustainability, without sacrificing comfort or livability. With comprehensive guidance on approaching these rooms sustainably, readers will:
- Communicate better with builders, clients, and potential clients
- Understand technical considerations, and the criteria that make a design "green"
- Conduct a full design analysis, including life cycle costing and efficiency
- Learn the ratings systems and standards in play in the green kitchen and bath
The biggest elements of sustainable interior design—energy efficiency, water use, and materials selection—are all major players in the kitchen and bath. Clients are increasingly demanding attention to sustainability issues, and designers must be up to date on the latest guidelines, best practices, and technology. Kitchen & Bath Sustainable Design is the complete technical and practical guide to green design for the kitchen and bath professional.
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Information
1
Understanding the Need for Sustainable Design
On my first Boy Scout trip, in the mid-1950s, I learned the basic environmental principle that we should leave the campsite as we found it. We were told that the next group of hikers deserved no less and that in fact we should clean the site up if those before us had been careless. I did not as a child understand that the campsite would be global or that the next hikers would include unborn generations.—John Sitter
- Learning Objective 1: Discuss the concept of designing for benefit rather than austerity.
- Learning Objective 2: Apply sustainable design concepts to kitchen and bath projects.
- Learning Objective 3: Identify the basic needs for applying sustainable practices.
- The average temperature of the earth has risen by more than 1.4° F over the last century.1
- Oceans are warming and becoming more acidic, ice caps are melting, and sea levels are rising.2 From 1880 to 2011, the average sea level rise was 0.07 inches per year, but from 1993 to 2011, the sea level rise was between 0.11 and 0.13 inches per year.3
- Emissions of greenhouse gases (carbon dioxide [CO2], methane, nitrous oxide, and fluorinated gases) have increased due to human activities such as:
- The burning of fossil fuels.
- Anaerobic decay of organic waste in landfills due to industry processes and commercial and household chemicals (see Figure 1.2)



- 38.9 percent of total US energy consumption
- 38.9 percent of total US CO2 emissions
- 13 percent of total US water consumption4
TRIPLE-BOTTOM-LINE APPROACH

Event-Oriented Thinking, Systems Thinking, and the Butterfly Effect
There are a thousand hacking at the branches of evil to one who is striking at the root.—Henry David Thoreau, Walden

We can't solve problems by using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them.—Albert Einstein
Table of contents
- Cover
- Titlepage
- Copyright
- Sponsors
- About the National Kitchen & Bath Association
- PREFACE
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
- CHAPTER 1 UNDERSTANDING THE NEED FOR SUSTAINABLE DESIGN
- CHAPTER 2 WHAT DEFINES SUSTAINABILITY?
- CHAPTER 3 SUSTAINABLE CONSTRUCTION
- CHAPTER 4 INDOOR AIR QUALITY
- CHAPTER 5 MATERIALS, APPLIANCES, AND FIXTURES
- CHAPTER 6 CREATING AN ENVIRONMENTALLY SUSTAINABLE DESIGN PRACTICE
- APPENDIX A COMPOSTING VERSUS GARBAGE DISPOSALS
- APPENDIX B WATER BOTTLES VERSUS WATER FILTERS
- APPENDIX C CASE STUDIES
- APPENDIX D SUMMARY OF PRODUCT STANDARDS FOR GREEN SPECIFICATIONS
- APPENDIX E DETERMINING YOUR CLIENT’S COMMITMENT TO GREEN DESIGN
- GLOSSARY
- RESOURCES
- INDEX
- ADVERT
- END USER LICENSE AGREEMENT