Saturday, April 07, 2007

Get Green/Recycling Building Materials

We have a lot of period homes here in the San Francisco Bay Area. From San Francisco Victorians, to 50's Eichlers, and everything in between.

Remodeling these homes requires a lot of period "stuff", like mouldings and windows and doors, that can't be had without paying painful premiums for custom products.

For those of us who would rather put our precious dollars toward the latest in appliances for our new kitchens, there is:

"Whole House Building Supply & Salvage, based in Palo Alto. While there have been salvage yards like Urban Ore, created by Dr. Daniel Knapp, in Berkeley and Caldwell's Building Salvage in San Francisco for decades, Whole House Building Supply (founded in 1998) has become such a one-stop shop of construction salvage and reuse that it seems like an invention from a utopian novel. "

For the rest of this article by Carol Lloyd, from the San Francisco Chronicle, click here.

The great thing about Whole House is that they will notify you of upcoming sales and you can actually go to the site where the house is being demolished and remove the materials yourself - or pay somebody to remove them - then haul them home.

You can also tell them exactly what you are looking for and they will notify you when it is available. I was looking for used bricks and flagstone for a yard project and they kept notifying me until I had enough and told them to stop.

It's not quite like going to a retail supplier and walking out with what you came for. But if you have time to wait, the price is sure right!

They also do demolitions and buy quality building materials you may want to sell.

It is such a great feeling to recycle beautiful material, some of which is no longer available at any price.
They also have an enormous yard where they take all the "stuff" that doesn't get bought on site. The selection of doors is unbelievable!

They build things out of recycled material at the yard too. Here's a PDF of some common items they build and even stock on site; but they will make anything you want; from a gate to a birdhouse.

Check them out next time you have a need. Tell 'em I sent you.

Peggy

Wednesday, April 04, 2007

Personal Secretary for the Kitchen

Tap a button on the SmartShopper, state your needs to its built-in microphone, and speech-recognition software turns them into text. SmartShopper recognizes 2,500 item names and common errands (“dry cleaners,” say, or “post office”), and lets you add items of your own. It also displays each new entry so you can correct it. When you’re going out to shop, it prints out the list, alphabetized, with errands followed by your list of things to get.
Available from http://www.smartshopperusa.com/, SmartShopper costs $149.95 and comes with three rolls of thermal paper. It also requires four AA batteries.
SmartShopper can be set on a counter, hung on the wall or magnetically attached to a refrigerator — wherever you’re most likely to be when you realize something’s running low.

I WANT one!

Peggy

Wikipedia on "The Kitchen"

This is a kitchen hut in modern day Zambia.

I stumbled onto Wikipedia's treatise on the Kitchen tonight.

Click on the image for a fascinating detour into the history of kitchens around the world.

NKBA needs to do some editing. They are not even mentioned.

Peggy