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Green Design Hits the City
Posted by Philip Higgs on May 15, 2007 - 12:47am.

After a week straight of wanting to barf with apprehension, I came out of this past weekend’s Brooklyn Designs expo – where I was part of a group discussion on green remodeling – feeling more like a happy evangelist. I didn’t get to address every last aspect of going green that I had wanted to, but I think along with the other panelists – green consultant Lauren Gropper, real-estate agent Karesse Grenier, and LEED-accredited architect David Bergman – we were able to give a few more people a few more ideas on how to start. The place was packed.

Brooklyn Designs – BKLYN DESIGNS for you cool kids out there – is a project of the Brooklyn Chamber of Commerce to show off homegrown talent in design and fabrication. Not everything had a green tint to it, but damn, there was some fine stuff; an excellent place to bite some style for my decrepit-but-soon-to-be-shining studio. A quick round up:

Daniel Moyer scrounges hardwood from decrepit decks on Fire Island and turns it into moddish, Asian-influenced furniture – and sweet $495 longboard skateboards for tooling around Williamsburg.



Jan Lee of Sinotique takes a similar tack, pulling wood for his mammoth tables and whatnot from wind-felled trees around the world – like the African ironwood he had fashioned into short stools, or the massive wooden doors from China he had turned into dining tables. (Word to the repurposed-door style!)

A little outfit called Re-surface reprints graffiti scenes from around Brooklyn onto lampshades. Green, schmeen – these things are rad. (That’s right, I said it: Rad. Word to 1987!)

Manche Mitchell builds highly covetable little storage shelves out of low- or no-VOC plywood. Something called Glide – is it an artists’ collective? a consulting firm? I couldn’t rightly tell – was pimping sunflower- and wheat-chaff-based particleboards, as well as Wonka-looking stackable lamps. One of Glide’s consulting projects is a joint called Habana Outpost, which hosted the after-after party – locally brewed beer, biodegradable cups and plates, and solar power. (Personally, I never made it past the after party – or maybe it was just the party-party. By after-after, I was in bed, softly snoozing away my nausea.) There’s a bit more about some exhibitors over at Dwell mag’s blog, if you still hunger.

Where a lot of these folks do their thing is at the Greenpoint Manufacturing and Design Center, a series of formerly unoccupied industrial spaces around Brooklyn that have been converted into usable – and affordable – workspaces for local designers, builders, jewelry makers, metalsmiths, woodworkers, stained-glass artists, you name it. Keeps the talent in Brooklyn quite handily, giving young businesses what the GMDC calls a “safe haven” from impossible rents. Een Draght Mackt Maght, people: Community is a beautiful thing.



<em>Jeddadiah</em>'s picture
Green for cheap
by Jeddadiah on May 15, 2007 - 1:04pm

Hey Phil--

 

Sorry to have missed you at the conference. In terms of the green designers that you met, were any of them green for the sake of economy, or green and inexpensive, or did you get the sense that it was more of a botique, high end group of craftspeople?


<em>phiggs</em>'s picture
it was a mix
by phiggs on May 15, 2007 - 9:14pm

I mean, they were all boutique-y in that they were all small operations, and high-end in that it was all handmade -- and looked really well-done at that. And some of it was expensive stuff -- like $9,000 for one of those Sinotique tables.

 As for the other kind of green, some of the designers seemed like they were green because it was the cool thing to do, but I got the impression that almost everyone there was doing what they could because they thought it was the right thing to do. Like those storage boxes by Manche Mitchell -- they could have been made out of any old plywood, but it was important to Manche personally that they be made of eco-sensitive plywood. Know what I'm saying? Maybe two or three years ago, no one would have thought of that, but because that sort of thing has now entered the popular consciousness, we got green storage boxes. 


<em>phiggs</em>'s picture
one more
by phiggs on May 15, 2007 - 9:17pm
I should have also mentioned Platform furniture in my post -- they make these really stunning tables and cabinets and whatnot from reclaimed fir. No idea where the fir is reclaimed from, but they're really, really lovely items. I lust.
<em>madamerebellion</em>'s picture
Fashionably green.
by madamerebellion on May 15, 2007 - 4:17pm

The lampshade is something you'd find in my home or... in my sister's room. She is always making artwork she especially loves making it from recycled material, most of it is marvelous by the way. Anyway I love Re-Surface... thanks for the reference I'm definitely getting one of those A-lights.

 

I do wish I was closer to New york see if I could catch one of these conferences, It'd be a pleasure to get these tips, that you so kindly provide us with via your blog, in person.

 

 

 

 


<em>dancingqueen</em>'s picture
tooling around
by dancingqueen on May 16, 2007 - 8:54am
My boys are getting into skateboarding.  How cool would that be to tool around on one of those.  A bit out of my pricerange, but  a lovely thought.  Sounds like you had a great time and a nice weekend to see NY.
<em>Vicki_R</em>'s picture
big green apple
by Vicki_R on May 16, 2007 - 8:56am
So how was your weekend in the big green apple?  Did you get to visit any of the great restaurants in the area and check out the area?  Sounds like the conference was very informative and you got some great ideas.  Love the skateboards!!!
<em>phiggs</em>'s picture
boards
by phiggs on May 16, 2007 - 11:09am

Yeah, those boards were really beautiful. Not sure I'd want to skate around town on a $500 board, though -- that thing would get trashed right quick under my feet.

Restaurants: We went to Superfine in Dumbo, which had a rad country band playing all night, and then to some place called Wet Noodle or something -- ancient place serving Italian food. Fantastic. I need to turn this blog into a TV show so I can afford to eat out every night in places like that. Help me out, TV pepople!


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