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Design Outdoor & Exteriors RENO ADDICT

6 great upgrades to make your home more energy-efficient

Upgrading your home to be more energy-efficient is in your best interest. By adding solutions geared at conserving energy, you’ll not only be protecting the environment, you’ll be saving lots of money in the long run. In contrast to conventional homes, energy-efficient ones limit unnecessary energy consumption and greenhouse gas emissions, conserve energy and reduce the demand for non-renewable resources. All in all, it’s worth making your home energy-efficient! Here are six smart tips to help you do it.

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  1. Replace your windows

If your windows are old, consider replacing them with energy-efficient alternatives or improve their efficiency with weather-stripping and storm windows. In general, replacing windows just to save energy isn’t that cost-effective – one source claims that it saves you 7-to-24% off your heating or air-conditioning bills. That is, unless your windows are large and single-glazed. Otherwise, it’s good to consider energy-efficient options once you’re replacing your windows for other reasons as well – that’s when the change becomes cost-effective.

  1. Insulate your home

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Proper insulation is key to saving energy. Without it, you risk letting out a lot of your heat during the cold winter months – and we all know that heating bills are high. Make sure to have good insulation – blown-in insulation for your walls or weather-stripping. Remember that the expertise of the contractor is more important than the insulating material you use – it’s the installation that matters most here.

  1. Think about solar panels

Solar panels are costly, but they’re a great investment. You can easily have them installed on your rooftop and enjoy reduced electricity bills by producing your own electricity. Even if the initial price seems quite high, solar panels are cost-effective. Still, they’re not such a popular solution in many regions of the world – but it’s very likely that this will change in the near future.

  1. Choose your appliances wisely

If you’re about to get some new appliances for your home, look for those with the HE logo. Certified appliances use less energy, and while they will cost you a bit more, they’re simply a smart investment. You’ll be running them very often, if not all day long, so expect to save on your electricity bills over time. Even when choosing energy-efficient appliances, it’s a good idea to limit their use. Avoid overusing your heater during winter, keep your thermostat at a certain level instead of changing it all the time and turn some appliances off when you’re not using them.

  1. Use compact fluorescent lamps (CFLs)

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Instead of incandescence light bulbs, go for the energy-efficient alternatives. If you settle for the old style of light bulbs expect to use much more energy than you have to. Sure, the CFLs are more expensive, but in the end they’ll help you save money on your electricity bill. Also, they last 12 times longer than regular light bulbs.

  1. Revamp your garden

Smart landscaping can be of great help in making your home more energy-efficient. By planting trees, you’ll protect your home from intense sun during the summer and during winter, your trees will act as a smart remedy against cold winds, helping you to conserve all the heat generated in your home.

Making your home energy-efficient is simply worth it – you’ll protect the environment, reduce your carbon footprint and enjoy innovative energy solutions that will only add value to your property.

— Lori Gardner is an experienced property advisor at Performance Property where she helps customers find and purchase the home of their dreams. 

Categories
Art Homewares

Olivia’s Fab Four Insta-Finds 21.01.15

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Olivia’s Fab Four is a weekly post that features my favourite finds on Instagram for the past week. To be in the running, all you have to do is hashtag your product photos #oliviasfabfour and tag them with my handle: @oliviashead.

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Here are this week’s beautiful products (clockwise from top left)

1. 2015 Candle, price upon request, from candleLit & co. @candlelitandco

2. I Heart Peonies (1 of 30), $135, from Geometric Collective. @geometriccollective

3. Miss. Fenty Diamond, $12, from Raw Luxe. @rawluxeinteriors

4. Set of Two Galvanised Storage Boxes (by Zakkia), $59, from Sari Jane Home Accents. @sarijanehomeaccents

 I’ll be back with more next week! Olivia x

Categories
Homewares

Elson’s Collection 02: soft, summery and safari luxe

Soft and summery but still with that unisex edge, the just launched Collection 02 from Elson is sure to see the brand continue riding its wave of success.

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The safari luxe style is most predominant in this collection. Featured in the two main printed designs, the first being Inked, a mottled grey take on animal and camouflage prints, and the second Jaggered Dune, which comes in taupe and cream; they are designed to be teamed with the army green design, Safari Plains, which all together create a style reminiscent of outdoors extravagance.

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Also available is the Mediterranean-inspired orange-striped Horizons and the plain-dyed Seafoam Straights, offering a fresh, crisp look to any room. All ranges in Collection 02 are available in sheets, pillows and duvet covers, so you can mix and match to your heart’s content.

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Outside of the bedroom, Elson have you covered with their new range of cushions. They have two stunning leather woven cushions in tan and black, which feature a gold zip exposed around three edges; a tan leather piped cushion on heavy cotton casement; and a silk embroidered Ikat style cushion. All work great with the Safari Luxe theme and Mediterranean vibe.

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Shop online.

Categories
Furniture

Clothes airers that you’ll be proud to have on show

Who would have thought it was possible, but these clothes airers from Miss Glass Home actually make me want to leave my washing out for everyone to see!

MGH Clothes Airer Style #3

Offering a new perspective on the care and presentation of your belongings, the contemporary Scandinavian inspired range consists of three designs that don’t just help your clothes dry but showcase them as well.

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Priced from $139 to $367, each design offers high quality construction made out of solid ash wood, large rungs to reduce drying lines on clothes (and eliminate the need for ironing!) and rubber feet providing extra stability.

MGH Clothes Airer Style #1

There’s the slim-line Airer #1, which is purpose-built to lean against walls or existing furniture; freestanding Airer #2 featuring special bullet-shaped ends especially designed to cater for the smaller treasure in your life; and Airer #3, which is big enough to care for your more substantial items (including sheets) for when you need it most.

Miss Glass Home is based in Melbourne and sold exclusively online. Explore the collection here.

Categories
Designers Interviews

Interview: Zoë Geyer on growing her residential architecture business

It was late last year that Zoë Geyer realised she had too much work to do it all alone. Having started her architecture practice in 2009, her portfolio was rapidly increasing and she was starting to be recognised on a national platform, winning the Heritage award at the 2013 Houses Awards and being shortlisted for residential design in the 2013 Australian Interior Design Awards.

East Melbourne House. Photo credit: Dianna Snape
East Melbourne House. Photo credit: Dianna Snape

So, she took the plunge and got herself a team of two, and since then she’s never looked back. “Their individual skills have brought more diversity and strength to the studio,” says Zoë. “I can clearly see the benefits of our combined skills and experiences. The workplace is a fairly light-hearted environment and much more stimulating with the insights of three architects.”

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Zoe Geyer

Working primarily in residential, the Melbourne-based firm Zoë Geyer Architect (known as zga) aim to create spaces unique to the individual and the environment they live in. “There is such richness to the connection between people, their private world, and the site, landscape or urban neighbourhood that they live within,” explains Zoë. “I am so inspired by how we as individuals, families and groups choose to live and what we seek from our environments.”

East Melbourne House. Photo credit: Dianna Snape
East Melbourne House. Photo credit: Dianna Snape

This notion is particularly evident in one of Zoë’s favourite projects, the East Melbourne House, which as a National Trust listed home, prohibited external changes to the building. “I see design as a comprehensive approach,” says Zoë. “As a type of problem-solving, and with this project our limitations ended up being the strength of our solution. The alterations responded to the cues and narrative of the existing building, embracing the honesty of a modern approach to interventions, while avoiding nostalgia or imitation.”

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East Melbourne House. Photo credit: Dianna Snape

Going on to win her first award (in the Houses Awards) for the East Melbourne House, it was also the first project that Zoë saw through from beginning to end and as a result was a pivotal moment of “validation and recognition as an emerging design practice.” Moreover, it was a chance to truly realise the goal for her firm, to approach designing holistically, working across the entirety of a project.

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East Melbourne House. Photo credit: Dianna Snape

Currently zga are working on a house for fashion designers in Melbourne’s East, a young family’s coastal-inspired house in Hampton and a sustainable green-roof project in Fitzroy. They have also recently completed their own studio and in keeping with their style, worked with the space rather than against it. “It’s in a Collingwood warehouse, hidden behind an old roller door,” says Zoë. “We’ve kept the crumbling brick walls and soaring trusses in original condition, and inserted a simple, clean plywood plinth and walls to provide a no-fuss framework for our studio.”

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The zga Studio. Photo credit: Tina Inserra

Five years on from zga’s launch, Zoë can still remember the original hurdles that she had to overcome. But she still has no regrets about leaving a large company to start out on her own: “While I was competent in the role of architect, starting my own studio required a whole range of other skills and business strategies, so it’s been a steep learning curve. However, there’s an excitement and freedom in designing under my own guidance. I find it very fulfilling, and have no regrets.”