I'm so one for gorgeous lighting set ups in my interiors. I HATE overhead lights in rooms (I sort of get a wee bit nauseous) and love playing with table and floor lamps and dimmer switches.
This week is Big Energy Saving Week so... Here's some more info for those of you reluctant to switch out incandescent bulbs for the more 'expensive' LED lights in your home... this is The Big Picture, the Long Term Solution.... The Low Down.... oh you get the idea...
Won't Cost the Earth - An infographic by LightBulbs-Direct to promote the Benefits of LED Bulbs for ‘Big Energy Saving Week’. To view the full image click here.
Tuesday, 28 January 2014
Don't Just Lower The Lights, Lower Those Electric Bills And CO2 Emissions At The Same Time...
Posted by
Alexandra Boyd
at
Tuesday, January 28, 2014
1 comments
Labels: Big Energy Saving Week, Citizen's Advice Bureau, CO2 emissions, eco interior design, LEDs, light bulbs, Light Bulbs Direct, saving money, The Eden Project
Tuesday, 28 July 2009
The Nash Goes Green!!!
Had to post it here for you!
National's energy savings can finance a play every year
The National Theatre is saving enough energy to pay for a production every year after a bold environmental drive.
It has met its target of cutting energy consumption by 20 per cent since 2006 and set itself a 25 per cent figure to hit by December.
The savings have translated into an annual financial dividend of £100,000 - which is equivalent to a new show in the Cottesloe, the smallest of the National's three stages. The success has prompted the theatre to consider a bigger long-term plan. Architecture company Haworth Tompkins has delivered a masterplan which includes environmental measures worth £10million that it says will transform the theatre over the next two to three decades.
They include the National using excess heat on site to generate hot water in a system known as combined heat and power, or CHP. The system would cost £1million but would pay for itself within four years. The savings so far have been made thanks to technology such as movement detectors to trigger lighting in the lavatories, so it switches off when no one is there, and a new extractor fan in the car park. The National also stopped a tradition of switching on certain stage lights three hours before curtain-up because they would not work without time to warm up. It found that modern ones were far more reliable.
Partly thanks to a £500,000 deal with Philips, the theatre has also replaced halogen and tungsten lights with LEDs, which are expensive but last a long time and use relatively little power.
The National last month won a silver medal from Mayor Boris Johnson at the Green500 awards.
Posted by
Alexandra Boyd
at
Tuesday, July 28, 2009
3
comments
Labels: CHP, LEDs, Major Boris Johnson, Philips, The National Theatre