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Blogging Conscious Choice: 9 Ways to Improve Indoor Air Quality

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The January/February issue of Conscious Choice has some good suggestions for clearing the air in your home. (By the way...doesn't this image from Chris's Green Hideaway on Re-Nest just make you want to get a bunch of house plants and start breathing easier?) Click below for the list and links...

 
 

This article has a great basic, doable list of ways to improve indoor air quality (which is far more polluted than outdoor air according to the EPA). Their suggestions:

• Open the windows as much as possible, if even just for a few minutes in winter.

• Change the filter on your heater every three months.

• Use green household cleaners to avoid nasty chemicals in the air, and burn soy candles rather than petroleum-based candles for scent.

• Fill your rooms with green plants that help to absorb your home's off-gassing (including carbon monoxide, formaldehyde, and benzene).

• Prevent mold growth by properly ventilating kitchens and bathrooms, using dehumidifiers in damp spaces, and using a HEPA (High Efficiency Particulate Air) filter vacuum. They also suggest washing sheets every 10 days to kill off mites.

• Don't wear shoes in the house. They can drag in a lot of nasty airborne particles from the street.

• Don't smoke in the house, and ask guests to smoke outside.

• If you haven't already, install a radon detector. Radon is a potent carcinogen that can't be located by taste or smell.

• Air out new furniture and fabrics before bringing them into the home. Most contain formaldehyde that off-gasses at high levels for a few days. Even better...buy green furniture (and read Re-Nest for suggestions on where to look).

Click here to read the full article (in detail) at Conscious Choice.

Originally posted by Sarah on AT:Chicago.

Tags

air & water quality, iaq, indoor air quality

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Comments (1)

I have a question about the first suggestion - opening your windows as much as possible. Is this always true? I thought I had heard somewhere that in some places, opening your windows may actually worsen your indoor air quality.

I live in Houston, where the outdoor air quality is horrible. We have allergens, pollution, and a million other things in the air I prefer not to think about. 75% of the year, I feel like opening my windows is actually worse than leaving my windows closed and allowing my air conditioner to filter my air for me - not least of the reasons for which is that 75% of the year the humidity is 100% and temperatures are skyrocketing.

So I'm curious - is my general feeling wrong? Should I be opening the windows and letting the stifling Houston air into my apartment? Or am I better off leaving them closed?

posted by kl on January 29th 2008 at 9:15am
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