Vegetable Garden in a Roll-out Mat Format

Are you one of those who have wanted to plant your own vegetable garden but just don’t have the time or know how to do it? Well, now Chris Chapman has made it so you have no excuse. He’s designed this no-brainer Roll-out mat complete with different seeds for different seasons.

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Read below for instructions on how to grow your own super easy garden. The original article can be seen here.

Whether you’re a seasoned gardener or just getting started, sometimes the hardest part is that first shovel-full of dirt at the beginning of the growing season. Getting outside and preparing the soil for the next planting can feel like one part you’d rather just skip and go straight to looking out at all those seedlings busting up through the dirt.

Chris Chapman designed roll-out vegetable mats, each designed for different growing seasons. The mat is made from corrugated cardboard with embedded seed pouches and fertilizers. The idea is that as the cardboard breaks down, the seeds are able to germinate and take root; meanwhile, you put in the least work possible.

While it’s a bit late in the year to try this for fall veggies, it’s the perfect time to prepare your own garden roll now so that this coming spring, sewing seeds is a snap. These roll-out mats are common for flower gardens, and there’s no reason why you can’t create your perfect organic herb and vegetable garden ahead of time in the same way.

Creating Your Own Roll-Out Garden Mat


Step 1 – Decide what vegetables and herbs you’d like to grow during spring, summer and fall. This way you can have your mats at the ready each time you need to sew seeds for that growing period. The best choices for what to grow is whatever you eat most during the year. If you’ve saved seeds from last year’s garden, you won’t even need to hit the garden shop before getting started!

Step 2 – Check on germination rates and companion gardening suggestions. This will help you figure out which seeds should go together in which mats. For instance, lettuces or radishes have very short growing times, whereas broccoli or tomatoes have much longer stretches of time before they can be harvested. Additionally, there’s the size factor. It’s not a good idea to put lettuce seeds on the same mat as tomato seeds, since the growing tomato plants will steal all the sun from lettuce seedlings. Finally, check into companion gardening. This is when you put plants together that have complimentary needs. Often companion gardening can eliminate the need for any organic fertilizers and natural pesticides you might otherwise need to use. Getting this information together and planning out your mats with these things in mind will maximize the ease of care and yield of your garden.

Step 3 – Create your mats. This can be done in a few ways. While Chapman’s design is clever, putting seeds in pouches doesn’t work since each seed needs to be spaced out. There are simple ways to make your own seed mats that will remedy this. For instance, you can gather up a roll of heavy duty brown paper towels, flour, and your seeds. Make a thick paste with flour and water, and spread it over the unrolled paper towel torn to whatever length you’d like. Then place the seeds in the paste at the distance recommended on the seed pouches. Let the towel dry completely, roll it up, label it, and stash it until it’s time to use it in your garden.

Step 4 – Grow your garden. When it comes time to grow the seed mat you’ve created, simply loosen a sunny patch of soil in your yard, unroll your mat, cover it with compost to the depth appropriate for whichever seeds you’re planting, water, and voila! You’re done planting your garden in minutes.

A successful garden will still require quite a bit of care, but planting sure couldn’t be much easier or carefree than this! A little late fall and winter preparation will save you tons of time during the rush of growing season.

Tel Aviv Top Eco-design Studio Mesila is on the Right Track

I’m not one to waste, so when I read Mesila Studio’s eco-green design mindset of “instead of producing an infinite number of objects, we suggest to give objects an infinite life”, I knew I had to share their ideas on our blog.

The houseware products that they have been able to make from everyday ordinary stuff like clothespins, buttons, and plywood scrape is amazing and must be seen!

Please visit the article on their design here.

You can also check out their website here.

Upcoming Solar Hot Water Pilot for New Homes

(by Rachel Moscovich, rachel.moscovich@vancouver.ca)

Are you building a new home in 2010? Are you interested in installing a solar hot water system on a new house next year? The City of Vancouver is initiating a pilot program early 2010. We will provide approximately 50% of the value of a solar hot water system (up to $6000 system value) in incentive funding to support local uptake of this renewable technology. Program participants will see their solar homes featured on our Green Buildings website.

Would you consider participating in this program? If so, how many houses/solar installations would you expect to begin in 2010?

We appreciate any comments or feedback.

A “Green” downtown

What would an eco-friendly downtown look like? The newurbanism blog has some examples, including an award winning concept from Vancouver’s Romses Architects.

Cities around the world are running into the same problems with their infrastructure: how can we create true eco-friendly living where cars, concrete and metal dominate? Its not simple. Problems of old infrastructure and traditional city planning curb significant efforts to recreate a city’s environment. New urban developments, like Blue Springs’ downtown revitalization, are much easier to reimagine with green living; the upper west side of Manhattan is another thing entirely.

What is the answer? Instead of trying to take the cities back into the natural environment, architects, designers and eco-friendly entrepreneurs are attempting to bring the natural environment back into the cities, right underneath their noses.  These eco-towers and sustainable skyscrapers could become a part of your skyline in the coming decades.  What do you think?  Green, or not?  Inspiring or silly?  Check out this description of one proposal in Vancouver:

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See more examples and original blog here.

Laneway information session

The new laneway housing has been an ongoing learning experience for both the public and the city staff. Fortunately, we’ve made a keen effort to keep upto date with the latest developments in zoning and design guidelines. For those who are curious about the latest news also, there will be an upcoming laneway information session.  Can you download the Laneway Housing Workshop form to find out how to register for this workshop.

Eco-friendly design products

The City of Vancouver is working on some revising bylaws to make it easier to use eco-friendly design products such as solar panels and sun shading. To read more about, please click here.

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NASA Goes Green With New Sustainability Base

By Clara Moskowitz
(Staff Writer, Live Science)

One of NASA’s most ambitious new projects isn’t in space, but on the ground.

The agency is planning to build its most environmentally-friendly building at its Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, Calif.

The structure, to be called Sustainability Base, will likely be the “greenest” building in the federal government, said Steve Zornetzer, Associate Center Director at NASA Ames.

The ceremonial groundbreaking on the $20.6 million building is set for Aug. 25, and construction is expected to be complete around November 2011.

The name for the new facility is an homage to the Tranquility Base from the Apollo 11 moon landing of July 20, 1969, when NASA astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin became the first humans to land and walk on the lunar surface.

NASA celebrated the 40th anniversary of the historic Apollo 11 flight last month.

“The very first image of this blue orb that we call Earth came from NASA,” Zornetzer said.

“When the Apollo astronauts looked back and saw the Earth…it was such an astounding image that it’s really served as almost a touchstone for the whole environmental movement.”

Smart building, green building
Utilizing solar panels, fuel cells, water recycling systems, and even technology derived from NASA’s human and robotic space exploration missions, the building will aim for a LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) platinum plus certification.

Sustainability Base is designed to consume no net energy – in other words, it will power itself.

And compared to conventional buildings of equal size, it will use 90 percent less potable water.

“I decided that if we’re going to build an energy efficient building, why don’t we build the most energy efficient building we can possibly build, in the spirit of what we need to do for this country,” Zornetzer told SPACE.com.

The centerpiece of the building’s cutting-edge technology is its intelligent control system, which is based on ones originally developed for NASA spacecraft. A computer inside Sustainability Base will connect to the Internet to call up weather forecasts for the local area to help it plan environmental control. It will have access to electronic calendars of workers in the building, so it can predict how many people will be at a given meeting, and adjust heating and cooling systems appropriately.

Instead of air conditioning, Sustainability Base is designed to cool itself from geothermal wells that route naturally cooled water from underneath the ground through pipes and cooling panels inside the building.

The computer will also control the windows, so when a chill nighttime breeze flows near, the building can take advantage of it too.

NASA also plans to encourage occupants to try to improve their own levels of energy efficiency, which the building will keep track of and report to people on their laptops.

“We want people in the building to compete, to try to optimize their own energy efficiency so they can get the greatest amount of work done with the least amount of watts,” Zornetzer said.

Sustainability Base will serve mainly as an office building, but may also house some scientific research and engineering.

The cost of the building will be provided by a NASA program called Renovation by Replacement, which aims to replace antiquated facilities with more modern, energy efficient ones.

The building was designed by the AECOM and William McDonough + Partners architectural firms.

Swinerton Inc. will carry out the construction.

Laneway Housing Key Features

On July 28, 2009, Council approved laneway housing.
The key features of laneway housing include:

  • In RS-1 and RS-5 single family areas
  • On lots 33′ wide and wider, with a lane, on a double fronting street, or on a corner with a lane dedication
  • Generally located in the space where a garage would be permitted: in the rear 26′ of the lot, and a minimum of 16′ separation between the laneway house and the main house
  • Rental or family only – no strata titling
  • Minimum of one on-site parking space
  • Unit based on lot size (0.125 x lot area) to a maximum of 750 sq.ft. (this results in approx. a 500 sq.ft. unit on a 33′x122′ lot)
  • 1 and 1.5 storey configurations, with guidelines to address upper storey massing, privacy and shadowing
  • 1 storey LWH have same roof height maximums as current garage maximums
  • 1.5 storey LWH have maximum roof heights of 18′ to 20′ depending on roof type
  • Homeowners may add a laneway house while retaining their existing main house, or build a laneway house along with a new house (with or without a secondary suite)

For more information about laneway housing, please see the EcoDensity website at: www.vancouver.ca/ecodensity (click on “What is Next”).

Free for a limited time only – 30 minute consultation for Laneway Housing options

Laneway housing is approved by Vancouver City Council and there is a buzz in the community!  Because of the excitement, we are offering a free 30 minute consultation on the Laneway Housing or Larger Basement topic.  Call us now to find out how you too can benefit from this.

Here is a summary of the key features of laneway housing:  

  •  In RS-1 and RS-5 single family areas
  • On lots 33’ wide and wider, with an open lane, on a double fronting street, or on a corner with a lane dedication
  • Generally located in the space where a garage would be permitted, i.e. in the rear 26’ of the lot (and a minimum of 16’ separation between the laneway house and the main house)
  • Rental or family only / no strata-titling
  • Minimum of one on-site parking space
  • Unit size based on lot size to a maximum of 750 sq.ft. (approx. a 500 sq.ft. unit on a 33’ X 122’ lot)
  • 1 and 1 ½ storey configurations, with guidelines to address upper storey massing, privacy, and shadowing
  • Enabling homeowners to add a laneway house while retaining their existing main house; with or without a secondary suite in the main house (a laneway house could also be built with a new house)

 For more information, please refer to http://www.vancouver-ecodensity.ca/content.php?id=47

Dinnerware from Fallen Leaves

VerTerra is an American company that specializes in reuseable dishes made from fallen leaves. The fallen leaves are steamed, heated, and pressure formed to make the final dishware collection.They are biodegradeable, compostable, sustainable, sun-resistant, microwave and oven-safe. They’re great even for the odd camping trip.Visit VerTerra’s Webpage for further information.