WEDDING GIFTS & BRIDAL REGISTRIES
Updating the Bridal Registry: Eco Luxury for the Bath
 Show your sustainable side.  (MS) -- Traditionally, the bridal registry is the place where the "art
of living" meets the "art of giving." It is the place where
couples select items they would like to enhance their new lifestyle
(the art of living) while providing friends and family with the
assurance that these gifts will be welcomed and appreciated (the
art of giving).
Today's couples are updating this time-honored tradition by using
their registry entries to expand both the arts of living and
giving by incorporating their ethical values into the gifts they
request. Protecting the environment is a value shared by many couples, and
they are reflecting this ethical choice by listing eco luxury plumbing products
as gifts they are eager to receive.
"Young couples today are walking their talk by suggesting to friends
and family that they give sustainable plumbing products as wedding gifts," says
Lenora Campos, spokesperson for TOTO USA, an eco-luxury plumbing manufacturer. "In
turn, to be welcomed into their well designed new homes, high-efficiency
plumbing products must make both water sense and fashion sense."
The Aesthetics of Conspicuous Conservation
Brides and grooms today eschew the "conspicuous consumption" of
past generations in favor of "conspicuous conservation" by factoring
water efficiency in the design of their home's bath spaces in
an effort to reduce its overall impact on the water environment. "Environmentally
conscientious brides and grooms are challenging themselves to
come up with ways to make their homes more sustainable without sacrificing
the aesthetics of their interior's design," says Campos.
Fortunately,
manufacturers such as TOTO offer products whose aesthetic attributes
are as good as their performance and functional benefits. Suites of design-coordinated
products are available that include WaterSense labeled high efficiency
toilets (HETs) and high-efficiency faucets (HEF) --and soon showers
(HES).
WaterSense Labeling Program
Briefly, WaterSense, a water efficiency program launched by the
Environmental Protection Agency, is designed to educate Americans to make
smart water choices that save money and maintain high environmental standards
without compromising performance. WaterSense aims to raise awareness about
the importance of sustainable water use, ensure the performance of water-efficient
products, and provide good consumer information to create a water efficiency
ethic in the US.
The WaterSense label -- like the Energy Star label before it
-- is easily identified on products that perform more efficiently than their
counterparts. Unlike the Energy Star label, however, the WaterSense label
requires independent, third-party testing to verify that the products met
its labeling criteria.
Low Water Mark
To qualify for the WaterSense label, manufacturers must obtain
third-party verification that their high-efficiency toilet models
consume no more than 1.28 gallons per flush (gpf; a 20% reduction from the
1.6 gpf mandated by the Energy Policy Act of 1992); effectively remove 350
grams of solid waste; and resist after-installation tampering (to increase
water consumption).
Given inconsistencies in available information, some young couples
have come to equate "dual flush" with high efficiency. "This
limited understanding that has led them to ignore other flushing systems
that, from a practical point of view, give equivalent or better water savings
without demanding behavioral changes such as choosing between full flush
(1.6 gpf) and light flush (.9 gpf)," offers Campos.
High efficiency single-flush toilets offer a larger water spot,
which reduces streaking, and they generally save an equal or
larger amount of water than dual-flush units -- especially because
many dual-flush users mistakenly use the full flush mode (1.6
gpf) to remove liquid waste, thereby actually using more water. A high efficiency,
single-flush model could potentially offer more certain benefits.
Going With the Flow
Faucets are focal points of the bath. Eye-catching lavatory
faucets drive the sensory experience of the room. Not only are they artful
in their own right, but they also provide visual pleasure by shaping the
water's physical presentation as well as its warm, soothing somatic benefits.
According to the EPA, faucets account for more than 15 percent
of indoor household water use -- more than 1 trillion gallons
of water across the United States each year. Even though the
Energy Policy Act of 1992 requires that new faucets not exceed
2.2 gallons per minute (gpm), older faucets can flow at rates as high as
3 to 7 gpm.
High-efficiency faucets (HEFs) and accessories such as faucet
aerators can reduce this standard flow by more than 30 percent
without sacrificing performance. If the country's 222 million
existing bathroom lavatory faucets were retrofit with high-efficiency
models, the US could save billions of gallons each year.
WaterSense labeled HEFs use no more than 1.5 gpm and have completed
a third-party certification process that includes independent
laboratory testing to ensure that they meet criteria for both
performance and efficiency, even in homes with lower water pressures.
On the Water Front
The EPA's WaterSense program is currently developing a specification
for high-efficiency showerheads, which establishes a single maximum flow
rate somewhere between 1.5 gpm and 2.0 gpm (measured at 80 pounds per square
inch of pressure), which would represent between a 20 to 40 percent reduction
from the current federally allowable maximum of 2.5 gpm established by the
Energy Policy Act of 1992. WaterSense determined this potential range after
an examination of products currently available in the marketplace.
"The challenge is to establish a specification that will provide young
couples with the showering experience they expect while using
less water," says
Campos. TOTO provides a luxurious, water-efficient showering
experience at 1.75 gpm.
Safety Valve
Switching to a high-efficiency showerhead seems like an easy
way for young couples to go green and save money on water bills,
but they need to be well acquainted with the behind-the-wall plumbing, specifically
the mixing valve. These valves, which usually include a regulator
that minimizes changes in temperature, are designed to work at a minimum
flow rate. If the showerhead is operating at an extremely low water volume,
the valve may not be able to handle effectively changes in hot or cold water
pressure, which leads to bursts of scalding or freezing water that bathers
detest. "Our
new SMA shower sets make it possible to relax and unwind in hot shower without
the fear of sudden changes in water temperature," says Campos. "The
Shape Memory Alloy technology provides an satisfying shower and
further enhances the experience by suppressing water hammer at its end --
that unpleasant banging sound that results when water rushing through pipes
is brought to a quick halt creating a kind of shock wave and hammering noise."
For more information on TOTO products, call (800) 350-8686
or visit www.TOTOUSA.com.
Source: Metro Creative
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