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Blogs

Take an inside look into emerging markets and trends. Gain valuable new perspectives from HBN experts and our partners. Be inspired to know better.

Home Depot Bans PFAS In Carpets & Rugs

HBN | September 2019 | Newsletter

The Home Depot, the world’s largest home improvement retailer, announced Sept. 17 that it will phase out the sale of all carpets and rugs containing PFAS chemicals, expanding the reach of its Chemical Strategy adopted in 2017. The company said it will stop purchasing for distribution in the U.S., Canada and online, any carpets or rugs containing PFAS chemicals by the end of 2019. The new policy has important implications beyond reducing the use of these chemicals, which are associated with serious health harm and last virtually forever in the environment. 


Five Steps to Selecting and Installing Healthier Products - by Suzanne Drake

HBN | July 2019 | Newsletter

Each year arrives with seemingly more rules and regulations for building design and construction, leaving little to no room or incentive to consider incorporating the concept of “health” into buildings. Suzanne Drake, a Project Designer for WRNS Studio, provides five easy steps for applying healthier materials to projects. As a long-time champion of healthy materials, she bridges the gap between creating beautiful, functional spaces, and those that are healthy. Check out the article to learn more about concrete steps you can take to promote healthy, thriving spaces. 

https://workdesign.com/2019/06/Busing-healthier-materials-from-selection-to-installation/


Quantifying the Impact of Product Choices

HBN | July 2019 | Newsletter

We know intrinsically that hazardous chemicals have the potential to do harm and that they commonly do so throughout a product’s life cycle. For champions of the healthy building cause, that understanding of the precautionary principle is enough. But others still need to be convinced and often want to quantify the impact of a healthy-material program. How can healthy building champions start to talk about and quantify the impacts of material choices?


Could Chemical Exposures Increase Your Chance of Catching a Cold?

HBN | June 2019 | Newsletter

Followers of our work at Healthy Building Network are well-versed in the broad range of impacts that chemical exposures can have on our health. Many chemicals that are common in building materials have been linked to cancer, asthma, and effects on the endocrine system.1 Did you also know that more and more studies suggest links between exposure to certain chemicals and our immune systems’ ability to fight infectious diseases? Or that chemicals may contribute to stronger, more antibiotic-resistant bacteria?


"Tens of Millions of Pounds of Phthalates Annually Eliminated from Vinyl Flooring"

HBN | June 2019 | Newsletter

Phthalates (thay-lates) are chemicals used to make vinyl soft and pliable for uses such as roofing membrane, wall covering and flooring. Healthy Building Network began a campaign to remove these chemicals from building products in our seminal 2002 report, Environmental Impacts of PVC Building materials. In 2005 we reported that researchers had demonstrated a link between a mother’s exposure to phthalates and genital deformities in male offspring. Soon phthalates began to be banned from children’s products, though not building products. In 2014 we published a positive assessment of available Phthalate Free Plasticizers in PVC. The next year, after extensive negotiations with the Mind The Store Campaign, a coalition of environmental health groups including HBN, The Home Depot led the big box industry in banning these chemicals from the vinyl flooring sold at retail. This week these groups announced that independent testing of product on the shelves of The Home Depot, Lowes and Lumber Liquidators has confirmed the successful elimination of these toxic compounds from vinyl flooring sold there. Read More


All Together Now: Class-based Approach to Chemical Regulation Helps Avoid Hazardous Flame Retardants

HBN | June 2019 | Newsletter

For years, Healthy Building Network has championed a class-based approach to chemical regulation because the alternative, regulating chemicals one at a time, often leads to regrettable substitutions. We are excited to report that a recent National Academies of Science report supports this approach towards regulating organohalogen flame retardants, and that we have incorporated their findings into Pharos and the Data Commons.