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The Polygal Inc Crier is the Quarterly Newsletter from Polygal Inc. Showing Newsletters 1 to 4 of 12
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POLYGAL is now an APPROVED AIA Provider!

AIA / CEU CONTINUING EDUCATION COURSE

Click here to request a presentation today on "Sustainable Design with Multiwall Polycarbonate"

  • Receive AIA/CEU credits
  • Learn about the exciting features and benefits of Multiwall Polycarbonate Sheet
  • Learn how multiwall Polycarbonate Stacks up against competitive products

"Sustainable Design with Multiwall Polycarbonate" course Objectives:

  • What is multiwall polycarbonate and its uses
  • Why use multiwall polycarbonate
  • Multiwall polycarbonate vs. other translucent materials
  • Sustainability
  • Factors to consider when choosing MWPC

This program is a registered AIA/CES provider presentation. It is intended for educational purposes only and conforms to the guidelines set- forth by the AIA. It is not intended to promote or market company products or services and used as an educational tool for the AIA community. If you have any questions regarding this specific course and its learning objectives please direct them to the course provider.

Story date is 2011-11-02


Homeowner Happy in Tulane-Designed 'Green' House

NEW ORLEANS, March 29, 2011 /PRNewswire/ -- The house at 2036 Seventh St. in New Orleans, designed and built by Tulane architecture professors and students, has been certified LEED Silver by the U.S. Green Building Council. It is the first LEED-certified residential project for Tulane and Neighborhood Housing Services of New Orleans, which collaborated through a program called URBANbuild.

View the video.

Dinwiddie Hall, a recently renovated building on the Tulane's uptown campus recently became the first university building in the state to receive LEED Gold certification.

First-time homebuyer Tami Hills proudly received a certificate honoring her new home's energy-efficient design from Byron Mouton, director of URBANbuild, and Kenneth Schwartz, dean of the Tulane School of Architecture, along with Lauren Anderson, CEO of Neighborhood Housing Services.

Hills loves her new home and says that her life philosophy is in harmony with the green nature of the house. She sees the beauty, history and potential of her neighborhood and is leading the charge for its recovery.

"My favorite feature is definitely, hands down, the Polygal panels -- they give me the privacy I need without having to hang curtains," says Hills. "Second in line: the insulation. For the first time in my history of living in New Orleans, I am warm in the winter and cool in the summer!"

Other green features of the home include low-emissivity windows, Energy-Star electrical fixtures and an energy-saving air conditioner, as well as sustainably harvested and manufactured materials such as bamboo flooring and zero-VOC interior paint.

Mouton says that engaging the LEED for Homes certification process "has been educational and deeply rewarding for the design students and faculty at Tulane School of Architecture, our housing partners at Neighborhood Housing Services, and especially our new homeowner. As with all of URBANbuild's design-build projects, we hope our experience is one that other developers and institutions can look toward as a model and a starting point for more environmentally responsible, well-designed homes."

SOURCE Tulane University

Story date is 2011-03-29


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