As a cabinet manufacturer located in Chicago, it seems that every time I turn the corner, I’m looking at another billboard for a new eco-friendly condominium project. Green construction is booming, as is the rest of the LOHAS (lifestyles of health and sustainability) domestic market segment.
According to Andrew Zolli of Brooklyn, N.Y.–based Z+ Partners, “There are 63 million consumers eating organics, driving hybrids, and buying fair trade morning lattes, making up 30 percent of the American market. They are not necessarily wealthier than other Americans, but have proven themselves willing to spend up to an astounding 20 percent premium on clean and green products over non-sustainable alternatives.”
There are also an increasing number of manufacturers and developers trying to capitalize on this growing market, and many are getting away with an old trick: cosmetically modifying unsustainable products to market them as green.
“Manufacturers are making green claims we would question,” says Tom Kelly, CEO of Neil Kelly, a remodeling firm in Portland, Ore. The company, the nation’s first green certified cabinetmaker (having built green since 1988), uses Agraboard and PureBond by Columbia Forest Products, along with FSC-certified hardwood in its cabinets.
But Kelly admits that builders may find it tough to analyze what is and isn’t green. He uses cabinet hardware as an example, noting that he’s not sure he’s ever seen an alternative to the good old metal hinge. “It’s the strength of the overall story,” he reminds. “It’s the components of the product compared against the downsides. What is it made of? How far did it have to travel?”
The following is a primer on what green cabinetry is and how you can ensure what you are offering your buyers is a sustainable product. Consumers interested in indoor air quality and resource management should know the origin of all cabinet materials, understand the finishes used, and know where the cabinets are manufactured. Obviously, local manufacturers should be chosen whenever possible to minimize fossil fuel emissions, not to mention freight costs.
The number-one distinguishing feature of a green cabinet is that the box material is free of urea-formaldehyde. Urea-formaldehyde resins are used in conventional plywood and particleboard adhesives and can off-gas formaldehyde gas, a carcinogen, into homes.
Formaldehyde gas can affect people in various ways, but when present in the air at levels at or above 0.1 ppm, acute health effects can include watery eyes, nausea, coughing, chest tightness, wheezing, skin rashes, and burning sensations in the eyes, nose, and throat.
Manufacturers have been quick to address the formaldehyde issue, with many, such as Columbia Forest Products, a manufacturer of hardwood plywood and hardwood veneer, replacing formaldehyde with a soy-based protein binder—and at no upcharge, notes John McIsaac, a spokesperson for the Portland, Ore.–based company. “We’re moving away from formaldehyde [in plywood] and decided not to pass the cost to customers, and it’s not been that difficult. We are forcing the industry into a new way of thinking,” he says.
According to McIsaac, Columbia Forest Products has extensively researched the cost of using formaldehyde-free products and found that in a $25,000 remodel of an average-sized kitchen, 15 panels of formaldehyde-free plywood would be used with an added cost of only $100. “So who wouldn’t do it?” he asks.
But not all wood products have made the shift that quickly or cost effectively. “Because there are more adhesives in particleboard and MDF, it is more expensive [to go formaldehyde-free], so manufacturers offer them at a premium,” explains McIsaac, which in turn makes it more difficult for green builders to offer such cabinets at comparable prices to cabinets that use regular formaldehyde.
Formaldehyde-free box material is the minimum you should expect in a green cabinet, and there are two categories of formaldehyde-free box material available, each with its own advantages and disadvantages:
Cabinet doors should either be built entirely from hardwood or have a hardwood frame with a veneered, formaldehyde-free center panel. We’ve already addressed the sheet material component. Let’s take a look at our hardwood options:
Finishes are the component of the green kitchen package where most green cabinetry companies fall down. Low-VOC finishes often take quite a bit of extra work to apply, require a skill set that is very different from the application of conventional finishes, and many manufacturers aren’t set up for the process.
But it’s important to understand that VOCs are chemicals that readily volatilize under ambient conditions and react with sunlight to produce smog. The EPA cautions that exposure to
VOCs can produce the following health effects: eye, nose, and throat irritation; headaches; loss of coordination; nausea; and damage to liver, kidney, and the central nervous system.
“Understanding the effects of HAPS and VOCs on human health is important because we spend about 90 percent of our time inside increasingly tight structures where accumulations of interactive chemicals can cause concentrations of pollutants that can be as much as 50 to 100 times greater than outdoor air,” says Andy Pace of Waukesha, Wis.–based Safe Building Solutions.
Many manufacturers will try to sidestep this issue by telling customers they use water-based finishes. Water based does not necessarily mean low-VOC. There are many water-based finishes that are not low-VOC. Be sure to ask. In addition, you need to take adhesives into consideration. “Adhesives are often overlooked in cabinets,” says Kelly. “They, too, should be low- or no-VOC.”
Where’s the green cabinet industry headed? By all accounts, toward more national market share—and quickly. “With the whole deal with toxic chemicals in toys and the FEMA trailer debacle, people are realizing that there are chemicals in their homes that they weren’t aware of,” explains McIsaac.
“They need to demand healthy products; it can’t just come from specifiers and manufacturers.” But according to Kelly, the consumer tipping point has just about been reached: “You’ve had people interested in [green cabinets] who are chemically sensitive and you have those who have environmental philosophy—and sometimes both,” he says.
In fact, green’s popularity has propelled Neil Kelly’s cabinets clear across the country to the East Coast, when for years the company was only serving Oregon. Kelly is hoping to find partners in the East to license and build there to fill the surging demand. He also doesn’t want to counter his green products’ attributes by burning fuel shipping them.
“We do very little marketing of our cabinets,” Kelly says. “Today, the reality is people are coming to find us.”
A green cabinet is a cabinet that is free from added urea-formaldehyde, has a low-VOC finish, and is made from sustainably sourced materials.
Here’s where you can find green cabinets:
Green cabinetry can earn credit under the NAHB Model Green Home Building Guidelines in the areas of resource efficiency, and occupancy comfort and indoor environmental quality. Green cabinetry and millwork can contribute to LEED certification in the following categories: materials and resources; regional materials: extracted, processed and manufactured regionally; rapidly renewable materials; FSC-certified wood; recycled content; indoor environmental air quality; low-emitting materials: paints, coatings, composite wood products.