September 23rd, 2008 -- Posted in Natural Mattress |
Chances are if you have a natural latex mattress, you won’t be sending it off to the landfill any time soon. After all, they have a lifespan of about 20 to 30 years.
But if you are ready to dump a conventional mattress, and Sean Leow of PSFK Shanghai says that 40 million mattresses do get trashed yearly, here is an inovative way to discard of that mattress. In his article, “Discarded Dreams: Used Mattress Competition,” Sean writes about a competition:
While re-use and recycling may focus on many of the daily items we use and consume, there are bigger ticket items that may get forgotten. Every year 40 million mattresses get thrown in the trash and their construction is by nature hard to dispose, causing landfills to pile up with tons of useless materials.
Architecture for Humanity and Rubicon National Social Innovations are invite entrants to create innovative ways of converting used mattresses into useful products. The competition aims to encourage entrants to form groups capable of creating a consumer product, instructions detailing how to make the product, and a plan for production on a larger scale. Entrants must create designs that take into account the volume of mattress waste generated each year. Groups are encouraged to utilize local resources, including existing manufacturing facilities and other waste products.
This is so cool! Just as we use recycled plastics to make new products (like turning soda bottles into park benches), taking the resources found in mattresses and repuposing the materials into new consumer products is a great idea.
Technorati Tags: landfill, mattress, recycling
September 19th, 2008 -- Posted in Natural Mattress |
What If I Can’t Afford a Natural Mattress?
I’d love to get a natural mattress, but I really can’t afford one. Is there a good alternative.
Yes, absolutely. Take a look at a natural latex mattress topper. You can keep you current mattress and place a mattress topper on top, attached with elastic straps.
What I would suggest is getting a topper that is made of two inches of natural latex (rubber that is not synthetic). You want one that is wrapped in pure wool and coveredwith a quilted organic cotton cover.
You will get most of the benefits of a natural mattress at a lower cost.
There are two reasons you want to make sure to get one with a wool layer. First, it’s very breathable, which means that you will stay cooler in the summer and warmer in the winter; but more important, it is naturally fire-retardant and normally meets the stardards required by law for a mattress (be sure to ask). Natural Mattresses and toppers without the wool often require a doctor’s prescription.
On top of having a mattress topper that meets fire retardant standards, it is chemical free, which is one of the main reasons I would suggest buying a natural mattress. On top of that, the latex is repellent to dust mites, mildew, and mold.
Whether you want a natural mattress for the health benefits – being hypo-allergetic, non-chemical, and good for your back – the natural mattress topper is a good alternative.
Technorati Tags: latex, mattress topper, Natural Mattress
September 4th, 2008 -- Posted in Natural Mattress |
Follow the natural latex harvesting to processing to shipping on this informative video.
Duration : 0:9:49
continue reading »
Technorati Tags: beds, harvesting, latex, mattress, natural, process, rubber