Bathroom Mirrors Houston Tx

Huntsville, Texas (USA) - According to Agence France Presse, Dan Phillips is a Texan who built houses unusual. Tilings based mosaics of small pieces of wood, kitchen countertops bone plates as a roof while out of his imagination, and garbage cans. "People do this for hundreds of thousands of years: they use whatever is available to build shelters," says Phillips, who founded Phoenix Commotion 12 years ago with the id e will create a new MODEL housing, sustainable and affordable. The 13 houses built so far he would have no place in an art museum in the streets of Huntsville, a conservative Texan cit of 35,000 people whose main claim to fame is to be the Headquarters excutive of the state capital. "Almost every day, someone knocks the door and asked if there way to see," said Edie Wells, an artist who rents a room in the "house of bones". Garden furniture and stairs are, as the name implies, made of bone. The floor is paved plugs liege and beer bottle caps, and a life antrieure, the transom silent Pyrex dish. Pavement mosaics of small pieces of wood, in the "House of the bones," the "house Buweiser," one of the houses from dchets rcuprs Huntsville, Texas. But what impresses most visitors, said Edie Wells is the bathroom o the walls, floors and ceiling are covered with exploded Fully mirrors. The example of Huntsville has inspired other municipalities, such as Houston, the mtropole of East Texas, which opened its own entrept in October 2009. In six months, it contained six tons of matrial, the weight of a Boeing 747. Don Phillips made the dsormais confrences across Submitted for its philosophy. "It's sustainable, and we clean our own garden by the same occasion," he résumé. according to the text of the AFP to read more. . . .
Many of us dream of intelligent recycling. It reminds me of this teacher living in the former Yugoslavia, who built a house in plastic bottles, too poor to have a roof. (I'll get this old article tomorrow). "Dan Phillips is a Texan who built houses unusual. Mosaic flooring made from small pieces of wood, kitchen countertops bone plates as a roof while out of his imagination, and garbage cans. "People do this for hundreds of thousands of years: they use whatever is available to build shelters," says Phillips, who founded Phoenix Commotion 12 years ago with the idea of ??creating a new model homes, sustainable and affordable. The 13 houses built so far he would have no place in an art museum in the streets of Huntsville, Texas a conservative city of 35,000 people whose main claim to fame is to be the site of executions of the state. "Almost every day, someone knocks on the door and asked if there way to see," said Edie Wells, an artist who rents a room in the "house of bones". Garden furniture and stairs are, as the name implies, made of bone. The floor is paved with corks and bottle caps of beer, and in a previous life, the transom was a Pyrex dish. But what impresses most visitors, said Edie Wells is the bathroom where the walls, floors and ceiling are completely covered with shards of mirrors. There is also the "House of storybooks," which resembles that of Hansel and Gretel, or the "house Budweiser" a family has built in tribute to his favorite brand of beer. Phoenix Commotion is a for-profit corporation, but operates more like an association that seeks to solve social problems universal: for 10. 000 dollars, she builds houses for single parents, low-income families and artists. These houses are energy efficient, with effective insulation, a solar water heater and a tank that collects rain water, then used for toilets and laundry. "It allowed me to learn construction techniques, but also to call myself creative," said Shannon Bryant, part of his apprentices. The company began to recover hundreds of tons of building materials in landfills, but it makes him now so that it can not be stored: the major DIY stores bequeath him their unsold tile, wood or granite, sparing the cost of entrusting them to recycling centers. Local residents also give their old doors and bathtubs when they make improvement work. Suddenly, Don Phillips has launched the Town of Huntsville a program to store materials in warehouses owned by the city before distributing them free to low-income people and NGOs. The example of Huntsville has inspired other municipalities, such as Houston, the city of East Texas, which opened its own warehouse in October 2009. In six months, it contained six tonnes of material, the weight of a Boeing 747. Don Phillips is now lectures around to present his philosophy. "It's sustainable, and we clean our own backyard at the same time," he summarizes. (With AFP). Those who can live in Sucy and those that can not "Getting into Sucy-en-Brie is most often the door of a real estate agency. So . . Germany wants to hire unemployed Europeans "In search of labor, Germany wants to attract the unemployed now left in Europe. . . .
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