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Keywords
Day
Greenpeace campaigners
Houses
KWCI (GPI)
Medium group of people
Outdoors
Persistent organic pollutants
Polyvinyl chloride
Spring
Toxics (campaign title)
Volunteers
Moving in to a Healthy Home
A representative of Habitat for Humanity hands Shylia Lewis the keys to a toxics free home for her and her four children in the St. Roch area. Greenpeace volunteers worked with Habitat for Humanity to build the home without polyvinyl chloride (PVC or vinyl) material or other toxic household products. Architect and reporter author Bruce Hampton is next to Lewis at right. Greenpeace campaigner Rick Hind is at far right.
Unique identifier:
GP03EG7
Type:
Image
Shoot date:
20/04/2004
Locations:
Louisiana
,
New Orleans
,
United States of America
Credit line:
© Kent Hardouin / Greenpeace
Ranking:
★★★★ (E)
Containers
Shoot:
Toxics Free Home Construction Project
Greenpeace volunteers worked with Habitat for Humanity and other groups to build a without polyvinyl chloride (PVC or vinyl) material or other toxic household products. With a typical construction budget of $60,000, the home was completed two days before Earth Day after a month-long construction effort. It may serve as a model for Habitat homes and affordable housing around the country. The PVC-free Habitat house is the first project of its kind for Greenpeace.
To document the construction, Greenpeace produced a short video and published a report, authored by architect Bruce Hampton, on lessons learned and how to build PVC-free homes.
More than two-thirds of all PVC or vinyl production is used in construction materials such as siding, window frames, waste water pipes, floor tiles, carpeting, wiring and wall covering. One of the most widely used plastics, PVC is also the most toxic, releasing hazardous chemicals such as dioxin during its lifecycle. These chemicals can build up in the air, water and food chain, causing severe health problems such as cancer, immune system damage and hormone disruption. Pollution from PVC plants has displaced entire towns and disproportionately affects low-income and African-American communities, particularly in the Baton Rouge-New Orleans corridor known as “Cancer Alley.”
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